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Jason Isbell is leaving the 400 Unit at home next year for what is being billed as an “Intimate Evening” with the six-time Grammy winner.
The tour begins on Feb. 15 in Chicago and runs through the end of March, with select stops in smaller markets, including Portsmouth, NH, and large cities like New York City, Los Angeles and Nashville. 

Isbell recently wrapped an eight-show residency at Music City’s Ryman Auditorium to mark the release of Live From The Ryman Vol. 2, a collection of recordings from four of the last six years of sold-out shows at legendary venue.

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Earlier this year, Isbell won his fifth and sixth Grammy when 2023’s Weathervanes (recorded with the 400 Unit) earned best Americana album and the track “Cast Iron Skillet” scored best American roots song. The Alabama native and former Drive-By Trucker first broke out in solo form in 2013 with his Dave Cobb-produced fourth LP Southeastern. His next two albums, Something More Than Free (2015) and The Nashville Sound (2017), were Grammy magnets and each won awards for best Americana album and roots song (for “24 Frames” and “If We Were Vampires,” respectively).

Tickets go on sale Friday, Oct. 25 via Isbell’s website.

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JASON ISBELL SOLO DATES

February 15 – Chicago, IL – Auditorium Theatre 

February 16 – Ithaca, NY – State Theatre 

February 17 – Portsmouth, NH – The Music Hall

February 18 – Providence, RI – Providence Performing Arts Center

February 21 – New York, NY – Beacon Theatre  

February 22 – New York, NY – Beacon Theatre  

February 28 – Washington, DC – Warner Theatre

March 1 – Washington, DC – Warner Theatre

March 14 – Los Angeles, CA – Walt Disney Hall 

March 15 – Santa Barbara, CA – Arlington Theatre

March 20 – Nashville, TN – The Pinnacle

March 21 – Nashville, TN – The Pinnacle

March 22 – Nashville, TN – The Pinnacle

March 28 – Nashville, TN – The Pinnacle 

March 29 – Atlanta, GA –  Fox Theater

Jason Isbell

Courtesy Photo

As the Americana Music Association celebrates 25 years as a trade organization committed to honoring, supporting and advocating for a myriad of roots-oriented music, the organization held its 23rd annual Americana Honors & Awards at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville on Wednesday evening (Sept. 18).

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The historic building, which has been home to generations of performers, was appropriate for the ceremony, as the evening was a revelry of Americana music’s roots and branches, winding through and meshing together rock n’ roll, Gospel, folk, country, blues, R&B and more.

Sierra Ferrell was the evening’s biggest winner, taking home the coveted artist of the year honor as well as album of the year (for Trail of Flowers). “Wondering Why” hitmakers The Red Clay Strays were named emerging artist of the year.

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Duane Betts opened the show with a tribute to his late father Dickey Betts by performing a relaxed, rollicking rendition of The Allman Brothers Band’s “Blue Sky” (from The Allman Brothers Band’s 1972 album Eat a Peach), punctuated by Betts’ note-perfect guitar skills and relaxed-yet-commanding guitar acumen.

“That one’s for you, Dad. We love you,” Betts said, honoring his father, Dickey, who died in April.

The Milk Carton Kids welcomed the audience watching both in-person at the Ryman as well as those watching at home. Buddy Miller continued his reign as band leader, leading the 2024 house band with Don Was, The McCrary Sisters, Bryan Owings, Jerry Pentecost, Jen Gunderman, Jim Hoke and Larry Campbell.

From there, Oklahoma native and emerging artist of the year nominee Kaitlin Butts performed a roaring rendition of the witty, fiddle laden “You Ain’t Gotta Die (to Be Dead to Me).” The first accolade of the evening, instrumentalist of the year, was awarded to 18-year-old guitarist/singer phenom Grace Bowers, who in August released her debut album, Wine on Venus. Bowers was on the road and could not be in attendance.

Waxahatchee performed her song of the year-nominated “Right Back To It,” from her album Tigers Blood. Charles Wesley Godwin, his voice golden and burnished, performed the banjo-inflected love song “All Again.”

The evening rolled on with performances from the agile-voiced Jobi Riccio, as well as Wyatt Flores, who previewed the title track from his upcoming project Welcome to the Plains.

The Milk Carton Kids dedicated their performance of “When You’re Gone” to sound engineer Mark Richards. Also stunning the audience were performances from sibling duo Larkin Poe, Red Dirt country-rockers Turnpike Troubadours, and the octave-scaling, peerless vocal dynamo The War and Treaty (who drew an instant, rowdy standing ovation). Also on the bill were engaging performances from Sarah Jarosz, Brandy Clark accompanied by SistaStrings, and a masterful performance of “American Dreaming” from Ferrell. Noah Kahan also performed his smash hit “Dial Drunk.”

Throughout the evening, powerful performances were punctuated by more awards winners, including Larkin Poe (duo/group of the year), Grace Bowers (instrumentalist of the year) and Brandy Clark (song of the year, for “Dear Insecurity,” featuring Brandi Carlile).

“I have struggled most of my career with where my music fits and you guys have made me feel at home,” Clark said in accepting the song of the year honor. “I remember I was at a low time of not fittin’ in and [Americana Music Association executive director] Jed Hilly invited me to play AmericanaFest.” Clark also thanked several of her music industry champions, including Gail Gellman, Tracy Gershon, CMT’s Leslie Fram, as well as the musicians on Clark’s self-titled album and Carlile, who not only sang on the song, but produced the album.

The Americana Music Association also honored several artists and musicians with the lifetime achievement award, including the gospel group The Blind Boys of Alabama, who performed an ovation-drawing rendition of “Work Until My Days are Done.” Fellow lifetime achievement honorees included Dave Alvin (known for his work as an artist, writer and member of The Blasters, X and The Knitters), Rev. Gary Davis, Shelby Lynne, Dwight Yoakam and musician/producer Don Was (known for working with a slate of artists including Bonnie Raitt, the Rolling Stones, Bob Dylan, Elton John, John Mayer, Ziggy Marley, Lucinda Williams, Ringo Starr, Delbert McClinton, Hootie & the Blowfish, The Black Crowes and Martina McBride (who introduced Was during the evening’s celebration).

“Go where the love is,” Alvin advised those listening. “Surround yourself with people who love music the same way that you do, no matter what passing tastes or fads might be, and always surround yourselves with musicians who are better than you are.”

The Americana Music Association has for the past five years teamed with the National Museum of African American Music, and was instrumental Wednesday evening in honoring Davis with the legacy of americana award, with Fantastic Negrito performing “Samson and Delilah.”

Singer-songwriter Allison Moorer celebrated her big sister and Wednesday evening’s lifetime achievement honoree Shelby Lynne, calling Lynne “my personal trailblazer.”

“I am proud to be a part of Americana. If I was ever to fit in anywhere, it was with the misfits, storytellers, outlaws and truth-tellers, the heartbreakers, the hippies,” Lynne said, before she was joined by Moorer in singing “Gotta Get Back,” from Lynne’s landmark album I Am Shelby Lynne.

Versatile musician, writer and actor Yoakam was also feted by Clark with a lifetime achievement award. He earned a standing ovation as he took the stage, first paying tribute to Alvin, saying, “Without Dave Alvin coming into my life, I don’t know where my journey would have taken me. The twists and turns that lay ahead of me at that point wouldn’t have turned corners into bright sunlight without Dave championing me…I owe him a debt of gratitude along with [guitarist/producer] Pete Anderson.”

“That was truly an independent record,” Yoakam said of Guitars, Cadillacs, Etc., Etc., which Yoakam originally released as a six-song indie record in 1984, before it was picked up by Warner’s Reprise Records and re-released with additional songs in 1986. The project would become the first of three consecutive Yoakam albums to hit No. 1 on Billboard’s top country albums chart. On Wednesday evening, Yoakam also said that original indie project was part of, “…why the spirit of the Americana Music Association felt at home to me…Thanks for the reminder every year when the AMA allows me to participate in anything they are doing. They always make room for us to come down… Every decade or so there is another generation that rediscovers the enormous impact of early country music, blues, rock and roll, soul, all of it can have on their peers and a brand new audience. The only place I ever won an artist of the year award was the Americana Awards [in 2013],” he noted. From there, fastening his guitar strap, Yoakam plunged the audience into his Bakersfield-meets-rockabilly groove of his 1993 hit “Fast as You.”

During the evening, Elizabeth Cook also took a moment to honor Jeremy Tepper, executive and program director of SiriusXM’s Outlaw Country station, who passed away in June.

“Jeremy was a key part of this community,” Cook said. “He was a musician first-off, and a label owner, a really clever guy who recognized that truck stops still had jukeboxes…and thus was born Diesel Only Records….he was an early and ardent supporter of the Americana Music Association.”

The star-studded evening closed with Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell offering a version of the Gram Parsons song “Return of the Grievous Angel.”

See the full list of this year’s Americana Music Honors & Awards honorees below:

Instrumentalist of the year:  Grace Bowers

Album of the year: Trail of Flowers, Sierra Ferrell (produced by Eddie Spear and Gary Paczosa)

Duo/Group of the year: Larkin Poe

Emerging act of the year: The Red Clay Strays

Song of the year: “Dear Insecurity,” by Brandy Clark (feat. Brandi Carlile) (written by Clark and Michael Pollack)

Artist of the year: Sierra Ferrell

The 23rd Annual Americana Honors & Awards, which are set for Sept. 18 at Nashville’s fabled Ryman Auditorium, will be bookended by memorable performances.
Duane Betts will open the show by performing the Allman Brothers Band’s “Blue Sky,” which his father Dickie Betts wrote. The song appeared on the 1972 classic Eat a Peach, the band’s first album to make the top 10 on the Billboard 200. Dickie Betts died on April 18 at age 80.

Emmylou Harris and Rodney Crowell will close the show with “Return of the Grievous Angel,” the opening track on Gram Parsons‘ Grievous Angel, on which Harris was prominently featured. The album was released in January 1974, four months after Parsons’ death from an overdose. He was just 26.

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The Americana All-Star Band, led by Buddy Miller, will return to back the artists who are performing on Americana music’s biggest night. Other band members include Don Was (who is set to receive a lifetime achievement award), The McCrary Sisters, Bryan Owings, Jerry Pentecost, Jen Gunderman, Jim Hoke and Larry Campbell.

In addition to being top nominees this year, Sierra Ferrell, Noah Kahan and Brandy Clark are set to perform on the show.

Blind Boys of Alabama, Dave Alvin, Dwight Yoakam and Shelby Lynne, all of whom are set to receive lifetime achievement awards, will also perform.

Other performers set for the show include SistaStrings (who will perform with Clark) and Fantastic Negrito (who will perform in a tribute to the late Rev. Gary Davis, who will receive the Legacy Award in partnership with the National Museum of African American Music).

The program will be filmed for broadcast on PBS in the Austin City Limits time slot in November. The awards show is the centerpiece of the annual Americanafest, which returns for its 24th year Sept. 17-21.

The show is set to begin at 6:30 pm CT. Doors open at 5:30 pm CT.

Here are all the performers and presenters for the 2024 Americana Honors & Awards.

Performers

Blind Boys of Alabama

Brandy Clark (with SistaStrings)

Charles Wesley Godwin

Dave Alvin

Dwight Yoakam

Fantastic Negrito

Hurray for the Riff Raff

Jobi Riccio

Kaitlin Butts

Larkin Poe

The Milk Carton Kids

Noah Kahan

Sarah Jarosz

Shelby Lynne

Sierra Ferrell

Turnpike Troubadours

The War and Treaty

Waxahatchee with MJ Lenderman

Wyatt Flores

Presenters

Allison Moorer

Amy Helm

Amythyst Kiah

Gaby Moreno

Hiss Golden Messenger

Iron & Wine

Jimmie Dale Gilmore

Joe Henry

Lukas Nelson

The Lone Bellow

Margo Price

The Milk Carton Kids

Nathaniel Rateliff

Shane Smith & Bennett Brown

Silvana Estrada

Susan Tedeschi

T Bone Burnett

Warren Zanes

“Our approach to managing artists is ‘Let’s create the world that the music becomes connected to,’” says Jason Murray, president of full-service boutique talent management firm Vector Management, who has helmed the long-running company since January 2023.
Vector was founded in Nashville by music biz powerhouse Ken Levitan 1998, with Jack Rovner joining as co-founder in 2003. Over the years, Vector has grown to approximately 40 staffers guiding the careers of nearly three dozen artists across its roster, including Charley Crockett, John Hiatt, Allison Russell, Peter Frampton and Hank Williams, Jr.

Following a stint at BMG Canada as head of Canadian operations, Murray joined Vector in 2022, before officially becoming president in January 2023, charged with overseeing new business and operations. At that time, the Canadian indie label/management company Murray co-founded, Black Box Music, merged with Vector. Levitan and Rovner remain at Vector as founding partners.

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Vector also guides the careers of such established artists such as Brian Kelley, Lynyrd Skynyrd and Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and newcomers including Chase McDaniel and Americana artist Bella White, whose song “Burn Me Once” was featured on the soundtrack for Hunger Games: The Ballads of Songbirds and Snakes.

In recent weeks, the artist management company, which has offices in Nashville, Los Angeles, New York and Toronto, has also added Yung Gravy, The Aces, Jack Harris and 3OH!3 to the roster.

Vector has found particular success within the Americana and roots genres, thanks to clientele that includes musical troubadour Crockett and blues-rocker Marcus King, as well as Grammy winners Russell and Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway. This year, Russell’s “Eve Was Black” won best American roots performance, while Molly Tuttle & Golden Highway earned best bluegrass album for City of Gold. Tuttle & Golden Highway are among the leading nominees for this year’s International Bluegrass Music Association Awards.

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“If you look at the just the Americana and roots space — artists including Molly, Charley, Allison, Nitty Gritty [Dirt Band] — it is, without question, 85% of our revenue,” Murray says. Still, upon joining the company, he immediately identified ways to further heighten awareness for his stable of performers.

“There was a very strong footprint in circles like Americana, but it hadn’t hit that Renaissance yet,” Murray says. “I was like, ‘Okay, this is a company with three decades of quality control, and that goes to the people within the company, how we treat our partners, and the type of artists, whether that’s a John Hiatt, an Emmylou [Harris], a Hank Jr. How do I add value to this?’ It’s in the mechanics of releasing music and marketing. It’s the same ethos, but different tools in the toolbox.”

In terms of newer artists, Murray calls the art of breaking an act “the hardest thing to do,” especially given today’s streaming and content-centered music landscape.

“I look at that and think, ‘What feels intuitive to a manager?’ We need advocacy and awareness at DSPs for starters. We’re not putting out 100 records a week — we’re not in a spreadsheet at a major label — so how do we go tell the story and create true connectivity to our artists? We live in the era of content, and content creation is very different now than it was four years ago; it’s all short-form. So we built out our marketing team, looked at merch and e-commerce to make sure it feels focused and that we have the tactical tools we need.

“The marketing and all those other things are done on the back of creating something we are really passionate about,” Murray continues. “For us, it’s a full end-to-end ecosystem. We get involved on the creative level at whatever capacity the artist needs, but we’re there early enough that it allows us to immerse ourselves in the world that the record is becoming the soundtrack to. The more we understand the fibers and little idiosyncrasies that make the album special to the artist, it allows us to go into this amazing marketing team we have built here over the past two years and elevate that project.”

Crockett’s social media, leaning into his reputation as an observant musical troubadour, is filled with videos chronicling his day-to-day life on the road, from jamming with fellow Texas singer/songwriter Vincent Neil Emerson to numerous concert photos tracing his travels. The company’s marketing approach also offers space for artists to focus on issues they feel passionate about, whether that is King’s recent music (which addresses his struggles with drugs and alcohol) or Russell’s advocacy for human rights. Over the past year, Russell not only released her second album, The Returner, and embarked on her headlining tour of the same name this year — but in 2023, Russell organized the All-Star benefit concert Love Rising at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena, in response to a slate of Tennessee anti-LGBT+ legislation.

“I give [Vector’s West Coast leader] Nicki Loranger a lot of credit. She had a vision that aligned with Allison and has supported Allison’s goals as a spokesperson, an artist, an advocate, a storyteller, a performer and helped put that in motion, and all these things to surround Allison’s mission,” Murray says.

King is among the artists who joined Vector under Murray’s tenure. In August 2023, Murray began an eight-month lead-up to what would become King’s 2024 album Mood Swings. What started with King sending Murray a Dropbox folder of 12 songs he had worked on with Rick Rubin, including “F—k Up My Life” and “Delilah,” soon became a quest to take the songs’ emotional arcs and translate them to visuals. Murray recalls creating a Pinterest board of color palettes, fonts and fashion colors that would represent the album. The ideas kept flowing, evolving into the idea of an album trailer visual to give fans an entry point into the record. They also set up an album listening event at the planetarium in Nashville, offering a space for King to play the music and discuss the songs.

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The neon red, cursive scrawl of “Mood,” and a collection of face emojis bearing cowboy hats and various facial expressions, became signifiers for the album — a throughline from album art to merchandising. “When he’s out touring the world for a year, it all ties back together,” Murray says.

In recent years, artists such as Zach Bryan and Noah Kahan have seen meteoric rises, selling out arenas and stadiums and dominating not only Billboard’s Americana chart, but the all-genre Billboard Hot 100. Last year, Bryan’s self-titled album spent two weeks atop the Billboard 200, while Kahan’s song “Stick Season” rose to No. 9 on the Hot 100 this year. Murray has seen the growth fuel the entire Americana genre.

“I feel like the ceiling just raised about 13 floors in terms of what the genre means,” Murray says. “We’ve built a rich history here in Americana and it’s about great songs, great stories, and great live shows. I think those pieces mean more now to a listening audience than ever before, so it’s a bit of a perfect storm. The counterculture has become the culture. You look at the history of all music genres — rock in the ‘70s, hip-hop, punk rock… you don’t know it’s coming until you’re in it.”

Upon joining Vector, Murray (along with Levitan) signed singer-songwriter Crockett, who Murray calls “a phenomenal artist, great songwriter.” His music draws on a deep knowledge and respect for music history in a variety of styles, melding them with vivid lyrics and a commanding vocal.

Though the genre does have radio stations and shows dedicated to its artists, as well as playlists such as Spotify’s Indigo and Amazon Music’s Fresh Folk & Americana, touring remains the bedrock for building an enduring career within Americana and roots music. Crockett has assembled a reputation as a rollicking live performer and Levitan and Murray capitalized on that by issuing his first live album, last September’s Live From the Ryman, and a concert film of his Ryman concert, which aired in February on PBS.

Crockett also released his $10 Cowboy album in April (via Son of Davy/Thirty Tigers) and has embarked on a tour that includes some of his biggest venues to date including Los Angeles’ Greek Theatre, Colorado’s Red Rocks, and two nights at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. He also paid homage to some of Texas’ most iconic venues, performing a slate of shows at places like Austin’s Broken Spoke and Houston’s Armadillo Palace.

The prolific Crockett recently announced $10 Cowboy Chapter II: Visions of Dallas (coming Monday, July 22), which follows April’s original $10 Cowboy. For Murray, the goal is marketing his artists year-round, regardless of how often projects are released.

Murray isn’t concerned about flooding the market. “When it comes to off-cycle or on-cycle, that was a system put in place by the labels, and it’s not how people consume,” he explains. “I use the analogy of Starbucks — they market all year long, and they still have their tentpoles, like the pumpkin spice latte or the peppermint latte. But what you do throughout the year is important. When we think about oversaturating the market — I don’t think that exists. I think it’s more quality control. Charley’s one of the best out there, and everything he puts out is so refined and thought out.”

The 360-degree approach to management has allowed the company to craft customized strategies for realizing each artist’s career vision.

“That’s part of what gets me excited about what we do here at Vector,” Murray says. “We’re not a volume business — we look at it more as a powerful boutique with attention to detail.”

Marcus King and Jason Murray

Courtesy of Jason Murray/Vector Management

For Zach Bryan’s The Quittin’ Time Tour, the fast-rising superstar has managed to make arenas feel like intimate backyard jam sessions – which is exactly what he delivered during his first of three nights at Los Angeles’ Crypto.com.  With a stage situated in the center of the floor, allowing for every seat in the house […]

UTA has signed The War And Treaty for booking representation, with exclusive worldwide representation in all areas. Founded in 2014 by the husband-and-wife duo Michael Trotter Jr. and Tanya Trotter, The War And Treaty has quickly become one of the most exciting new musical acts. They recently teamed with Zach Bryan for the song “Hey […]

Noah Kahan has had quite the year. Last October, the singer-songwriter released his third album Stick Season, a project that ushered in a sonic shift for the artist away from pop and into folk music — and set him on the fast-track to global acclaim.
The album debuted at No. 14 on the Billboard 200; In June, Kahan released its deluxe edition, Stick Season (We’ll All Be Here Forever), which shot the album up to a No. 3 peak on the chart. The deluxe also topped a handful of genre-based charts, including Top Rock Albums, Top Alternative Albums and Americana/Folk Albums.

“It’s been an unbelievable year-and-a-half now … a whirlwind of attention and wonderful outpouring of love from fans,” says Kahan. He recalls making Stick Season through the pandemic, saying, “There was a feeling in the studio of like, ‘Woah, this is something special.’ I felt so creatively in control … and I think, at the time, I couldn’t see that as a sign of success or relatability, it just felt so right for me that I was fine with whatever happened.”

In July, Kahan delivered yet another gift to fans with his Post Malone collaboration on standout single “Dial Drunk.” And while Kahan says he didn’t get a chance to play beer pong with the champ (“I got to watch him play, there was a big line … I was a little starstruck”) he says their first meeting was “exactly what I wanted an experience with Post Malone to be; he was sitting crossed-legged, drinking Bud Lights [and] smoking cigarettes.”

The pair bonded over their love of the comedy Walk Hard and Kahan confirms “the hang is not over.” As he says, “I would love to get in the room and write music with him [together from scratch]. What I love about [him] is he is so untethered by genre…I would love to make some weird shit.”

Looking ahead, Kahan has already completed his two biggest goals: be verified on Instagram and have a Wikipedia page. Still, he has one other major project in the works. His nonprofit the Busyhead Project, which he founded with his managers in May and is named after his 2019 debut album Busyhead, is on track to raise $1 million for mental health organizations across country and in Canada. “That is definitely a goal,” he says.

Watch the full Billboard News interview above.

Tyler Childers’ Can I Take My Hounds to Heaven was named album of the year at the 2023 Americana Honors & Awards, which were held Wednesday (Sept. 20) at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville.
The album consists of three discs, each containing different remixes of eight gospel music songs. The “Hallelujah” versions were recorded live in the studio; the “Jubilee” versions incorporate horn and string sections; and the “Joyful Noise” versions incorporate remixes and sampling. Three of the songs are public domain. Childers wrote the other five. The album reached No. 3 on Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart and No. 8 on the Billboard 200. It was Childers’ first top 10 album on the Billboard 200.

Bonnie Raitt’s “Just Like That” won song of the year, nearly eight months after it won in the same category at the 65th annual Grammy Awards. It’s the first song written by a solitary writer to win here since Jason Isbell’s “If We Were Vampires” five years ago.

Billy Strings won entertainer of the year for the second year in a row. He’s the first artist to win two years running since John Prine in 2017-18.

The War and Treaty won duo/group of the year last year for the second year in a row. They’re the first act to win two years running since the Avett Brothers in 2010-11. The husband-and-wife duo is up for vocal duo of the year at the upcoming CMA Awards.

S.G. Goodman won for best emerging act. Many previous winners have gone on to do very well, including The Avett Brothers (2007), Mumford & Sons (2011), Alabama Shakes (2012), Sturgill Simpson (2014) and Margo Price (2016), Amanda Shires (2017), Childers (2018), The War and Treaty (2019) and Black Pumas (2020).

The Americana Music Association also presented its lifetime achievement, trailblazer and legacy award honorees. The recipients were Grammy-winning artists Patty Griffin and Nickel Creek; Grammy-nominated artists The Avett Brothers and Bettye LaVette; and George Fontaine Sr., co-founder and owner of New West Records.

The program is the marquee event of AmericanaFest, which returned for its 23nd year on Sept. 19 and runs through Sept. 23.

Here’s the full list of nominees for the 2023 Americana Honors & Awards, with winners marked:

Album of the year

Big Time, Angel Olsen; Produced by Angel Olsen and Jonathan Wilson

WINNER: Can I Take My Hounds to Heaven?, Tyler Childers; Produced by Tyler Childers

El Bueno y el Malo, Hermanos Gutiérrez; Produced by Dan Auerbach

The Man from Waco, Charley Crockett; Produced by Bruce Robison

Strays, Margo Price; Produced by Margo Price and Jonathan Wilson

Song of the year

“Change of Heart,” Margo Price; Written by Jeremy Ivey, Margo Price

“I’m Just a Clown,” Charley Crockett; Written by Charley Crockett

WINNER: “Just Like That,” Bonnie Raitt; Written by Bonnie Raitt

“Something in the Orange,” Zach Bryan; Written by Zach Bryan

“You’re Not Alone,” Allison Russell featuring Brandi Carlile; Written by Allison Russell

Artist of the year

Charley Crockett

Sierra Ferrell

Margo Price

Allison Russell

WINNER: Billy Strings

Duo/group of the year

49 Winchester

Caamp

Nickel Creek

Plains

WINNER: The War and Treaty

Emerging act of the year

Adeem the Artist

WINNER: S.G. Goodman

William Prince

Thee Sacred Souls

Sunny War

Instrumentalist of the year

Isa Burke

Allison de Groot

Jeff Picker

WINNER: SistaStrings (Chauntee and Monique Ross)

Kyle Tuttle

Gordon Lightfoot, who died on May 1, and John Prine, who died in 2020, are among the artists in the Folk Americana Roots Hall of Fame’s (FARHOF) inaugural class of inductees. The first induction ceremony for recipients and their families will take place in April 2024. Living and deceased artists, songwriters, record executives, managers and concert promoters tied to elevating folk, Americana and roots music were all eligible.
The inaugural class of 29 was selected by a designated nomination committee that includes industry experts as well as FARHOF’s board of directors. The class consists of 10 solo living artists, 11 solo legacy artists (all of whom are deceased, though the rules don’t stipulate that), four groups or duos, three non-performers and one recipient of the Paul Robeson Artist/Activist Award.

“When we created the Folk Americana Roots Hall of Fame, identifying the inaugural class and those after was going to be a big part of our initiative with focus on preserving these important genres and the history they created,” Joe Spaulding, president and CEO of the Boch Center and founder of FARHOF, said in a statement. “The diverse inaugural class reflects activism and social justice that shaped our world today, and we look forward to inducting these national treasures into the Folk Americana Roots Hall of Fame.”

The Weavers were inducted, while two members of that legendary group were also honored on their own. Pete Seeger, who left the group in 1957 and died in 2014, was inducted as a solo legacy artist. Frank Hamilton, who joined the group after Seeger’s departure and remained with it until it disbanded in 1964, received the Paul Robeson Artist/Activist Award. Hamilton is still living at 89.

The Folk America Roots Hall of Fame, which launched in 2019, is a cultural and education initiative of the Boch Center, which is located inside the Wang Theatre in Boston. For updates, information about tours and upcoming events and exhibits, visit the website at FARHOF.org.

Here are the 29 inductees in the inaugural class, by category.

Solo Living Artist

A contemporary performer whose initial impact on the genre was at least 25 years prior to the year of induction.

Joni Mitchell

Bob Dylan

Joan Baez

Mavis Staples

Willie Nelson

Emmylou Harris

James Taylor

Taj Mahal

Bonnie Raitt

Ramblin’ Jack Elliot

Solo Legacy Artist

A performer whose initial impact on the genre was at least 45 years prior to the year of induction.

Odetta

Pete Seeger

Woody Guthrie

Lead Belly

Richie Havens

Josh White

Oscar Brand

Johnny Cash

John Prine

Jean Ritchie

Gordon Lightfoot

Duo or Group of Musicians

Duos or groups whose initial impact on the genre was at least 25 years prior to the year of induction.

Peter, Paul & Mary

The Band

The Byrds

The Weavers

Non-Performer

This category includes supporting musicians, songwriters, managers, publishers, historians and producers.

Albert Grossman (former manager to many musicians in the folk music scene)

George Wein (jazz promoter, pianist and producer as well as founder of Newport Jazz Festival and co-founder of the Newport Folk Festival. Also instrumental in the founding of the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival.)

Betsy Siggins (founding member of the Club 47 venue now Passin in Boston; assisted in creating the Festival of American Folklife and founder of the New England Folk Music Archives/Folk New England.)

Paul Robeson Artist/Activist Award

Non-performing industry professionals who have had a major influence on the social justice that has impacted culture.

Frank Hamilton – (American folk musician, member of The Weavers and co-founder of Old Town School of Folk Music)

On July 16, Gabe Lee will step into the Grand Ole Opry circle for the first time, just days after releasing his latest album, Drink the River, out July 14.
For the Nashville-raised Lee, the Grand Ole Opry—which in its nearly century-long tenure has served as a bedrock for country music but also hosted blues, rock and Americana artists, and at its former Ryman home, served as a foil for the birth of bluegrass—offers a parallel for Lee’s own distinctive blend of country, rock, bluegrass and Americana.

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“The Opry represents the dream, the community,” Gabe says. “The Opry and its stage and history are not only a tradition, but a beacon for all future musicians. It’s just a great honor to perform there.”

The son of Taiwanese immigrants, Lee grew up immersed in classical and church music, as his mother played piano and his father played guitar. “They sacrificed so much, just working hard and saving and believing in me and my music,” he recalls. Absorbing their work ethic and learning in proximity to the ever-heightening stakes of the music industry also gave Lee a clear-eyed perspective on the truths of a music career.

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“A lot of my friends who grew up with musician parents got the hell outta dodge,” he recalls with a chuckle. “They were like, ‘The last thing we wanna be is in music.’ And it’s a joke among players and music people in music, like, ‘If my kids want to play music, I’d let them but I wouldn’t wish it on ‘em,’ because it is a gamble…folks get their dreams made and their dreams broken every day.”

His previous album, 2022’s The Hometown Kid, embodied Lee’s own relentless tugs of both adventure and familiar comforts. He spent a year attending Nashville’s Belmont University, bartending on the side and performing at writers rounds at Bobby’s Idle Hour Tavern, the Listening Room and Whiskey Jam. He then decamped to Indiana University to study literature and journalism, before returning to Music City to continue pursuing his craft.

But where scores of singer-songwriters spend days cranking out radio-friendly songs and seeking major label country deals, and nights networking at any number of guitar pulls and industry events, Lee draws more from cult favorite touchstones such as John Prine and Jason Isbell. Lee is the sole writer on many of his songs, and like his musical heroes, he excels in excavating from everyday moments the raw materials from which he crafts his vivid musical narratives. Drink the River showcases Lee as a troubadour filling his songs with keen observations gleaned from other people’s stories.

The album’s folk-country, acoustic flavor takes cues from Old Crow Medicine Show’s first record, while songs like “Property Line” tip the hat to Prine’s clear-eyed, light-hearted style. “It’s a bit of how John [Prine] was always a master at infusing humor in his songs. A little bit of humor goes a long way,” Lee says.

“Even Jesus Got the Blues,” which Lee began writing nearly four years ago, revels in an early SteelDrivers, blues-meets-bluegrass feel, and was inspired by a friend who succumbed to addiction. The two-year-old “Lidocaine” stems from an Uber ride, as a driver confided in Lee his story of being diagnosed with dementia at 40 years old. He also revisits “Eveline,” from his 2019 debut project farmland.

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Meanwhile, the lyrics and instrumentation of album closer “Property Line” evoke the feel of the popular series Yellowstone; the song is an ode to Lee’s girlfriend’s father Jason, who owns a large plot of land in Alabama.

“I started hanging out down there and what I quickly realized is I may be from the South, but those guys are country,” he says with a laugh. “I’ve learned a lot from them and I really admire their sensibilities and the way they look at the world.”

Lee and his manager, Alex Torrez, founded the indie label Torrez Music Group, under which Lee has issued three albums (with Drink the River to be his fourth) in approximately as many years, including his breakthrough, 2020 roots-rock project Honky Tonk Hell, and last year’s The Hometown Kid. He’s kept a marathon runner’s pace — steady and relentless — as he balances studio time and writing with ever-more prominent performance slots, having shared stages with artists including Isbell, American Aquarium and Molly Tuttle. To date, Lee’s songs have registered 10.5 million official U.S. on-demand streams, according to Luminate.

He is also slated to perform during the Americana Music Association’s annual AMERICANAFEST in September, and was recently added to Tidal’s “Tidal Rising” new artist program, which also includes Sunny War, Kara Jackson and Kassa Overall. 

“We’ve been in a double-down mentality for the past few years,” he says. “You get a little momentum, and you don’t want to lose it for a second. As a small label, we work within our means and try to roll most of our revenue from merch and streaming right back into the label in the next project.”

While many of his Nashville counterparts dream of selling out stadiums and dozens of No. 1 hits, Lee’s immediate goals are more economical. “That’s the basic dream for so many artists and writers, just getting to the point where it’s sustainable. Some of my favorite songwriters are those that play the Texas circuit. They make it work, they aren’t living in mansions, but they’ve got a roof over their heads, they keep their businesses alive and their families fed by playing music. We’re just trying to make records, tour, and not go bankrupt. We’re just out here doing the work and hopefully, the work will speak for itself.”

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