

The next year the record swept all of its six noms, including Producer of the Year for Steve Lillywhite, a rock field sweep, Song of the Year (“Sometimes You Can’t Make it On Your Own”), and of course Album of the Year. First, the lead single “Vertigo” won Best Rock Duo/Group Performance, Best Rock Song, and Best Music Video in 2005. The other top winning album is U2’s “How To Dismantle an Atomic Bomb.” It brought home its nine Grammys over the span of two years. SEE Billie Eilish songs, ranked: We rank her 21 greatest hits (so far), including her latest, ‘Happier Than Ever’ “Supernatural” ended up sweeping, only losing one nomination (Best Pop Collaboration for “Love of My Life” with Dave Matthews) to … another song from the album (the aforementioned “Smooth”). Their team even went as far as to arguably fraud an entry in Best Pop Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal, which didn’t allow collaborations at the time, by submitting the hit “María María” as a solo Santana song without its featured artists, The Product G&B, which meant those artists didn’t get a Grammy for the song they performed on. As such, the album had entries in multiple pop and rock races.
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Besides sweeping the general field with “Smooth” (Record and Song of the Year) plus Album of the Year, Santana’s strategy was to submit in as many categories as possible. One of those is Santana’s “Supernatural” in 2000.

The two biggest Grammy-winning albums ever are tied with nine trophies apiece. But which albums have won the most Grammys? For the purposes of this overview, we’re including Best New Artist and Producer of the Year trophies in these counts if they occurred alongside those Grammy sweeps since those are in no small part a celebration of those corresponding albums. Each year after the Grammys, you’ll often see pictures of artists holding a heavy stack of trophies, typically being the biggest winners of the year.
