The Hamilton Spectator

Kenny Chesney enjoys his first solo Grammy nomination

- SARAH RODMAN

Given that he routinely fills stadiums and has notched 30 No. 1 hits, it’s a pleasant surprise for Kenny Chesney to still be experienci­ng firsts in his 20-plus-year career. Tuesday morning he celebrated his first solo Grammy nomination: best country album for “Cosmic Hallelujah.”

“To me, the Grammys represent the best of what all music is,” Chesney exclusivel­y told The Times. “It’s everyone who makes music, who creates and plays, coming together as one big family — and really considerin­g the best of the year.”

The Tennessee native has previously been nominated five times, including nods for duets with Pink (2016’s “Setting the World on Fire”) and Grace Potter (“You and Tequila” from 2011) and group outings with friends like Jimmy Buffett and Alan Jackson. But all of those were either in the duo/group or collaborat­ion categories so this solo recognitio­n was particular­ly meaningful.

That the album also took risks both creatively and promotiona­lly makes the nomination that much sweeter. While “Cosmic Hallelujah” features its share of good-time party fare, Chesney says, “We also invested in a larger dialogue about our world. Right now, it seems like that mattered more than a lot of people realized at the time.”

“For ‘Cosmic Hallelujah’ more than any album, we defied convention­al wisdom every way possible,” said Chesney, noting the decision to change the first single to the song “Noise” nine days before release because it “felt so topical and urgent.”

That song, a catchy lament for our informatio­n overloaded times hit No. 6 and was followed by two No. 1s “Setting the World on Fire” and “All the Pretty Girls.”

“This album, I did what I felt was the right thing to do for the music. People didn’t always understand,” said Chesney, who recently hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with “Live in No Shoes Nation,” a compendium of live recordings from the last decade. “But when you can put songs like ‘Noise’ onto country radio, or make videos like ‘Rich & Miserable’ with an actor like John C. McGinley — even though it’s not going to be a single — and get people to think about the world around them, that’s powerful.”

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