ACM Awards: The Winners [Updated]

ACM Awards: The Winners [Updated]

We’ll be updating this post as the winners for the 54th ACM Awards are announced.

TV broadcast begins at 7 p.m. CT on CBS.

New Female Artist of the Year

  • Danielle Bradbery
  • Lindsay Ell
  • Ashley McBryde WINNER
  • Carly Pearce

New Male Artist of the Year

  • Jimmie Allen
  • Luke Combs WINNER
  • Jordan Davis
  • Michael Ray
  • Mitchell Tenpenny

New Duo/Group of the Year

  • High Valley
  • LANCO WINNER
  • Runaway June

Music Event of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]

  • Burning Man – Dierks Bentley featuring Brothers Osborne WINNER
    • Producers: Ross Copperman / Jon Randall Stewart / Arturo Buenahora Jr.
    • Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
  • Drowns the Whiskey – Jason Aldean featuring Miranda Lambert
    • Producer: Michael Knox
    • Record Labels: Macon Music, LLC; Broken Bow Records; BBR Music Group; BMG
  • Everything’s Gonna Be Alright – David Lee Murphy featuring Kenny Chesney
    • Producers: Buddy Cannon / Kenny Chesney / David Lee Murphy
    • Record Label: Reviver Records
  • Keeping Score – Dan + Shay featuring Kelly Clarkson
    • Producers: Scott Hendricks / Dan Smyers
    • Record Label: Warner Music Nashville
  • Meant To Be – Bebe Rexha Featuring Florida Georgia Line
    • Producer: Wilshire for Rock The Soul Ent
    • Record Label: Warner Bros. Records

Group of the Year

  • Lady Antebellum
  • LANCO
  • Little Big Town
  • Midland
  • Old Dominion WINNER

Video of the Year [Awarded to Producer(s)/Director(s)/Artist(s)]

  • Babe – Sugarland featuring Taylor Swift
    • Producer: Roger Hunt
    • Director: Anthony Mandler
  • Burn Out – Midland
    • Producer: Ben Skipworth
    • Director: TK McKamy / Cameron Duddy
  • Burning Man – Dierks Bentley featuring Brothers Osborne
    • Producer: Nate Eggert
    • Director: Wes Edwards
  • Drunk Girl – Chris Janson WINNER
    • Producer: Ben Skipworth
    • Director: Jeff Venable
  • Shoot Me Straight – Brothers Osborne
    • Producer: April Kimbrell
    • Director: Wes Edwards / Ryan Silver
  • Tequila – Dan + Shay
    • Producer: Christen Pinkston
    • Director: Patrick Tracy

Song of the Year (Awarded to Songwriter/Publisher/Artist)

  • Break Up In The End – Cole Swindell
    • Writers: Jessie Jo Dillon / Chase McGill / Jon Nite
    • Publishers: EMI April Music Inc. / Nite Writer Music (ASCAP) / Songs of Universal, Inc. / Plum Nelly (BMI) / Big Music Machine (BMI)/ Big Ass Pile Of Dimes Music (BMI)
  • Broken Halos – Chris Stapleton
    • Writers: Mike Henderson, Chris Stapleton
    • Publishers: WB Music Corp./House of Sea Gayle Music, admin. by ClearBox Rights/Spirit Catalog Holdings, S.a.r.l. admin. by Spirit Two Nashville (ASCAP); Straight Six Music (BMI)
  • Meant To Be – Bebe Rexha featuring Florida Georgia Line
    • Writers: David Garcia, Tyler Hubbard, Joshua Miller, Bebe Rexha
    • Publishers: BMG Platinum Songs/Kiss Me If You Can Music (BMI) (all rights administered by BMG Rights Management (US) LLC) Big Loud Mountain (BMI) and T Hubb Publishing (BMI). All Rights Administered by Round Hill Works. Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. on behalf of itself and Songs of the Corn and Jack 10 Publishing. Universal Music – Brentwood Benson Publishing (ASCAP) D Soul Music (ASCAP) (adm. at CapitolCMGPublishing.com)
  • Space Cowboy – Kacey Musgraves
    • Writers: Luke Laird, Shane McAnally, Kacey Musgraves
    • Publishers: Smack Hits/Smack Songs, admin by Kobalt Music Group ltd. (GMR); Universal Music Works/We Are Creative NBaSmack Hits/Smack Songs, LLC, admin. by Kobalt Music Group Ltd. (GMR); Universal Music Works/We Are Creative Nation/Jake and Mack Music, admin. by Universal Music Works; Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp./351 Music (BMI).
  • Tequila – Dan + Shay WINNER
    • Writers: Nicolle Galyon / Jordan Reynolds / Dan Smyers
    • Publishers: Beats and Banjos (ASCAP), WB Music Corp. (ASCAP), A Girl Named Charlie (BMI) / Warner-Tamerlane Publishing Corp. (BMI) / Buckeye26 (ASCAP) / Jreynmusic (ASCAP)
  • Yours – Russell Dickerson
    • Writers: Casey Brown / Russell Dickerson / Parker Welling
    • Publishers: BMG Platinum Songs/Kailey’s Dream / So Essential Tunes / Not Just Another Song Publishing / Hillbilly Science and Research Publishing/Trailerlily Music

Single of the Year [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]

  • Down to the Honky Tonk – Jake Owen
    • Producer: Joey Moi
    • Record Label: Big Loud Records
  • Heaven – Kane Brown
    • Producer: Dann Huff / Polow Da Don
    • Record Label: RCA Nashville
  • Meant To Be – Bebe Rexha featuring Florida Georgia Line
    • Producer: Wilshire for Rock The Soul Ent
    • Record Label: Warner Bros. Records
  • Most People Are Good – Luke Bryan
    • Producers: Jeff Stevens / Jody Stevens
    • Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
  • Tequila – Dan + Shay WINNER
    • Producers: Scott Hendricks / Dan Smyers
    • Record Label: Warner Music Nashville

Duo of the Year

  • Brothers Osborne
  • Dan + Shay WINNER
  • Florida Georgia Line
  • LOCASH
  • Maddie & Tae

Male Artist of the Year

  • Dierks Bentley
  • Luke Combs
  • Thomas Rhett WINNER
  • Chris Stapleton
  • Keith Urban

Female Artist of the Year

  • Miranda Lambert
  • Ashley McBryde
  • Maren Morris
  • Kacey Musgraves WINNER
  • Carrie Underwood

Entertainer of the Year

  • Jason Aldean
  • Luke Bryan
  • Kenny Chesney
  • Chris Stapleton
  • Keith Urban WINNER

Songwriter of the Year

  • Ross Copperman
  • Ashley Gorley
  • Shane McAnally WINNER
  • Chase McGill
  • Josh Osborne

ALBUM OF THE YEAR [Awarded to Artist(s)/Producer(s)/Record Company–Label(s)]

  • The Mountain – Dierks Bentley
    • Producers: Ross Copperman / Jon Randall Stewart / Arturo Buenahora Jr.
    • Record Label: Capitol Records Nashville
  • Dan + Shay – Dan + Shay
    • Producers: Scott Hendricks / Dan Smyers / Matt Dragstrem
    • Record Label: Warner Music Nashville
  • Desperate Man – Eric Church
    • Producers: Jay Joyce / Arturo Buenahora Jr.
    • Record Label: EMI Records Nashville
  • From A Room: Volume 2 – Chris Stapleton
    • Producers: Dave Cobb / Chris Stapleton
    • Record Label: Mercury Nashville
  • Golden Hour – Kacey Musgraves WINNER
    • Producers: Ian Fitchuk / Daniel Tashian / Kacey Musgraves
    • Record Label: MCA Nashvile
Barnes Named Werner Naismith College Coach of the Year

Barnes Named Werner Naismith College Coach of the Year

Credit: UT Athletics

During its annual Naismith Awards Brunch at the Final Four Sunday in Minneapolis, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced that Tennessee’s Rick Barnes is the winner of the 2019 Werner Ladder Naismith Men’s Coach of the Year Award.

Barnes was the runner-up for the award last season. He becomes the first Tennessee men’s coach to win the award, adding to the five honors held by legendary Lady Vols head coach, the late Pat Summitt.

Barnes was chosen by the Atlanta Tipoff Club’s national voting academy, comprised of leading journalists from around the country, current and former head coaches, former award winners and conference commissioners, all of whom base their selections on outstanding coaching performances during the 2018-19 college basketball season. Additionally, fans contributed to five percent of the total vote.

Rick Barnes has built an incredible program at Tennessee, and his coaching performance this season was worthy of the top award in college basketball, the Werner Ladder Naismith Trophy Men’s Coach of the Year,” Atlanta Tipoff Club Executive Director Eric Oberman said. “We are honored to recognize Rick as the newest member of the Naismith Awards family.”

It is the second national coach of the year honor for Barnes this season, as the USBWA previously named him the “overwhelming” winner of its 2019 Henry Iba Award.

During Sunday’s brunch, Barnes was presented with the Werner Ladder Naismith Coach of the Year commemorative trophy designed by nationally acclaimed sculptor Brian Hanlon. The bronze trophy features Dr. James Naismith, inventor of the sport of basketball, holding the original peach basket and ball used to play the first game.

Barnes edged out three other Naismith Coach of the Year finalists in Chris Beard (Texas Tech), Tony Bennett (Virginia) and Kelvin Sampson (Houston).

Rick Barnes and his fellow finalists have led their teams to great seasons, and each of them has impacted the sport of basketball through their coaching and strong leadership,” WernerCo. Vice President of Brand Marketing Stacy Gardella said. “We are excited to honor Rick as the Werner Ladder Naismith Men’s College Coach of the Year for his dedication to his team and college basketball.”

Sunday’s Naismith award caps an impressive honors haul for Barnes over the last two seasons, during which he’s guided the Volunteers to a 57-15 overall record and established Tennessee as a mainstay in the top 20.

This season, Barnes led the Big Orange to a school-record-tying 31 wins and a school-record 19-game win streak. For the first time in program history, Tennessee spent the entire season ranked in the top 10, and the Vols occupied the No. 1 spot in both major polls for four consecutive weeks.

Tennessee scored more than 3,000 points for the first time in program history and also set single-season records for assists (661) and blocks (199).

Outstanding player development has been a pillar of the program during Barnes’ four years on Rocky Top, and 2018-19 was no exception.

Former three-star recruit Grant Williams repeated as SEC Player of the Year and garnered consensus first-team All-America acclaim after overcoming consistent double-teams to post career-bests in scoring (18.8 ppg), rebounding (7.5 rpg), assists (3.2 apg), steals (1.1 spg) and field-goal percentage (.565).

Williams also was present at Sunday’s Naismith Awards Brunch, as he was one of four finalists for the Naismith Trophy Men’s National Player of the Year Award. Other finalists were Gonzaga’s Rui Hachimura, Murray State’s Ja Morant and Duke’s Zion Williamson. Williamsson won the Naismith Trophy.

Senior wing Admiral Schofield—another former three-star prospect—earned honorable mention All-America status and first-team All-SEC honors after averaging career-highs in scoring (16.5 ppg), 3-pointers made (74) and 3-point percentage (.418).

Junior point guard Jordan Bone dished out 215 assists this season after totaling 190 in his first two seasons combined. His 2.91 assist/turnover ratio led the SEC. Bone entered this season with a 7.3 ppg scoring average and nearly doubled that by averaging 13.5 ppg in 37 games.

The Vols concluded their season last week in the Sweet Sixteen round of the NCAA Tournament. It was Barnes’s seventh career Sweet Sixteen appearance, and in doing so, he became just the 12th head coach to lead at least three different Division I programs to the Round of 16.

 

UT Athletics

Photo Gallery: “ACM Decades” Event with Carly Pearce, Cole Swindell, Lauren Alaina, Maddie & Tae, Michael Ray & More

Photo Gallery: “ACM Decades” Event with Carly Pearce, Cole Swindell, Lauren Alaina, Maddie & Tae, Michael Ray & More

More than a dozen country stars took the stage for the ACM Decades event at the Marquee Ballroom inside the MGM Grand in Las Vegas on April 6.

The concert featured current and past hit-makers singing some of their most well-known songs, including Lauren Alaina, Carlton Anderson, Rodney Atkins, Deana Carter, Easton Corbin, Jordan Davis, Carolyn Dawn Johnson, Home Free, Tracy Lawrence, Maddie & Tae, Jamie O’Neal, Carly Pearce, Michael Ray, Cole Swindell, Mitchell Tenpenny and Tenille Townes.

ACM Party for a Cause events support ACM Lifting Lives, the charitable arm of the Academy of Country Music.

Check out our photo gallery, courtesy of Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com.

photos by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Photo Gallery: “ACM TopGolf Tee-Off” Event with Scotty McCreery, Cassadee Pope, Chris Lane, Runaway June & More

Photo Gallery: “ACM TopGolf Tee-Off” Event with Scotty McCreery, Cassadee Pope, Chris Lane, Runaway June & More

More than 20 stars walked the red green carpet before the ACM Lifting Lives Topgolf Tee-Off event on April 6 at Topgolf Las Vegas.

Hosted by Scotty McCreery, the event featured performances from Ingrid Andress, Adam Craig, Morgan Evans and Chris Lane. In addition to the aforementioned names, a number of stars were in attendance, including Runaway June, Cassadee Pope, Jimmie Allen, Devin Dawson, Russell Dickerson, AJ McLean and more.

ACM Party for a Cause events support ACM Lifting Lives, the charitable arm of the Academy of Country Music.

Check out our photo gallery, courtesy of Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com.

 

photos by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Photo Gallery: “ACM Stories, Songs & Stars” Event with Little Big Town, Midland, Thomas Rhett, Jake Owen & More

Photo Gallery: “ACM Stories, Songs & Stars” Event with Little Big Town, Midland, Thomas Rhett, Jake Owen & More

More than 20 songwriters and artists took the stage to share the stories behind some of country’s biggest hits at the ACM Stories, Songs & Stars event on April 5 at the MGM Grand Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas. Hosted by Hillary Scott and Storme Warren, the event featured performances from Rhett Akins, Ross Copperman, Ashley Gorley, Luke Laird, Shane McAnally, Lori McKenna, Chase McGill, Josh Osborne, Brantley Gilbert, Little Big Town, Midland, Old Dominion, Thomas Rhett and more.

ACM Party for a Cause events support ACM Lifting Lives, the charitable arm of the Academy of Country Music.

Check out our photo gallery, courtesy of O’Connor/AFF-USA.com.

Brett Young and Wife Taylor Mills Expecting First Child

Brett Young and Wife Taylor Mills Expecting First Child

Brett Young and wife Taylor Mills announced via Instagram that they are expecting their first child.

“And then we were 3 đŸ‘ŠđŸŒđŸ‘©đŸ»đŸ‘¶đŸŒ,” said Brett, in part. “Taylor and I are absolutely over the moon to be expecting a new little angel into our family. Absolutely blessed to be starting this new chapter with my baby and our baby.” 

After getting engaged in February 2018, Brett and Taylor married in Palm Springs, Calif., in November 2018. They have known each other for more than 10 years.

Congrats to the happy family.

photo by AFF-USA.com

Vols Use Dominant Pitching Performance to Even Series with No. 5 Mississippi State

Vols Use Dominant Pitching Performance to Even Series with No. 5 Mississippi State

Vols RHP Zach Lingenfelter / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – A masterful pitching performance from the duo of Zach Linginfelter and Redmond Walsh led Tennessee to a 2-1 victory over No. 5 Mississippi State on Saturday night at Lindsey Nelson Stadium.

Pitching carried the night for both teams in a low-scoring affair. There were a just eight combined hits allowed in the game as Linginfelter and Bulldogs’ starter Peyton Plumlee were able to keep hitters off balance throughout the night.

Linginfelter was dominant from the start for the Vols, holding MSU to just five hits and one run in 6.2 innings of work. The junior also added three strikeouts on the evening and scattered five hits to earn his fifth win of the year.

Walsh came in for Linginfelter with two outs and the tying run on base in the seventh. The Alcoa high school product struck out the Bulldogs’ best hitter in Jake Mangum to end the threat. Walsh went on to retire the side in order in the eighth and ninth innings to shut the door and earn his fourth save on the year.

Plumlee had a solid outing as well, allowing only two runs on two hits in 5.1 innings of work while adding three strikeouts on the night.

After three scoreless innings to open the game, the Bulldogs got the scoring started with a single up the middle by Justin Foscue to drive in Elijah MacNamee from second.

The Volunteers scored their first and only two runs of the game on a bizarre play in the bottom of fifth. After a sacrifice bunt by Landon Gray to move runners to second and third, Plumlee threw the ball into the Bulldogs’ dugout prior to being awarded time by the umpire, which resulted in an error and allowed both runners to score, giving UT a 2-1 lead.

Linginfelter and Walsh took it from there to help the Big Orange nail down their 23rd win of the season and fourth in SEC play.

The Vols’ held Mississippi State’s potent lineup to just five hits, the second-fewest in a game this season for the Bulldogs. It was the 13th time this year that UT has held its opponent to five hits or fewer.

NOTABLE
LINGO BOUNCES BACK: Coming off a rough start in last Saturday’s loss at Vanderbilt, junior pitcher Zach Linginfelter had quite the bounce-back performance against No. 5 Mississippi State on Saturday night. The junior right hander allowed just one run on five hits in 6.2 innings to earn the win and improve to 5-3 on the year. Linginfelter was pulled after just 1.1 innings against the Commodores after allowing seven runs on eight hits.

RUCKER CONTINUES SOLID HITTING IN SEC PLAY: Freshman second baseman Jake Rucker had the bat going on Saturday night and was one of just a few players to have a decent night at the plate, finishing the game with two singles and a run scored. The Greenbrier, Tenn., native was hit by a pitch in his only other at-bat and scored what turned out to be the game-winning run in the fifth inning. Rucker has been one of UT’s most productive hitters in conference play, ranking second on the team with a .333 batting average in SEC contests.

UP NEXT:  The Vols and Bulldogs will square off again tomorrow afternoon in the rubber game of the series at 2 p.m. The game will be streamed online via the WatchESPN app. Fans can also listen to the Vol Network radio broadcast (FM 99.1 / AM 990) as John Wilkerson and Vince Ferrara call the action.

Box Score (PDF) | Season Stats (PDF) | SEC Stats (PDF) | VIDEO: Vitello Postgame | VIDEO: Linginfelter & Walsh Postgame

-UT Athletics

#5/7 Lady Vols Drop Series Opener to #13/14 Auburn, 10-5

#5/7 Lady Vols Drop Series Opener to #13/14 Auburn, 10-5

Lady Vols / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – In a top-15 matchup, No. 5/7 Tennessee fell to No. 13/14 Auburn, 10-5, at Sherri Parker Lee Stadium on Saturday afternoon.

Tennessee now sits at 28-7 overall and 6-4 in SEC play, while the Tigers improve to 31-7, 7-3 SEC.

Freshman Ashley Rogers got the start and threw 4.0 innings, recording three strikeouts, before Matty Moss entered in relief. The senior ended the game with one strikeout through 3.0 innings of work, but allowed five runs on five hits to be charged with the loss.

Offensively, Chelsea Seggern and Cailin Hannon both recorded two RBIs on the day. Seggern and Jenna Holcomb each had two knocks in the outing while Hannon and Aubrey Leach scored twice.

In the opening frame, Auburn took advantage of an error and an infield groundout to take a 2-0 lead.

Tennessee responded with two runs of its own in the bottom of the inning. Leach and Hannon reached on back-to-back walks and came around to score on a Seggern single and an RBI groundout by Rogers, respectively, tying the game at 2-2.

The Lady Vols broke the tie in the second, scratching three runs across on four hits. With two outs, Holcomb and Leach notched back-to-back singles before Hannon drove the pair home on a one-bagger to right field. Seggern then rounded out the scoring streak with a double to the right-center gap, sending Hannon home to extend Tennessee’s edge to 5-2.

Auburn responded in the third inning with a two-run home run, trimming the Big Orange’s lead, 5-4.

After a scoreless fourth inning, the Tigers regained the lead in the fifth on Tannon Snow’s second two-run homer of the game. AU tacked on four more runs in the seventh to push its advantage to 10-5.

Tennessee went down in order in the bottom of the frame to make the 10-5 score final.

ON DECK: The Lady Vols host Auburn in Game 2 of the series tomorrow, April 7, at 6 p.m. ET. The game will be aired on SEC Network. UTSports.com, the Tennessee Gameday App and AM 990 will also carry a live radio broadcast.

Box Score | Highlights | Postgame Interview: Co-head Coach Ralph Weekly | Postgame Interview: Aubrey Leach

-UT Athletics

Little Big Town Drops Thought-Provoking New Single, “The Daughters,” From Upcoming 9th Studio Album [Watch Poignant Video]

Little Big Town Drops Thought-Provoking New Single, “The Daughters,” From Upcoming 9th Studio Album [Watch Poignant Video]

Little Big Town released a thought-provoking new single, “The Daughters,” on April 5. Written by Sean McConnell, Ashley Ray and LBT’s Karen Fairchild—who also provides lead vocals—“The Daughters” is the lead single from the band’s upcoming ninth studio album.

LBT also released a poignant video for “The Daughters,” which features dancers showcasing choreography from Andrew Winghart in a 1948 gym in Portland, Tenn. The clip was directed by Dano Cerny, who has helmed videos for The Chainsmokers, Elle King, Pentatonix, The Roots and more.

Little Big Town will perform the television world premiere of “The Daughters” on the ACM Awards on April 7 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS.

Watch the new video below.

photo by Tammie Arroyo, AFF-USA.com

Miranda Lambert Announces “Roadside Bars & Pink Guitars Tour 2019” With Maren Morris, Ashley McBryde & More

Miranda Lambert Announces “Roadside Bars & Pink Guitars Tour 2019” With Maren Morris, Ashley McBryde & More

Miranda Lambert is hitting the road this fall for her 2019 Roadside Bars & Pink Guitars Tour—and she’s bringing some heavy hitters with her on select dates, including Maren Morris, Elle King, the Pistol Annies, Tenille Townes, Ashley McBryde and Caylee Hammack.

The 26-date tour kicks off on Sept. 13 in Uncansville, Conn., making additional stops in New Orleans, Baltimore, Milwaukee and more.

“I’m so excited and honored to be on tour with some of my favorite artists, who each inspire me in a different way,” said Miranda. “Maren Morris is a fiery fellow Texas girl that isn’t afraid to take a risk and be who she is. Elle King is a brave, confident and unapologetic artist who is honest about her life and uses it for her art. My fellow Pistol Annies are not only some of my best friends and writing partners, but also make me want to be a better artist every time we take the stage together. Tenille, Ashley and Caylee are all women who have something to say and they do it their own way. They are the next generation of fearless female artists and I’m so thrilled to share a stage with them.”

Roadside Bars & Pink Guitars Tour

Featuring Elle King, Pistol Annies and Caylee Hammack
Sept. 13 Mohegan Sun Arena || Uncasville, Conn.
Sept.14 Mohegan Sun Arena || Uncasville, Conn.
Sept. 19 Van Andel Center || Grand Rapids, Mich.**
Sept. 20 Huntington Center || Toledo, Ohio**
Sept. 21 BB&T Arena at Northern Kentucky University || Highland Heights, Ky.**

Featuring Elle King, Pistol Annies and Tenille Townes
Sept. 26 Royal Farms Arena || Baltimore, Md.**
Sept. 27 Charleston Coliseum || Charleston, W.Va.
Sept. 28 Nationwide Arena || Columbus, Ohio

Featuring Maren Morris, Pistol Annies and Tenille Townes
Oct. 3 Cajundome || Lafayette, La.**
Oct. 4 Smoothie King Center || New Orleans, La.**
Oct. 5 Centurylink Center || Bossier City, La.**
Oct. 10 State Farm Center || Champaign, Ill.**
Oct. 11 Pinnacle Bank Arena || Lincoln, Neb.**
Oct. 12 Denny Sanford Premier Center || Sioux Falls, S.D.**

Featuring Elle King, Pistol Annies and Ashley McBryde
Oct. 17 Fargo Dome || Fargo, N.D.
Oct. 18 Fiserv Forum || Milwaukee, Wisc.
Oct. 19 Xcel Energy Center || Saint Paul, Minn.
Oct. 24 TaxSlayer Center || Moline, Ill.
Oct. 25 JQH Arena || Springfield, Mo.**
Oct. 26 INTRUST Bank Arena || Wichita, Kan.**

Featuring Maren Morris, Pistol Annies and Tenille Townes
Nov. 7 John Paul Jones Arena || Charlottesville, Va.**
Nov. 8 Colonial Life Arena || Columbia, S.C.**
Nov. 9 Amway Center || Orlando, Fla.

Featuring Maren Morris, Pistol Annies and Ashley McBryde
Nov. 21 VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena || Jacksonville, Fla.
Nov. 22 Infinite Energy Arena || Duluth, Ga.
Nov. 23 Greensboro Coliseum || Greensboro, N.C.

*currently on sale
**on sale Friday, April 12
Remaining dates on sale timing to follow

photo by NCD

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