Chattanooga Times Free Press

STAPLETON’S SUNDAY

CHRIS STAPLETON CELEBRATIN­G HIS 40TH BIRTHDAY, THE BIRTH OF HIS TWINS AND ALBUM OF THE YEAR WIN

- BY MESFIN FEKADU

Sunday is a day Chris Stapleton will always remember: His wife gave birth to twin boys, he celebrated his 40th birthday and he won album of the year at the Academy of Country Music Awards.

Stapleton didn’t attend the show in Las Vegas, but host Reba McEntire announced the birth of the boys when his album, “From a Room: Volume 1,” was named album of the year.

Stapleton, who released two top-selling albums last year, is the top nominee with eight. This year marks his first nomination for entertaine­r of the year, where he will battle Garth Brooks, Keith Urban, Luke Bryan and Jason Aldean, who has won the honor the last two years.

Miranda Lambert also made history Sunday: Her win for song of the year helped her surpass Brooks and Dunn as the most decorated act in ACM history with 31 wins.

“Thank you, guys, so much for sharing my broken heart with me,” Lambert said onstage, standing with “Tin Man” co-writers Jack Ingram and Jon Randall.

Lambert is the current record holder for most consecutiv­e wins for female vocalist of the year; this year her competitio­n in the category includes Underwood, McEntire, Maren Morris and Kelsea Ballerini.

Lambert helped the country music community, returning to Vegas six months after a massive shooting in the city, remember the victims not in song, but with words to open the ACM Awards.

Lambert said the world can be “united through the healing power of music,” while Bryan said “music helps us remember what really matters in life.” At the MGM Grand Garden Arena, Morris said music “makes us stronger” and Thomas Rhett said music gives us “a chance to rejoice.”

Aldean closed the emotional moment, saying in respect to the victims and music fans, “we celebrate the music tonight. America, this is your ACM Awards.”

Last October a lone gunman killed 58 people at country music’s Route 91 Harvest Festival in Sin City, becoming the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history. The ACMs, however, is typically known as the genre’s biggest party of the year.

Florida Georgia Line’s Tyler Hubbard wore an allred ensemble and Brian Kelley was in all-white when they hit the stage with pop singer Bebe Rexha to perform the massive hit “Meant to Be,” which is spending its 19th week on top of Billboard’s Hot country songs chart. It ties Leroy Van Dyke’s “Walk On By” as the third longest-running song of all-time on the chart.

Little Big Town sang Elton John’s “Rocket Man” in celebratio­n of the icon’s new album, “Restoratio­n,” which features country singers covering his songs. Kane Brown and Lauren Alaina were impressive when they sang their duet, “What Ifs.”

Kenny Chesney, Alan Jackson, Lady Antebellum and Dierks Bentley also performed.

McEntire, who will also hit the stage, is hosting the show a year after Bryan and Bentley did the job.

“It takes one woman to do the job of two men,” she said, earning a rousing applause.

Rhett earned six nomination­s, Urban and songwriter-producer Shane McAnally are up for five awards, and Lambert and Morris will each compete for four honors.

Little Big Town, Midland and Sam Hunt, whose “Body Like a Back Road” is the longest-running No. 1 song of all-time on Billboard’s Hot country songs chart, all have three nomination­s each.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Reba McEntire, center, accepts the award for album of the year for “From A Room: Volume 1” on behalf of Chris Stapleton at the 53rd annual Academy of Country Music Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Sunday in Las Vegas.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Reba McEntire, center, accepts the award for album of the year for “From A Room: Volume 1” on behalf of Chris Stapleton at the 53rd annual Academy of Country Music Awards at the MGM Grand Garden Arena on Sunday in Las Vegas.

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