
Garth Brooks wins Entertainer of the Year at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: Donn Jones / CMA
The ABC-TV network telecast of the 51st Annual CMA Awards conveyed a theme of love, unity and respect while honoring some of the genre’s most recognizable names.
Garth Brooks repeated his 2016 win as Entertainer of the Year. This set a CMA record of six wins for him in this category. Miranda Lambert also made history, claiming her seventh Female Vocalist award.
Little Big Town won its sixth Vocal Group prize. Mac McAnally topped his own record with his ninth Musician of the Year win. Chris Stapleton claimed his third Male Vocalist honor as well as Album of the Year. Brothers Osborne were also double winners, garnering Duo and Video awards.
Winners’ remarks and show highlights stressed a theme of unity and healing in the face of national catastrophes, including October’s mass shooting of fans during a country-music festival in Las Vegas.
“Tonight should be about harmony and what we can do together to change things,” said Karen Fairchild of Little Big Town. “Kindness is an attractive quality. We can change things if we step out together.”
“More than any other year, I feel like there is a family in the room tonight,” said Lambert.
“Miranda said it best: We are family,” echoed Brooks. “The most important people…are the people who allow us to do what we do – the fans.”

Carrie Underwood performs “Softly and Tenderly” at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. [Click to enlarge] Photo: Donn Jones / CMA
The show opened with
Eric Church singing “Amazing Grace” and then
Darius Rucker leading an all-star assemblage in performing his uplifting 1994 Hootie & The Blowfish hit “Hold My Hand.”
Co-hosts Carrie Underwood and Brad Paisley set the tone for the show. “This has been a year marked by tragedy,” said Underwood. “So tonight we’re going to do what families do—come together, pray together, cry together and sing together. Our music lifts…”
Later in the show, she stood in the center of Bridgestone Arena and sang “Softly and Tenderly” as photos of country-music folks we lost during the past year appeared. The segment concluded with portraits of all 58 Las Vegas victims.
One of the late performers she saluted was a 2017 award winner. Glen Campbell and Willie Nelson’s performance of “Funny How Time Slips Away” on Campbell’s final Adios album claimed the Music Event award.
Little Big Town performed a flawlessly harmonized version of Campbell’s “Wichita Lineman” in tribute. Jimmy Webb, the song’s composer, accompanied the group on piano.

Brothers Osborne performs “It Aint My Fault” and “Tulsa Time” at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: Donn Jones/CMA
Dierks Bentley and Rascal Flatts saluted the late Troy Gentry by singing “My Town” on the show. Gentry’s duo partner Eddie Montgomery came onstage to sing the last verse and offered a shout-out to “T-Roy.” Angie Gentry, the star’s widow, wept in the crowd.
Brothers Osborne rocked their hit “It Ain’t My Fault” and then shifted gears into “Tulsa Time” to honor the late Don Williams.
Another highlight was Keith Urban’s introduction of his pulsing, heart-in-throat song “Female” as an anti-sexual harassment statement.
Kane Brown’s appearance with Brad Paisley during the cheery, downhome “Heaven South” was a statement of inclusion. Paisley’s t-shirt read, “Unity.”
Presenter Tyler Perry also offered a rebuke to the more extreme elements of Trump Nation. “It’s important that we come together and find some common ground, and realize that we are more alike than not alike,” he said.
Rucker’s show-opening appearance and the prominence of The McCrary Sisters and Joanna Cotton during the Eric Church performance of “Chattanooga Lucy” also underscored the theme of diversity and inclusion.

Chris Stapleton performs “Broken Halos” at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: John Russell/CMA
Another musical highlight was Lambert’s stone-country delivery of “To Learn Her,” which earned her a standing ovation. The same was true for Stapleton’s soulful performance of “Broken Halos” and for Alan Jackson’s plain-spoken delivery of “Chasin’ That Neon Rainbow.”
Brooks earned a long ovation for a torrid, dramatic performance of his current hit “Ask Me How I Know.” He shared his microphone with Mitch Rossell, who co-wrote the song.
Tim McGraw and Faith Hill electrified the arena with the deeply romantic “The Rest of Our Life.” Reba McEntire offered an effective alto harmony on Kelsea Ballerini’s “Legends.”
Other performances included Pink’s acoustic ballad “Barbie,” Old Dominion’s hit “No Such Thing as a Broken Heart,” Maren Morris and Niall Horan’s mash up of “I Could Use a Love Song” with “Seeing Blind,” Thomas Rhett’s “Unforgettable” and New Artist of the Year winner Jon Pardi’s “Dirt on My Boots.”
Luke Bryan’s “Light It Up” led into a Chevy commercial by him. Lauren Alaina sang The Youngbloods’ 1967 hippie peace anthem “Get Together” with Dan + Shay, which led into a Walmart commercial utilizing the same song.

Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood host The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: Donn Jones/CMA
Many of ABC’s TV stars were included as presenters, alongside such country artists as Trisha Yearwood, Brett Young, Luke Combs, radio winner Bobby Bones, Kellie Pickler, Brett Eldredge and an apparently reunited Sugarland.
Urban’s “Blue Ain’t Your Color” won Single of the Year. Taylor Swift’s “Better Man,” a hit for Little Big Town, won Song of the Year.
The CMA Awards telecast had many moments of levity, as well as healing. Co-host Paisley provided most of these, offering parody tunes ranging from “Before He Tweets” to “Total Eclipse of the Garth.”
The show’s theme of unity-through-song led Paisley to go off script at one point. “The warmth in this room tonight is amazing,” he stated. He also offered the telecast’s benediction: “This show is dedicated to all those we have lost….we will never forget you.”
New Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Jackson closed the program with Paisley and Underwood doing a rousing rendition of “Don’t Rock the Jukebox.”
Weekly Chart Report 11/10/17
/by Alex ParryClick here or above to access MusicRow‘s weekly CountryBreakout Report.
Alan Jackson’s Honky Tonk Highway Tour To Keep Rolling In 2018
/by Sarah SkatesAlan Jackson performs on the 51st Annual CMA Awards. Photo: ABC/Image Group LA
Alan Jackson is extending his Honky Tonk Highway Tour into 2018. This announcement follows his show-ending CMA Awards performance Wednesday night (Nov. 8), celebrating his 2017 induction to the Country Music Hall of Fame. Jackson and his band, The Strayhorns, closed out “Country Music’s Biggest Night” with back-to-back performances of “Chasin’ That Neon Rainbow” and “Don’t Rock the Jukebox” (the latter with hosts Carrie Underwood and Brad Paisley).
The next leg of his tour opens January 19, visiting arenas, amphitheatres, and festivals.
Jackson is again teaming up with CID Entertainment to offer fans VIP experiences at many of his 2018 shows.
Honky Tonk Highway Tour 2018
Friday, January 19 – Lexington, KY (Rupp Arena) **++
Saturday, January 20 – Little Rock, AR (Verizon Arena) ^^++
Thursday, February 8 – Independence, MO (Silverstein Eye Centers Arena) ^^
Friday, February 9 – Indianapolis, IN (Bankers Life Fieldhouse) ^^
Thursday, February 15 – San Antonio, TX (San Antonio Stock Show & Rodeo) **
Friday, February 16 – Grand Prairie, TX (Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie) ^^
Friday, March 23 – Toledo, OH (Huntington Center)
Saturday, May 24 – Pittsburgh, PA (Venue TBD)
Friday, April 27 – Baltimore, MD (Royal Farms Arena)
Saturday, April 28 – Albany, NY (Times Union Center) ^^
Friday, May 4 – Tuscaloosa, AL (Tuscaloosa Amphitheatre)
Saturday, June 23 – Orange Beach, FL (The Wharf) ^^
Friday, July 27 – Central Point, OR (Country Crossing Music Festival) **
Saturday, July 28 – Mountain Home, ID (Mountain Home Country Music Festival) **
Thursday, August 16 – Vienna, VA (Wolf Trap)
Friday, August 17 – Gilford, NH (Bank of New Hampshire Pavilion) ^^
Saturday, September 15 – Charlotte, NC (Spectrum Center) ^^
**Date is already onsale
^^Tickets onsale Friday, November 17
++with special guest Lauren Alaina
Sony Music Nashville Artists Shine on 51st CMA Awards
/by Sarah SkatesPictured (L-R): Ken Robold, EVP/COO, Sony Music Nashville; River House Artists/Columbia Nashville’s Luke Combs; Matthew Ramsey of RCA Nashville’s Old Dominion; RCA Nashville/Zone 4’s Kane Brown; and Randy Goodman, Chairman/CEO, Sony Music Nashville. Photo: Alan Poizner
Sony Music Nashville staff, artists and guests celebrated a successful night at the CMA Awards on Wednesday with a party at The Bell Tower in downtown Nashville.
14-time CMA Award winner Brad Paisley, marked his 10th consecutive year as co-host of the show. Lead nominee for the night, Miranda Lambert received her record-extending 7th Female Vocalist of the Year award.
The evening’s all-star performances included “The Rest of Our Life” by Arista Nashville’s Tim McGraw and Faith Hill, whose first collaborative studio album streets Nov. 17; “Heaven South” by Arista Nashville’s Paisley and RCA Nashville/Zone 4’s Kane Brown; “I Could Use a Love Song” by Columbia Nashville’s Maren Morris (also performing “Seeing Blind” with Niall Horan); “No Such Thing as a Broken Heart” by RCA Nashville’s Old Dominion; and “To Learn Her” by Vanner Records/RCA Nashville’s Lambert.
Pictured (L-R): Columbia Nashville’s Maren Morris and Randy Goodman, Chairman/CEO, Sony Music Nashville. Photo: Erika Goldring Photography.
Pictured (L-R): ShopKeeper Management’s Crystal Dismon and Marion Kraft; Randy Goodman, Chairman/CEO, Sony Music Nashville; Vanner Records/RCA Nashville’s Miranda Lambert; Rob Stringer, CEO, Sony Music Entertainment. Photo: Alan Poizner.
Pictured (L-R): Rob Stringer, CEO, Sony Music Entertainment; RCA Record’s P!NK; Vanner Records/RCA Nashville’s Miranda Lambert; and, Randy Goodman, Chairman/CEO, Sony Music Nashville. Photo: Erika Goldring Photography.
Maverick Acquires Big Loud Management
/by Jessica NicholsonThe deal does not include Big Loud’s label and publishing divisions. In 2014, Guy Oseary launched the Maverick venture with Cortez Bryant, Ron Laffitte, Adam Leber, Gee Roberson, Scott Rodger, Larry Rudolph, and Caron Veazey. Nashville management company Spalding Entertainment joined the Maverick umbrella in 2014. In Nashville, Big Loud Management and Spalding will maintain separate offices.
Among the collective’s additional clients are Britney Spears, Madonna, U2, Shania Twain, and more.
CMA Awards Win Night For ABC-TV With More Than 14 Million Viewers
/by Sarah Skates“Total Eclipse of the Garth”: Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood keep the crowd laughing with parody tunes at The 51st Annual CMA Awards.
The 51st Annual CMA Awards won the ratings race on Wednesday night, and saw an uptick from 2016.
Airing live on ABC-TV from the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville, the show drew 14.29 million viewers, up from 12.5 million in 2016, and 13.6 million in 2015. (Last year’s event aired opposite Game 7 of a historic World Series). Among adults 18-49, the 2017 CMA awards drew a 3.2 rating, an increase from 2.9 in 2016.
Source: The Nielsen Company, posted on Zap2it.com.
CMA Awards Viewership (live and same day)
2016—12.5 million viewers
2015—13.6 million
2014—16.1 million
2013—16.8 million
2012— 13.6 million
2011—16.3 million
2010—16.45 million
2009—17.2 million
2008 —15.9 million
BMLG Celebrates CMA Awards, Welcomes Return of Sugarland
/by Sarah SkatesPictured (L-R): Back Row – Brett Young; Drake White; Midland’s Cameron Duddy, Mark Wystrach, Jess Carson; Trent Harmon and Lauren Jenkins; Front Row – BMLG COO Andrew Kautz, Carly Pearce, BMLG President/CEO Scott Borchetta, BMLG SVP Creative Sandi Spika Borchetta, Danielle Bradbery and EVP BMLG/President BMLG Records Jimmy Harnen
Big Machine Label Group hosted its annual CMA Awards After Party in Nashville at FGL House to celebrate “Country Music’s Biggest Night” and the reunion of Sugarland.
BMLG’s Reba McEntire, Ronnie Dunn and Thomas Rhett were part of the awards show’s all-star opening, singing “Hold My Hand.” McEntire performed “Legends” alongside Kelsea Ballerini as well as presented Entertainer of the Year to Garth Brooks to close the show. Thomas Rhett performed his latest chart-topping single “Unforgettable.”
Brett Young presented Song of the Year to Little Big Town, who accepted on behalf of BMLG labelmate Taylor Swift for penning the band’s “Better Man.” (Swift’s highly-anticipated sixth studio album reputation will be released tomorrow).
Alongside label family, friends and industry executives BMLG President/CEO Scott Borchetta toasted with Big Machine Platinum Filtered Premium Vodka to the return of Sugarland, who had presented on the awards show earlier in the night. At the after-party, Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush took the stage to perform smash hits including “Baby Girl” and “Stay.”
Among those in attendance were Mayor Megan Barry, NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson and ABC’s The Bachelorette’s Luke Pell.
Photos Courtesy of Getty Images for BMLG
Sugarland returns for an acoustic set of their smash hits.
Pictured (L-R): Carly Pearce, Drake White, Trent Harmon, Danielle Bradbery, Brett Young
Pictured (L-R): EVP BMLG/President BMLG Records Jimmy Harnen, Brett Young and BMLG President/CEO Scott Borchetta
Warner Music Nashville Celebrates 2017 With CMA After-Party
/by Sarah SkatesWarner Music Nashville toasted awards season ahead of the 51st Annual CMA Awards this week with a spirited celebration surrounded by its label family, artists and management teams, gathering with WMN Chairman and CEO John Esposito to celebrate the year’s accomplishments. From Chris Janson, RaeLynn and Brett Eldredge’s No. 1 debuts on the Billboard country albums charts, to Blake Shelton, High Valley and Cole Swindell’s sold-out tour stops, the WMN family had much for which to be thankful for.
Additionally, following the 51st Annual CMA Awards, artists, staff and industry guests gathered at the George Jones Museum downtown, pictured below.
Photos by John Shearer/Getty Images for Warner Music Nashville
Pictured (L-R) Row 4: Monique Benjamin (SVP Finance), William Michael Morgan, Megan Joyce (SVP Business & Legal Affairs), Curtis Rempel (High Valley), Brad Rempel (High Valley), Matt Signore (COO), Morgan Evans, Ben Kline (SVP Global Revenue & Touring)
Row 3: Cale Dodds, Tim Foisset (VP Streaming), Frankie Ballard, Cole Swindell, John Esposito (Chairman & CEO), Brett Eldredge, Chris Janson, Sophie Dawn (Walker County), Ivy Dene (Walker County)
Row 2: Shane Tarleton (SVP Artist Development), Dan Smyers (Dan + Shay), Shay Mooney (Dan + Shay), Scott Hendricks (EVP A&R), Michael Ray, Devin Dawson, Ryan Kinder, Ashley McBryde, Cris Lacy (SVP A&R)
Row 1: Tegan Marie, Kristen Williams (SVP Radio & Streaming), RaeLynn, Hunter Hayes, Bailey Bryan, Wes Vause (SVP Publicity), Randy Travis.
Pictured (L-R): Michael Ray, Curtis Rempel, Brett Eldredge, Brad Rempel, and Cale Dodds.
Pictured (L-R): Chairman & CEO Warner Music Nashville John Esposito, Ashley McBryde, and Brett Eldredge
Pictured (L-R): Devin Dawson, Chairman & CEO Warner Music Nashville John Esposito, and Morgan Evans
Adkins Publicity Signs Tanya Tucker
/by Jessica NicholsonTanya Tucker
Tanya Tucker has joined recently-launched public relations company Adkins Publicity.
Tucker is the latest in a string of signings with the company, which owner Scott Adkins launched after exiting Webster PR. Others recently added to the Adkins Publicity roster include Gene Watson, Lucas Hoge, Phil Vassar, The Bellamy Brothers, Naomi Judd and Billy Ray Cyrus.
Tucker, a CMA and ACM-winning vocalist known for hits including “Delta Dawn,” “Two Sparrows In A Hurricane,” and “A Little Too Late,” recently performed on TBN’s Huckabee, NBC’s TODAY Show and graced the cover of Closer Weekly. She also recently appeared on Inside Edition, Fox News Edge, The Insider, Lifeminute, Celebrity Page and SiriusXM.
UMG Nashville Toasts Wins By Chris Stapleton, Keith Urban and More
/by Sarah SkatesUniversal Music Group Nashville celebrated the 51st Annual CMA Awards at an after-party at the Musicians Hall of Fame & Museum on Wednesday night (Nov. 8).
The label group brought home multiple trophies including Keith Urban, Single of the Year for “Blue Ain’t Your Color;” Jon Pardi, New Artist of the Year; Chris Stapleton, Male Vocalist of the Year and Album of the Year for From A Room: Volume 1; Brothers Osborne, Vocal Duo of the Year and Music Video of the Year for “It Ain’t My Fault;” and Little Big Town, Vocal Group of the Year.
(L-R): UMGN President Cindy Mabe, Darius Rucker, UMGN Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, UMG CFO and EVP – Boyd Muir. Photo Credit: Chris Hollo
(L-R): UMG CFO and EVP Boyd Muir, John Osborne (Brothers Osborne), TJ Osborne (Brothers Osborne), UMGN President Cindy Mabe, Jon Pardi, UMGN Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan. Photo Credit: Chris Hollo
(L-R): UMG CFO and EVP Boyd Muir, UMGN Chairman and CEO Mike Dungan, UMGN President Cindy Mabe, Hannah Lee Hunt, Sam Hunt. Photo Credit: Chris Hollo
Garth And Miranda Make History At CMA “Unity” Show
/by Robert K OermannGarth Brooks wins Entertainer of the Year at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: Donn Jones / CMA
The ABC-TV network telecast of the 51st Annual CMA Awards conveyed a theme of love, unity and respect while honoring some of the genre’s most recognizable names.
Garth Brooks repeated his 2016 win as Entertainer of the Year. This set a CMA record of six wins for him in this category. Miranda Lambert also made history, claiming her seventh Female Vocalist award.
Little Big Town won its sixth Vocal Group prize. Mac McAnally topped his own record with his ninth Musician of the Year win. Chris Stapleton claimed his third Male Vocalist honor as well as Album of the Year. Brothers Osborne were also double winners, garnering Duo and Video awards.
Winners’ remarks and show highlights stressed a theme of unity and healing in the face of national catastrophes, including October’s mass shooting of fans during a country-music festival in Las Vegas.
“Tonight should be about harmony and what we can do together to change things,” said Karen Fairchild of Little Big Town. “Kindness is an attractive quality. We can change things if we step out together.”
“More than any other year, I feel like there is a family in the room tonight,” said Lambert.
“Miranda said it best: We are family,” echoed Brooks. “The most important people…are the people who allow us to do what we do – the fans.”
Carrie Underwood performs “Softly and Tenderly” at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. [Click to enlarge] Photo: Donn Jones / CMA
Co-hosts Carrie Underwood and Brad Paisley set the tone for the show. “This has been a year marked by tragedy,” said Underwood. “So tonight we’re going to do what families do—come together, pray together, cry together and sing together. Our music lifts…”
Later in the show, she stood in the center of Bridgestone Arena and sang “Softly and Tenderly” as photos of country-music folks we lost during the past year appeared. The segment concluded with portraits of all 58 Las Vegas victims.
One of the late performers she saluted was a 2017 award winner. Glen Campbell and Willie Nelson’s performance of “Funny How Time Slips Away” on Campbell’s final Adios album claimed the Music Event award.
Little Big Town performed a flawlessly harmonized version of Campbell’s “Wichita Lineman” in tribute. Jimmy Webb, the song’s composer, accompanied the group on piano.
Brothers Osborne performs “It Aint My Fault” and “Tulsa Time” at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: Donn Jones/CMA
Dierks Bentley and Rascal Flatts saluted the late Troy Gentry by singing “My Town” on the show. Gentry’s duo partner Eddie Montgomery came onstage to sing the last verse and offered a shout-out to “T-Roy.” Angie Gentry, the star’s widow, wept in the crowd.
Brothers Osborne rocked their hit “It Ain’t My Fault” and then shifted gears into “Tulsa Time” to honor the late Don Williams.
Another highlight was Keith Urban’s introduction of his pulsing, heart-in-throat song “Female” as an anti-sexual harassment statement.
Kane Brown’s appearance with Brad Paisley during the cheery, downhome “Heaven South” was a statement of inclusion. Paisley’s t-shirt read, “Unity.”
Presenter Tyler Perry also offered a rebuke to the more extreme elements of Trump Nation. “It’s important that we come together and find some common ground, and realize that we are more alike than not alike,” he said.
Rucker’s show-opening appearance and the prominence of The McCrary Sisters and Joanna Cotton during the Eric Church performance of “Chattanooga Lucy” also underscored the theme of diversity and inclusion.
Chris Stapleton performs “Broken Halos” at The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: John Russell/CMA
Another musical highlight was Lambert’s stone-country delivery of “To Learn Her,” which earned her a standing ovation. The same was true for Stapleton’s soulful performance of “Broken Halos” and for Alan Jackson’s plain-spoken delivery of “Chasin’ That Neon Rainbow.”
Brooks earned a long ovation for a torrid, dramatic performance of his current hit “Ask Me How I Know.” He shared his microphone with Mitch Rossell, who co-wrote the song.
Tim McGraw and Faith Hill electrified the arena with the deeply romantic “The Rest of Our Life.” Reba McEntire offered an effective alto harmony on Kelsea Ballerini’s “Legends.”
Other performances included Pink’s acoustic ballad “Barbie,” Old Dominion’s hit “No Such Thing as a Broken Heart,” Maren Morris and Niall Horan’s mash up of “I Could Use a Love Song” with “Seeing Blind,” Thomas Rhett’s “Unforgettable” and New Artist of the Year winner Jon Pardi’s “Dirt on My Boots.”
Luke Bryan’s “Light It Up” led into a Chevy commercial by him. Lauren Alaina sang The Youngbloods’ 1967 hippie peace anthem “Get Together” with Dan + Shay, which led into a Walmart commercial utilizing the same song.
Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood host The 51st Annual CMA Awards, live Wednesday, Nov. 8 at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville and broadcast on the ABC Television Network. Photo: Donn Jones/CMA
Many of ABC’s TV stars were included as presenters, alongside such country artists as Trisha Yearwood, Brett Young, Luke Combs, radio winner Bobby Bones, Kellie Pickler, Brett Eldredge and an apparently reunited Sugarland.
Urban’s “Blue Ain’t Your Color” won Single of the Year. Taylor Swift’s “Better Man,” a hit for Little Big Town, won Song of the Year.
The CMA Awards telecast had many moments of levity, as well as healing. Co-host Paisley provided most of these, offering parody tunes ranging from “Before He Tweets” to “Total Eclipse of the Garth.”
The show’s theme of unity-through-song led Paisley to go off script at one point. “The warmth in this room tonight is amazing,” he stated. He also offered the telecast’s benediction: “This show is dedicated to all those we have lost….we will never forget you.”
New Country Music Hall of Fame inductee Jackson closed the program with Paisley and Underwood doing a rousing rendition of “Don’t Rock the Jukebox.”