Robert Woods
WINS*
13
NOMINATIONS*
29
51st Annual GRAMMY Awards
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Through the 66th GRAMMY Awards
- Robert Woods garnered a reputation as a sought-after classical music producer in the late 1970s with recordings such as the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra's Stravinsky: The Firebird Suite; Borodin: Overture And Polovetsian Dances From Prince Igor, Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra's Tchaikovsky: 1812; Capriccio Italien; Cossack Dance and Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra's Bizet: Carmen Suite; Grieg: Peer Gynt Suite.
- Woods earned his first career GRAMMY for 1980 for Classical Producer Of The Year. He has won the category a total of seven times.
- Along with Jack Renner, Woods founded Telarc Records in 1977, which was dedicated to classical music releases. Today the label is an imprint of Concord Music Group and also produces jazz and blues artists, including Oscar Peterson, George Shearing and Gordon Goodwin's Big Phat Band.
- Woods' wife, Elaine L. Martone, won a GRAMMY for 2006 for Producer Of The Year, Non-Classical. They are the only husband-and-wife duo to win the award.