Keith Urban, Kacey Musgraves, Dan + Shay win at ACM Awards
Longtime host Reba McEntire takes swipe at lack of female nominees in top category
Grammy-winning duo Dan + Shay solidified themselves as the hottest group in country music with multiple wins at the Academy of Country Music Awards, where Keith Urban was named entertainer of the year and Kacey Musgraves won three honours.
Urban won the top prize Sunday with his ninth nomination for the award, besting Chris Stapleton, Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney and Jason Aldean, who held the title the last three years.
"Baby girl, I love you so much," Urban said, looking to his actress-wife, Nicole Kidman.
"To the fans out there, you are amazing. You have no idea what you mean to me."
Urban also won entertainer of the year at the Country Music Association Awards in November — his first time winning the prize since 2005.
No women were nominated for the top ACM honour.
Musgraves was the sole women up for album of the year. She won twice when Golden Hour picked up top album — as an artist and co-producer of the project. She was also named female artist of the year.
The award "goes out to anyone woman, girl, or anybody really" who has been told "her perspective or style is too different," Musgraves said.
"Just stay at it. It'll work out."
Other categories didn't feature many female nominees: Bebe Rexha was the only woman competing for song of the year with Meant to Be, while Maddie & Tae was the sole female act up for duo of the year.
'This is all incredible:' Dan Smyers
But both honours, along with single of the year, went to Dan + Shay.
"I think somebody got the cards mixed up tonight," Dan Smyers said onstage at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas.
"This is all incredible. We are all winners tonight."
Smyers technically won five honours — picking up double wins in song of the year as artist and co-writer (shared with Jordan Reynolds and Nicolle Galyon) and single of the year as artist and co-producer (shared with Scott Hendricks). Shay Mooney, who won three awards for his role in the duo, didn't write or produce the song.
Even Thomas Rhett jokingly dedicated his male artist of the year trophy to Dan + Shay.
"I am going to give this to Dan + Shay so they can go home with four," Rhett said.
Rhett also gave a shout-out to his wife who sat in the audience: "You are smoking hot tonight."
Rhett performed Sunday, while Dan + Shay hit the stage to sing Keeping Score alongside Kelly Clarkson, hitting impressive high notes. Chris Stapleton's performance was also a highlight. The singer-songwriter, who often performs with Morgane Stapleton, his wife (who is pregnant), sang onstage as she held her hand over her stomach.
Emmy-nominated This Is Us actress Chrissy Metz made her live singing debut and gave an emotional performance onstage, teary-eyed at the song's end. Metz sang I'm Standing with You from the upcoming film Breakthrough, which she stars in. She was joined onstage by Carrie Underwood, Lauren Alaina, Mickey Guyton and Maddie & Tae — the performers all wore blue dresses and sang in unison.
Ashley McBryde, who won new female artist of the year, also was memorable: Nearly in tears, she strummed her guitar and beautifully sang Girl Goin' Nowhere. The 35-year-old was nominated for best country album at the Grammys and recently earned a Daytime Emmy nomination for her performance on CBS This Morning Saturday. McBryde shined again onstage when she joined Eric Church to sing The Snake.
Jason Aldean kicked off the awards show with a fun performance featuring the hit-making duo Florida Georgia Line. Aldean earned the Dick Clark Artist of the Decade Award.
"More than anything — thank you to the country music fans [and] country radio, you guys have changed my life forever," he said. "This is one of the proudest nights of my life."
Reba's real talk
Reba McEntire, who hosted the show for the 16th time, kept the audience in stitches. In her monologue, she mentioned the collaborative performances of the night — Khalid and Kane Brown and Brandi Carlile and Dierks Bentley, among others — and she said she would perform with rap star Cardi B.
They could sing her song No U in Oklahoma, she quipped before referencing the Grammy-winning rapper's catch-phrase: "And that's okurrr with me," earning laughs from the audience.
However, she also addressed the wider conversation about how the country music industry treats its female artists.
"People always ask me, 'Do you ever get tired of [hosting the awards show]?' ... "Heck no! My name is Reba McEntire and I haven't been tired in 53 years!"
She added: "I'm a woman in the music business and we don't have time for tired."
The music icon also took a more specific swipe at the show for its lack of female nominees in the top category, entertainer of the year.
Noting that it had snowed in Las Vegas in recent weeks, McEntire quipped: "It froze us women out of entertainer of the year. But you know what, that didn't bother Kacey Musgraves because she's been too busy carrying all her Grammys around."
At February's Grammy Awards gala, which honours the top U.S. achievements across all musical genres, Musgraves won four trophies: three in country categories as well as one of the night's top honours, album of the year.
With files from CBC News