Philadelphia rockers The War on Drugs won a Grammy on Sunday night for its fourth studio album, "A Deeper Understanding," which is the second since co-founder Kurt Vile left to pursue a solo career.

It was the first nomination for the group, which was up against Mastodon, Metallica, Nothing More and Queens of the Stone Age.

Several other Pennsylvanians won at the Grammys:

Best musical theater album: Philadelphia-born composer Benj Pasek was part of the team behind "Dear Evan Hansen." He composed and produced the original Broadway cast recording. (Pasek lost in the category of best song written for visual media to Lin-Manuel Miranda, "Moana.")

Best contemporary instrumental album: Philadelphia-born Jeff Lorber won for the album "Prototype."

Best choral performance - The Crossing, a Philadelphia choir, won for their performance of "Bryars: The Fifth Century" with conductor Donald Nally and PRISM Quartet.

Best orchestral performance: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra won for "Shostakovich: Symphony No. 5; Barber: Adagio" with conductor Manfred Honeck. They were nominated for orchestral performance in 2014 and 2015. Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra's only Grammy Award was earned in 1992 for a recording with cellist Yo-Yo Ma.

Best engineered album, classical: Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra took home the Grammy for this, too.

There were plenty of Pennsylvanians nominated who didn't win, too: