The St. Paul Chamber Orchestra won its second Grammy Award Sunday, picking up the best chamber music/small ensemble performance award for the group’s recording of Franz Schubert’s “Death and the Maiden.”

The award was one of dozens given Sunday afternoon in a non-televised ceremony prior to the glitzy, star-studded program that aired live Sunday night on CBS.

Violinist and artistic partner Patricia Kopatchinskaja arranged “Death and the Maiden” for the SPCO and added selections from composers John Dowland and Gyorgy Kurtag to the piece.

The orchestra premiered it in 2015 and has revisited it several times. In a 2016 review of one performance, Pioneer Press critic Rob Hubbard raved that the orchestra’s “playing was some of the most urgent and involving the ensemble has offered in recent memory.”

Gov. Mark Dayton offered his congratulations to the orchestra in an emailed statement.

“You make all of Minnesota very proud!” Dayton said.

The Minnesota Orchestra was nominated, but didn’t win, in the best orchestral performance category for the orchestra’s recording of Mahler’s Fifth Symphony. The Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra took home that Grammy.

Minnesota native Bob Dylan’s third dip into the Great American Songbook, “Triplicate,” lost best traditional pop vocal album to “Tony Bennett Celebrates 90.” Dylan has earned dozens of nominations over the years and taken home 11 Grammy Awards.

Neither orchestra sent a representative to the ceremony, as both had performances Sunday and the Grammys require a musician who participated in the recording to be on hand to accept the award.

The SPCO previously won the best chamber music performance award for Aaron Copland’s “Appalachian Spring” in 1980.