State Champ Radio

by DJ Frosty

Current track

Title

Artist

Current show
blank

State Champ Radio Mix

12:00 am 12:00 pm

Current show
blank

State Champ Radio Mix

12:00 am 12:00 pm


Americana Music association

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).

Explore

See latest videos, charts and news

See latest videos, charts and news

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.

Trending on Billboard

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

When the idea for the Americana Music Association emerged in the late 1990s, it came from a community that shared a vision. A collective of artists, label executives, journalists and radio programmers all believed in promoting music driven by ideals and creativity rather than revenue. The nonprofit launched in 1999 and held its first convention in Downtown Nashville the following year with performances from Rhonda Vincent, Sam Bush, Jim Lauderdale and Rodney Crowell. In 2002, the first Americana Music Honors & Awards show was held lauding Lauderdale, Buddy & Julie Miller, Johnny Cash, Emmylou Harris, Billy Joe Shaver and T Bone Burnett.
Over the past 25 years, the association has worked to fashion a community that supports an ever-growing, ever-evolving slate of artists whose roots music styles include country, folk, bluegrass, R&B and roots-rock. The Avett Brothers, Carolina Chocolate Drops (whose members then included Rhiannon Giddens), Mumford & Sons, Jason Isbell, Brandi Carlile, Margo Price, Sturgill Simpson, Brandy Clark and the late Levon Helm have had sterling career successes under the Americana banner, followed by the recent ascension of Noah Kahan, Wyatt Flores, Kaitlin Butts, Charley Crockett, Tyler Childers and Allison Russell.

Trending on Billboard

The Americana genre is “just a home base thing, for me — I’ve built my whole life within this community, including my family and my kids,” Carlile told Billboard last year when she received Grammy Award nominations in the pop, rock and Americana categories. “We’re just rooted in our Americana people. And what Americana really is is a rejection of some of the exclusive tenets of country music — I mean that politically; I mean that sonically. In terms of diversity, Americana is where you’re going to see it the most.”

Jed Hilly has been key to the Americana Music Association’s growth. After serving as head of label for Orbison Records, Hilly became the association’s executive director in 2007 and has been a foremost advocate for the genre. He sees the organization’s mission in simple terms: to advocate for the authentic voice of American roots music. During Hilly’s tenure, the Recording Academy expanded its Americana/roots categories at the Grammy Awards (there are now four), while Billboard updated the name of its Folk Albums chart to Americana/Folk Albums and the Merriam-Webster Dictionary added the word “Americana.”

In recent years, acts including Carlile, Crockett, Russell, the late John Prine, Billy Strings and The War and Treaty have won honors in top categories at the Americana Music Honors & Awards, and the association now boasts 4,000 members. In addition, the annual Nashville-based AmericanaFest has served to highlight a diverse array of talent, with last year’s event showcasing 200 acts with performances spanning 48 venues across the city. The 2024 AmericanaFest will take place Sept. 17-21.

As the Americana Music Association celebrates its 25th anniversary, Billboard spoke with Hilly about the organization’s beginnings, its evolution and the genre’s current surge in popularity.

Tell me about the origins of the Americana Music Association.

In the late ’90s, there was a movement against commercial country radio, which had dropped artists like Steve Earle, Emmylou Harris, Lyle Lovett, Rosanne Cash and the list goes on. The movement was started by Jon Grimson and Rob Bleetstein, [who were instrumental in launching] an Americana chart for [music publication The Gavin Report], where they cherry-picked the stations that were still playing that kind of music. Then in 1999, when about 30 people got together at South by Southwest in Austin, they wanted to start a trade association like others had done.

The credit goes to the founding fathers, mothers, sisters and brothers, people like Emmylou Harris, Buddy Miller, Rodney [Crowell]. We truly have changed the landscape of music. We’ve given prominence to those artists who otherwise might not be heard. Music in the ’90s became more commercial, with less artist development. SoundScan really shifted the landscape. But as T Bone Burnett says, “If you make a great album, you make a great album.”

Jed Hilly onstage during the association’s Honors & Awards nomination ceremony at the National Museum of African American Music in Nashville on May 7, 2024.

Tibrina Hobson/Getty Images

The Americana Music Association has done significant advocacy work in expanding the roots and Americana recognition at the Grammy Awards.

That was the first thing I was working on. Hats off to Robert Plant, Alison Krauss and T Bone Burnett [whose 2007 Raising Sand earned five Grammys, including album of the year]. We welcomed that album before it [went] on to win Grammys. It was our album of the year in the fall before the Grammys, when they were nominated and won all those awards. When Robert went into the press room at the Grammys with four or five Grammys stacked up, someone asked him which was his favorite, and Robert said, “Actually, it was the one we won in Nashville last fall.” That opened the doors. I engaged [the Americana Music Association’s] membership to support the Recording Academy’s membership [because the academy’s philanthropic division], MusiCares, is an organization I so respect. Significantly, the Americana album category became the fastest-growing category, percentagewise, for the Grammys.

In recent years, top Americana Music Honors & Awards winners have included the bluegrass-rock sounds of Billy Strings, Charley Crockett’s old-school country and soul sounds, the songcraft of John Prine, the strong voices of Brandi Carlile and Allison Russell and the country-soul sounds of The War and Treaty. How do you define Americana today?

Music evolves. Billy Strings crosses a contemporary line. Maybe a more radical version would be Mumford & Sons with that first album. They crossed a contemporary line. With blues, if Muddy Waters is the baseline, Bonnie Raitt made a contemporary form of the blues. [Bob] Dylan and the band [went] electric at [the Newport Folk Festival] — that was not folk music anymore; it was something else. I believe that it’s important for art forms to maintain their integrity. In 1955, rock’n’roll was Elvis Presley; 1961, it was Chubby Checker; and fast-forward to U2 winning [the Grammy for best rock performance by a duo or group with vocal] for The Joshua Tree. It evolves.

I also give credit to Danna Strong, who was the first Americana Music Association employee and is still our director of education and programs and conference producer. Danna came to me in 2010 and said, “No one’s honored Muscle Shoals. How do we do that?” We honored everyone in Muscle Shoals and asked Rick Hall [who has been called “the Father of Muscle Shoals”] to accept the award, but honored everyone who was part of that.

Did that change the way you looked at the awards?

We recognized inspiration as part of the criteria for a lifetime achievement award, and that came in part from Porter Wagoner. In my first year, I was reluctant to honor Porter and I hate that I was reluctant, but I was figuring things out. Porter, to me, was the epitome of country music, and I felt we were something different than country music. But I realized people like Buddy and Rodney all did Porter songs on their albums. That opened the door to other ideas, like [honoring] Richard Thompson [and] honoring Booker T. and the M.G.’s. That’s not what you would think of as the down-the-middle Americana at the time. It was about looking at the greater landscape of inspiration.

The Americana Music Honors & Awards is slated for Sept. 18 in Nashville, and the awards have become more inclusive in honoring the work of pioneers such as Mavis Staples and Allen Toussaint, but also celebrating the artistry and musicianship of contemporary artists including Brandi Carlile and Allison Russell.

Diversity is important. I woke up after the [Americana] awards show in 2013 or 2014 and realized that all of our lifetime achievement honorees were basically white, middle-aged men. Americana is the contemporary form of music that is derived from multiple roots genres. The best way I know to go about that is to find people who feel welcome in the community and show them off. The McCrary Sisters have been our in-house band for as long as we’ve been doing this, and they are extraordinary. We have partnered with the National Museum of African American Music. The Fairfield Four as a quartet deserves to be recognized and honored — let’s put a spotlight on that. Our goal is to be open and welcoming. Do we have a long way to go? Sure we do. Americana is a great American art form, and it’s an opportunity that welcomes all walks of life with an authentic approach to making music. I do believe that if everyone in the world listened to Americana music for one hour, the world would be a better place.

Over the past few years, artists such as Zach Bryan and Noah Kahan, who have a roots-driven sound, have dominated all-genre charts. They aren’t based in Nashville, but they are having a huge impact in driving listeners to seek out more Americana sounds. What is your take on that impact?

Americana’s rockin’ right now. Noah has participated in several events, and he’s nominated for artist of the year this year. When The Lumineers took off, we embraced them early and nominated them for emerging artist of the year. They didn’t really know what we were doing, so we sat down with them, and as time went on, they were like, “What can we do to help?” They did a show during AmericanaFest at The Cannery [Ballroom], so 700 people got to see them perform. I hope Zach will join us someday. I think he’s an Americana artist — he’s not a country artist, in my humble opinion. But we look at Wyatt Flores and Sierra Ferrell, Nathaniel Rateliff, Jason Isbell and Brandi Carlile selling out massive rooms. Whether or not Americana has a mainstream [radio] hit, we can build careers.

This story appears in the Aug. 24, 2024, issue of Billboard.

The Americana Music Association has revealed this year’s slate of lifetime achievement honorees for the 23rd annual Americana Honors & Awards ceremony, to be held Sept. 18 at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium. The ceremony serves as a key event during the annual Americanafest, slated for Sept. 17-21 in Nashville.
Dave Alvin, The Blind Boys of Alabama, Rev. Gary Davis, Shelby Lynne, Don Was and Dwight Yoakam are this year’s honorees.

Alvin is known for both his solo work as well as being part of the duo The Blasters alongside his brother Phil. Alvin won a Grammy in 2000 for his album Public Domain: Songs From the Wild Land.

Trending on Billboard

The Blind Boys of Alabama was established in Alabama in 1939 and in the ensuing decades came to redefine gospel music with their songs and performances. They are multi-Grammy winners and Gospel Music Hall of Fame inductees, and found mainstream acclaim following the group’s role in the 1983 musical The Gospel at Colonus. They went on to perform and record with artists including Prince, Bonnie Raitt and Peter Gabriel.

South Carolina native Davis was a blues and gospel performer proficient on multiple instruments including harmonica. He became an essential part of the 1960s folk revival thanks to songs including “Death Don’t Have No Mercy,” influencing artists including Bob Dylan and the Grateful Dead.

Lynne made her debut project, Sunrise, in 1989 and has since traversed musical spaces including rock, country and pop. In the 1990s she saw songs such as “Things Are Tough All Over” reach the top 30 on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart. Her album I Am Shelby Lynne earned Lynne a best new artist Grammy. She’s also won honors including the ACM Awards’ top new female vocalist. Lynne will release her album Consequences of the Crown on Aug. 16, via Monument Records.

Detroit native Was launched the band Was (Not Was) in the 1980s, then as a producer gained renown working with artists including Bonnie Raitt, The Rolling Stones and Brian Wilson. Among Was’s Grammy honors is a trophy for producer of the year. In addition to his production work, he has served as president of the jazz label Blue Note Records since 2012. Was has also been the longtime bass player in the house band for the Americana Honors & Awards ceremony.

Yoakam has earned two Billboard Hot Country Songs chart-toppers, with the 1988 Buck Owens collaboration “Streets of Bakersfield,” and “I Sang Dixie,” as well as numerous top 5 hits such as “Fast As You” and “Guitars, Cadillacs.” Along the way, he forged a sound that melded elements of country, rock, bluegrass and the Bakersfield sound. He’s won two Grammy honors, including best country vocal performance, male (“Ain’t That Lonely Yet”) and best country collaboration with vocals (“Same Old Train”).

“This year’s Lifetime Achievement honorees represent multiple facets of American roots music. It is a privilege to recognize and celebrate the incredible careers of these artists. We look forward to another exceptional night at the Ryman Auditorium,” Jed Hilly, Executive Director of the Americana Music Association and Foundation, said via a statement.Tickets for the Americana Honors & Awards will go on sale to silver passholders on June 26, with tickets going on sale for association members, festival passholders and the general public at a later date.

Tyler Childers and Sierra Ferrell are among the top nominees for the 23rd annual Americana Music Honors & Awards.
Ferrell released her new album Trail of Flowers last month, while in September 2023, Childers released his sixth studio album Rustin’ in the Rain, spearheaded by “In Your Love,” which earned Childers his Billboard Hot 100 debut.

This year’s nominees were revealed Tuesday (May 7) at the National Museum of African-American Music in Nashville. The nominations ceremony was hosted by Gina Miller, senior vp and general manager of MNRK Music Group and a member of the Americana Music Association‘s board of directors. The event also featured performances from SistaStrings, The War and Treaty, Megan McCormick with Amanda Fields and Ethan Ballinger, as well as Kaitlin Butts and Ferrell.

Other top nominees include the twice-nominated Brandy Clark, as well as Allison Russell, Charley Crockett, “Wondering Why” performers The Red Clay Strays, Stick Season hitmaker Noah Kahan and Wyatt Flores.

Trending on Billboard

The winners will be announced during the annual Americana Honors & Awards on Wednesday, Sept. 18, at the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville. The awards show is the centerpiece of the annual Americanafest, which returns for its 24th year Sept. 17-21, 2024.

See the full list of nominations below:

Album of the year

Brandy Clark, Brandy Clark; produced by Brandi Carlile

The Past Is Still Alive, Hurray for the Riff Raff; produced by Brad Cook

Rustin’ In The Rain, Tyler Childers; Produced by Tyler Childers and The Food Stamps

Trail of Flowers, Sierra Ferrell; Produced by Eddie Spear and Gary Paczosa

Weathervanes, Jason Isbell and the 400 Unit; Produced by Jason Isbell

Artist of the year

Tyler Childers

Charley Crockett

Sierra Ferrell

Noah Kahan

Allison Russell

Duo/group of the year

Black Pumas

Larkin Poe

The Milk Carton Kids

Turnpike Troubadours

The War And Treaty

Emerging act of the year

Kaitlin Butts

Wyatt Flores

Charles Wesley Godwin

The Red Clay Strays

Jobi Riccio

Instrumentalist of the year

Grace Bowers

Maddie Denton

Jamie Dick

Megan McCormick

Joshua Rilko

Song of the year

“American Dreaming,” Sierra Ferrell; Written by Melody Walker and Sierra Ferrell

“Dear Insecurity,” Brandy Clark; Written by Brandy Clark and Michael Pollack

“In Your Love,” Tyler Childers; Written by Geno Seale and Tyler Childers

“Jealous Moon,” Sarah Jarosz; Written by Daniel Tashian and Sarah Jarosz

“Right Back To It” – Waxahatchee; Written by Katie Crutchfield