In Grammy-nominated or Grammy-winning recordings, the recording engineering approach is almost always multi-microphone technique, not One Mic. Multi-mic tech. enables precise control over indi. instruments, vocals, room acoustics, direct sound, image, SS depth, etc. We are talking about reference / standard here in lieu of something based on someone's ad hoc opinion
My favourite Grammy recordings are by the Norwegian label 2L - see 2L - the Nordic Sound. They are not just multi-microphone, they are multi-channel delivered on SACD, Blu-ray and Dolby Atmos. Many are of classical music and get rave reviews from, for example, the Gramophone magazine, which has been going for over 100 years. In my opinion, for classical music, Gramophone carries more weight than a Grammy committee.
Note that 2L recordings do however follow the principle of 'one microphone' to capture the original performance in its recording space. So the 'one microphone' becomes a central, fixed microphone 'tree'. My understanding is that, apart from mixing down, for example to reduce the number of channels for SACD and vinyl, no further processing is performed. These days 2L uses DSD files sampled at a very high frequency for archiving. All lesser digital formats can be precisely computed from the archive data.
The producer Morten Lindberg also turns the question of microphone positioning on its head. Instead of "where should the microphones be placed?" he asks "where should the players be?". His rather surprising answer is in an approximate circle around the microphones, but away from the walls of the venue. He believes all recordings are an illusion and his illusions are better than most!
Admittedly he tends to record with smaller forces than a full symphony orchestra of over 100 instruments! Despite that, one of his towering achievements, in my opinion, is his recording of Grieg's Piano Concerto. The pianist is the Australian Percy Grainger who was born in 1882 and would be 143 if alive today, so obviously there is some trickery!
Percy made piano roll recordings in 1921 and here they are replayed on a modern Steinway piano with the Kristiansand Symphony Orchestra in full multichannel. Simply stunning!

