1964 • 6th Annual GRAMMY® Awards

In a way, the 6th Annual GRAMMY Awards was a victim of the GRAMMY’s own success. The previous year’s “The Best on Record” broadcast—a one-off production to test how well a televised music awards show would fair—was so widely watched that NBC, sponsor Timex, and The Recording Academy began negotiations for a long-term deal for an annual show. Like today, such complex deals involving multiple parties are not executed overnight. As a result, by the time this deal was hammered out, the 6th GRAMMY presentation had come and gone.

Yet despite the lack of TV presence, by the time of the 6th Annual GRAMMY Awards, the music industry’s top honor had become established enough that the awards presentation was marked primarily by major awards going to both artists who had become GRAMMY favorites and fresh voices who were about to become legends.

On the established GRAMMY favorite side, Henry Mancini would win his 12th, 13th, and 14th GRAMMYs during the presentation of the 6th Annual GRAMMYs, all of them for the bittersweet “Days of Wine and Roses,” which won both Record and Song of the Year as well as Best Background Arrangement. The film of the same name was a stark tale of alcohol addiction as told by the usually comedic director Blake Edwards and solidified one of the most productive director/composer partnerships of all-time.

The freshest new voice came in the form of Album of the Year and Best Vocal Performance, Female, winner Barbra Streisand. Her solo debut, The Barbra Streisand Album, was recorded before she was 21 and set the stage for her remarkable run as a singer, actress and stage performer. Her Album of the Year win marked a turning point of sorts. Though Mancini would go on to win six more GRAMMYs in the coming years, one of the albums Streisand beat was Andy Williams’ The Days of Wine and Roses, as well as the Singing Nun—stage name Soeur Sourire, real name Jeanine Deckers—who had a surprise hit with “Dominique,” which did win for Best Gospel Or Other Religious Recording (Musical), thank God.

Perhaps equally fresh was the first ever GRAMMY win for Quincy Jones, who took Best Instrumental Arrangement for Count Basie’s “I Can’t Stop Loving You.” Jones would go on to win 26 more GRAMMYs to date. In 2007, Jones commented that this first GRAMMY win remains “a true highlight” in one of music’s most distinguished and enduring careers.

There were also awards (Best Vocal Performance, Male) for Jack Jones’ now politically incorrect “Wives and Lovers,” which included the lyrics “Hey little girl, comb your hair, fix your makeup/Soon he will open the door/Don’t think because there’s a ring on your finger/You needn’t try anymore,” and the relatively wholesome choice of a cappella classical vocal group Ward Swingle and the Swingle Singers for Best New Artist of 1963.

Yet there was at least one sign that the times were now truly a-changin’, for both the GRAMMY Awards and the culture at large. Peter, Paul And Mary won two GRAMMYs— Best Folk Recording and Best Performance by a Vocal Group—for their version of Dylan’s classic “Blowin’ in the Wind.” And next year, four mop-topped Liverpudlians would emerge to take the Best New Artist award.

By the following year, the winds were blowin’ the GRAMMYs way, and Music’s Biggest Night would be back on the air to stay.

Winners

Category Winner Work Actions
Record Of The Year Henry Mancini Days Of Wine And Roses All Nominees
Album Of The Year Barbra Streisand The Barbra Streisand Album All Nominees
Song Of The Year/New Song Of The Year Henry Mancini, Johnny Mercer Days Of Wine And Roses All Nominees
Best New Artist Ward Swingle All Nominees
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance Barbra Streisand The Barbra Streisand Album All Nominees
Best Male Pop Vocal Performance Jack Jones Wives And Lovers All Nominees
Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal Ward Swingle Bach's Greatest Hits All Nominees
Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal Peter, Paul And Mary Blowin' In The Wind All Nominees
Best Pop Instrumental Performance Count Basie This Time By Basie! Hits Of The 50's And 60's All Nominees
Best Pop Instrumental Performance Al Hirt Java All Nominees
Other Pop/Rock&Roll/ Contemporary Awards or Instrumental April Stevens, Nino Tempo Deep Purple All Nominees
Best R&B Recording - Best Rhythm & Blues Performance Ray Charles Busted All Nominees
Best Country & Western Performance Bobby Bare Detroit City All Nominees
Best Instrumental Jazz Album Bill Evans Conversations With Myself All Nominees
Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album Woody Herman Encore: Woody Herman, 1963 All Nominees
Best Original Jazz Composition Steve Allen, Ray Brown Gravy Waltz All Nominees
Best Gospel Other: Incl. Sacred, Religious or Inspirational Recording, Musical or Non-Musical Soeur Sourire Dominique All Nominees
Best Folk Performance or Best Folk Recording Peter, Paul And Mary Blowin' In The Wind All Nominees
Best Recording For Children - Single or Album, Musical or Spoken Leonard Bernstein Bernstein Conducts For Young People All Nominees
Best Spoken Word Or Non-musical Album (Uta Hagen, Arthur Hill, George Grizzard & Melinda Dillon) Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf? All Nominees
Best Comedy Album Allan Sherman Hello Mudduh, Hello Faddah All Nominees
Best Musical Theater Album Jerry Bock, Sheldon Harnick She Loves Me All Nominees
Best Score Soundtrack For Visual Media John Addison Tom Jones All Nominees
Best Instrumental Composition Norman Newell, Nino Oliviero, Riz Ortolani More - Theme From Mondo Cane All Nominees
Best Instrumental Arrangement Quincy Jones I Can't Stop Loving You All Nominees
Best Instrumental Arrangement Accompanying Vocalist(s)/Best Background Arrangement Henry Mancini Days Of Wine And Roses All Nominees
Best Album Package - Incl. Album Cover, Graphic Arts, Photography Robert M. Jones Puccini: Madama Butterfly All Nominees
Best Album Package - Incl. Album Cover, Graphic Arts, Photography John Berg The Barbra Streisand Album All Nominees
Best Album Notes Stanley Dance, Leonard Feather The Ellington Era All Nominees
Best Engineered Recording, Non Classical James Malloy Charade All Nominees
Best Engineered Recording, Non Classical Robert Fine The Civil War, Vol. II All Nominees
Best Classical Engineered Recording Lewis W. Layton Puccini: Madama Butterfly All Nominees
Best Classical Album Benjamin Britten Britten: War Requiem All Nominees
Best Classical Orchestral Performance Erich Leinsdorf, conductor Bartók: Concerto For Orchestra All Nominees
Best Opera Recording Erich Leinsdorf Puccini: Madama Butterfly All Nominees
Best Choral Performance, Classical Lord Benjamin Britten, conductor; David Willcocks & Edward Chapman, choral directors (Pears, Vishnevskaya, Fischer-Dieskau) Britten: War Requiem All Nominees
Best Classical Performance-Instrumental Soloist(s) (with orchestra) Artur Rubinstein Tchaikovsky: Piano Concerto No. 1 In B Flat Minor All Nominees
Best Classical Performance-Instrumental Soloist(s) (without orchestra) Vladimir Horowitz The Sound Of Horowitz All Nominees
Best Chamber Music Performance Julian Bream Evening Of Elizabethan Music All Nominees
Best Classical Vocal Performance Leontyne Price, soprano Great Scenes From Gershwin's Porgy And Bess All Nominees
Best Classical Contemporary Composition Benjamin Britten Britten: War Requiem All Nominees
Most Promising New Classical Recording Artist Andre Watts, piano Liszt: Concerto No. 1 For Piano & Orchestra (Bernstein, cond.; N.Y. Philharmonic) All Nominees

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