Country Music People March 2018 | Page 5

Country at The Grammys The 60th annual Grammy Awards, Jan. 28, meant good news for country hitmaker Chris Stapleton (above), who won big: Best Country Solo Performance for Either Way; Best Song for Broken Halos, which he co-wrote with Mike Henderson; and Best Album, for From A Room: Volume One, co-produced by Chris and Dave Cobb. (Incidentally, Stapleton’s 2015 debut album Traveller also earned them Grammys.) Little Big Town scored this year for best group performance, thanks to their single Better Man, penned by Taylor Swift and produced by Jay Joyce. Country diva Reba McEntire nabbed a Grammy for her album Sing It Now: Songs of Faith & Hope in the Gospel Roots category. Bluegrass queen Rhonda Vincent added another win to her collection, for All the Rage: In Concert, Vol. 1 (Live), in a tie for Best Bluegrass album; the other winner being Infamous Stringdusters’ Laws Of Gravity. Jason Isbell & The 400 Unit scored multiple wins in the Americana division: best Americana album for The Nashville Sound, produced by Dave Cobb, and best roots song for If We Were Vampires,” both for the act and Jason as songwriter. Jackson and Anderson honoured The national Songwriters Hall of Fame committee has announced its newest inductees into its Hall of Fame, among them country composers Bill Anderson and Alan Jackson, already members of the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame, and all-genre writer Steve Dorff. A truly diverse writer, Dorff numbers include such songs as Easy Love for Dionne Warwick, and Miracle for Celine Dion; however, he has supplied songs for country artists like Kenny Rogers, Through the Years; Eddie Rabbitt, Every Which Way But Loose; Anne Murray, I Just Fall In Love Again; Mel Tillis’ Coca Cola Cowboy; and George Strait’s I Cross My Heart. Anderson’s hits began in 1958, during his college years when he furnished Ray Price’s monster hit City Lights, and in the 1960s Whispering Bill sang many of his own hits, including Tips Of My Fingers and Still, while also through the years supplying others such as Lefty Frizzell’s Saginaw, Michigan, Conway Twitty’s I May Never Get To Heaven, Kenny Chesney’s A Lot of Things Different, Brad Paisley-Alison Krauss’ Whiskey Lullaby, and George Strait’s Give It Away. Jackson, of course, penned his own, ranging from his 1990 breakthrough song Here In The Real World, onward to #1’s such as Don’t Rock The Jukebox and Chattahoochee, The inductees will be enshrined officially at the 49th annual Songwriters Hall of Fame banquet, in New York City’s Marriott Hotel, June 14. AMERIPOLITAN AWARDS The Guest House at Graceland in Memphis, Tennessee was the venue for the 5th Ameripolitan Awards on Feb 13. It marked the firs time the ceremony was held outside Austin and featured performers on the night such as James Hand, Reverend Horton Heat, Unknown Hinson, Nikki Lane, and Jason D. Williams. There will be a full report in next month’s CMP but a notable winner from a UK perspective was our own Sophia Johnson in the Western Swing Female category.(see Page 11). Luke Bell - Honky Tonk Male Winners on the night were: Honky Tonk Female – Brennen Leigh Honky Tonk Male – Luke Bell Honky Tonk Group – The Reeves Brothers Outlaw Female – Nikki Lane Outlaw Male – Cody Jinks Outlaw Group – Whitey Morgan and the 78’s Chris Scruggs – Musician on the Year Venue of the Year – Sportsmen’s Tavern, Buffalo NY Festival of the Year – New England Shake Up, Sturbridge MA DJ of the Year – W.B. Walker, Old Soul Radio Show Podcast Western Swing Female – Sophia Johnson Western Swing Male – Billy Mata Western Swing Group – The Carolyn Sills Combo Brian Setzer: Honoured with the with the Ameripolitan Master Award MARCH 2018 - cmp 5