Watch Miranda Lambert’s Captivating Acoustic Performance of “Tin Man” From “Austin City Limits”

Watch Miranda Lambert’s Captivating Acoustic Performance of “Tin Man” From “Austin City Limits”

Miranda Lambert made her third appearance on Austin City Limits in an episode that aired on Nov. 3. The Texas songbird treated fans in attendance and viewers at home to a 13-song set, including “Kerosene,” “Vice,” “We Should Be Friends” and more.

The highlight of the show was Miranda’s stripped-down solo performance of “Tin Man,” which is nominated for Song of the Year at the CMA Awards. Before beginning the acoustic rendition, Miranda credited her co-writers on the song—Jack Ingram and Jon Randall—with helping her create something special.

“I wrote this song with two of my best friends that are from Texas as well, Jack Ingram and Jon Randall,” said Miranda. “I think we all needed to write this song. At the time that we wrote it, we all sort of took equal parts in each other’s pain and put it down on paper and on a record, so I recorded it but I wanted to do it by myself [tonight] because I feel like that’s where it starts—with a song and a guitar and a person and a girl and some emotions, so I’m going to leave it there tonight.”

Watch Miranda’s performance of “Tin Man” below.

 

photo by Jason Simanek

Vols Post Exhibition Road Win at Clemson 71-67

Vols Post Exhibition Road Win at Clemson 71-67

Vols G Lamonte Turner / Credit: UT Athletics

CLEMSON, S.C. — Tennessee capped off its preseason with a thrilling, 71-67 victory over Clemson at Littlejohn Coliseum on Sunday afternoon.

Clemson used a 15-4 run in the final minutes of the game to pull within two, but a basket by Admiral Schofield—who fielded a perfect outlet pass from a poised James Daniel III, who was surrounded by multiple defenders after receiving the in-bounds pass—with five seconds left sealed the game for the Volunteers.

Grant Williams led UT with 24 points on 9-of-12 shooting to go along with seven rebounds. Lamonte Turner turned in an impressive all-around performance with 14 points, seven rebounds, three assists and a pair of steals. Junior forward Kyle Alexander pitched in with eight points, six rebounds, one block and a steal.

Marcquise Reed fueled Clemson’s offense with 25 points on 7-of-12 shooting from the field, including 16 points in the second half.

Tennessee’s defense was locked in early on, holding the Tigers without a field goal until 11:49 remaining in the first half. During that stretch, UT jumped out to a 14-2 lead. Clemson would fight back, though, holding the Vols to six minutes without a basket during one stretch.

Tied at 23-23, sophomore point guard Jordan Bone stole the ball and sped the length of the court to snap the drought with a transition dunk.

Williams fueled Tennessee’s offense in the opening half, dropping 12 points on a perfect 5-of-5 shooting from the field.

The Vols held a 28-25 advantage going into intermission.

Tennessee shot .426 as a team, including a .375 clip from 3-point range (9-for-24). The Vols recorded 15 assists on 26 made field goals and out-rebounded the Tigers 41-36.

WITH THE WIN: Tennessee earned its first exhibition victory against an ACC team in school history and extended its winning streak in preseason play to 14 games.

HURRICANE RELIEF: The NCAA approved a waiver enabling Clemson to host Sunday’s charity exhibition game, with net proceeds going toward the Salvation Army’s hurricane relief efforts in Texas and Florida.

UP NEXT: Tennessee opens the regular season Friday, Nov. 10, at home against Presbyterian at 7 p.m. ET. The game will be streamed online and viewable worldwide through SEC Network+ (WatchESPN).

-UT Athletics

 

Vols Celebrate Homecoming With 24-10 Win

Vols Celebrate Homecoming With 24-10 Win

Vols defense / Credit: UT Athletics

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – With the defense forcing two third-quarter turnovers and the offense converting those opportunities into 14 points, Tennessee broke open a tight game and surged past Southern Miss, 24-10, Saturday night in the annual Homecoming game at Neyland Stadium.

With an announced crowd of 95,551 on hand, UT improved to 4-5 on the season, thanks to a pair of rushing touchdowns from junior tailback John Kelly and another from redshirt freshman quarterback Jarrett Guarantano. With their second-straight loss, the Golden Eagles fell to 5-4 this season.

Tennessee got off to a fast start, as senior Evan Berry‘s 46-yard return of the opening kickoff set the Vols’ offense up at the Southern Miss 49. Nine plays later, Guarantano capped the drive with a three-yard burst into the end zone. Senior placekicker Aaron Medley added the PAT to provide the Big Orange with a 7-0 advantage with 4:01 gone in the first quarter.

The Golden Eagles got on the scoreboard with 8:16 remaining in the second period. Kicker Parker Shaunfield cut UT’s lead to 7-3, drilling a 27-yard field goal to put the finishing touches on a 10-play, 77-yard drive.

The Vols pushed the advantage back to seven points, 10-3, with 2:42 left before the half with two quarterbacks engineering the scoring march. True freshman Will McBride entered the game for three snaps in the middle of the 12-play, 68-yard drive before Medley came on to close it out with a 38-yard field goal.

Tennessee’s defense, which had been holding Southern Miss at bay all night, came up with two huge plays in the third frame to provide the offense outstanding field position. With McBride on at quarterback in place of the injured Guarantano, Tennessee’s offense cashed in both times.

First, senior cornerback Emmanuel Moseley stepped in front of an errant Southern Miss pass, returning it 19 yards to the USM 20. Kelly, who finished the night with 79 yards on 20 carries, wasted no time making the Golden Eagles pay, rumbling 20 yards for a touchdown. Medley added the extra point for the Big Orange to make it 17-3 with 5:15 to go in the third.

On Southern Miss’ next series, UT’s Darrell Taylor came calling with one of his two, and the Vols’ four, sacks (Kyle Phillips also had two) on the evening. The junior defensive end sacked USM’s Howard and forced a fumble that redshirt junior nickel Rashaan Gaulden (team-leading nine tackles) recovered.

Tennessee initially turned that takeaway into a 30-yard Medley field goal, but an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty by USM presented UT a first down and an opportunity for six points rather than three. The Vols took full advantage, with Kelly punching the ball in from three yards out and Medley adding the PAT to extend the lead to 24-3 with 3:17 left in the third stanza.

The Golden Eagles had one last counter in them, however, going 90 yards in 10 plays midway through the fourth period. Redshirt junior quarterback Kwadra Griggs hit pay dirt from a yard out, and Shaunfield added the extra point to draw USM within 14 points, 24-10, with 6:45 left in the contest. The Vol defense stiffened from that point on to close out the win.

The Vols return to action next Saturday night in Columbia, Mo., as they face the Missouri Tigers at Faurot Field in Memorial Stadium. The game is slated for a 6:30 p.m. CT (7:30 ET) kickoff on the SEC Network.

-UT Athetics

 

Hoops Preview: Tennessee at Clemson (exhibition)

Hoops Preview: Tennessee at Clemson (exhibition)

CLEMSON, S.C. — Tennessee is set for its second exhibition game of the 2017-18 preseason Sunday, as the Vols travel to play Clemson at Littlejohn Coliseum for a 12:30 p.m. ET tip.

The NCAA approved a waiver enabling Clemson to host a men’s basketball charity exhibition game against Tennessee, with net proceeds going toward hurricane relief efforts in Texas and Florida. Admission is free, although donations to the Salvation Army’s continued hurricane relief efforts in Texas and Florida are encouraged.

The game will not be televised, and there will be no video stream available. However, there will be a live audio feed of the game, which can be found here.

Tennessee is entering its 108th season of basketball and its third season under head coach Rick Barnes. The regular season begins next Friday, Nov. 10 when Presbyterian comes to Rocky Top (7 p.m. ET, SEC Network +).

HAPPENING NOW…
• Proceeds from Sunday’s game will be donated to the Salvation Army’s hurricane relief efforts in Texas and Florida.
• This is Tennessee’s first domestic road exhibition game since a 77-66 loss to “Spirit Express” in Memphis on Nov. 26, 1987.
• Tennessee has never played a public exhibition against a “Power Five” opponent.

ABOUT CLEMSON
• Founded in 1889 and located in Clemson, South Carolina, Clemson University is a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference.
• Clemson head coach Brad Brownell is entering his eighth season with the Tigers and his 16th season as a head coach. He led Clemson to a 17-16 (6-12 ACC) record last year, and the Tigers lost in the opening round of the NIT.
• Clemson boasts an athletic roster highlighted by senior forward Donte Grantham (7.3 ppg, 4.3 rpg) and senior guards Marcquise Reed (10.0 ppg, .400 3FG%) and Gabe DeVoe (7.1 ppg).
• Significant contributions also are expected from point guard Shelton Mitchell (10.8 ppg, .453 3FG%), a Vanderbilt transfer who had offseason knee surgery.
• The Tigers defeated Augusta University, 80-56, in a home exhibition game last Thursday. Grantham led all scorers with 18 points on 8-for-11 shooting from the field, while also chipping in eight rebounds.

BARNES’ SUCCESS AT CLEMSON WAS SPRINGBOARD TO TEXAS
•  Rick Barnes is entering his 31st season as a collegiate head coach. He spent four of those years as Clemson’s coach, guiding the Tigers to a 74-48 (.607) record from 1994-98 before being hired at Texas.
• Barnes led the Tigers to a school-record three consecutive NCAA Tournament appearances (1996, 1997 and 1998) and 13 wins over ranked opponents. Clemson climbed as high as No. 2 in the national rankings during the 1996-97 season, and Barnes’ Tigers advanced to the Sweet Sixteen that year.
• While Barnes was the head coach at Providence in the early 90s, he suffered one loss to Clemson. And since leaving Clemson to take the head coaching job at Texas in 1998, he has never faced the Tigers.

TWO VOLS QUESTIONABLE
• Two players on Tennessee’s roster are questionable for Sunday’s exhibition.
• Junior guard Chris Darrington, a juco transfer, is nursing an ankle injury.
• Redshirt freshman wing Jalen Johnson, who underwent a procedure to address a chronic stress fracture in his left shin in July,  was recently cleared by team medical staff for full participation, but he is gradually working his way back to full speed.
• Neither Darrington nor Johnson played in last Thursday’s exhibition win over Carson-Newman.

VOLS’ SCHEDULE IS ACC HEAVY
• In addition to today’s exhibition at Clemson, Tennessee’s 2017-18 schedule features three games against ACC opposition: Dec. 3 at Georgia Tech, Dec. 17 vs. North Carolina, Dec. 23 at Wake Forest.
• There is also a chance the Vols could face NC State at the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament later this month.

CARSON-NEWMAN (EXH) RECAP
•  Grant Williams logged a double-double off the bench, and Tennessee cruised to an 86-44 win over Carson-Newman at Thompson-Boling Arena Thursday night in the team’s first exhibition game of the preseason.
•  Williams finished with 18 points and 12 rebounds, both of which were game-highs. Admiral Schofield enjoyed a strong performance as well, dropping 17 points to go along with five boards. Also finishing in double figures was sophomore Jordan Bowden, who went 3-of-6 from beyond the arc. Jordan Bone dished out a game-high eight assists while committing just one turnover.
•  The Vols outscored Carson-Newman 26-2 in points-off-turnovers. Tennessee also drained 12 3-pointers.
•  Tennessee’s 44 points allowed were the fewest allowed by the Vols in any game (exhibition, regular season or postseason) since March 14, 2014, when they held South Carolina to 44 points in the SEC Tournament.

ROSTER BREAKDOWN
• The Vols’ 2017-18 roster features 16 players (13 scholarship student-athletes) representing nine states as well as Ontario, Canada, and France.
• There are five Vols who hail from the state of Tennessee, two from North Carolina and one each from Alabama, Delaware, Illinois, Missouri, Ohio, Texas and Virginia.
• This is the first time since 2006-07 that the Vols’ roster has not included at least one player from the state of Georgia.
• Tennessee has one senior (a graduate transfer), five juniors, four sophomores and six freshmen (including three redshirt freshmen).
• This is the tallest roster third-year head coach Rick Barnes has had at Tennessee. This season’s team includes six players listed at 6-7 or taller. For each of the previous two seasons, UT had just three players listed at 6-7 or taller.

SUMMER EUROPEAN TOUR A SUCCESS
• Tennessee completed a 10-day European tour that saw them post a 3-0 record in exhibition play while visiting Barcelona and Valencia, Spain as well as Paris, France.
• All three games were played against local professional clubs and were contested with a FIBA ball under international FIBA rules.
• Chris Darrington finished the tour with the highest scoring average on the team (14.3 ppg)—barely edging out Lamonté Turner (14.0 ppg).
• True freshman forward Derrick Walker averaged 13 points and eight rebounds over the three games.
• Tennessee’s top rebounders in Europe were forwards Grant Williams (9.3 rpg) and Kyle Alexander (9.0 rpg).

TENNESSEE RETURNS TO BATTLE 4 ATLANTIS
• Tennessee will make its second appearance in the Battle 4 Atlantis tournament later this month. The 2017 field includes the Vols, Arizona, NC State, Northern Iowa, Purdue, SMU, Villanova and Western Kentucky. The Vols open against Purdue Nov. 22.
• The Battle 4 Atlantis takes place at the Atlantis Resort on Paradise Island, Bahamas.
• In Atlantis in 2013, Tennessee dropped its opening game to UTEP before bouncing back to defeat Xavier and Wake Forest.

-UT Athletics

 

Jimmy’s blog: Vols avoid first 5-game losing streak since 1988 with win over USM

Jimmy’s blog: Vols avoid first 5-game losing streak since 1988 with win over USM

By Jimmy Hyams

SEC teams are supposed to beat Southern Miss. That’s one reason they keep scheduling USM.

Not that the Golden Eagles are a slouch. They have been to 16 bowls games since 1997. They won 12 games in 2011. They produced Brett Favre.

But a win over Southern Miss isn’t going to pad your resume if you’re a Power 5 team.

Tennessee (4-5) didn’t pad its resume Saturday night with a less-than-thrilling 24-10 victory over USM (5-4). But it did help the Vols avoid their first five-game losing streak since 1988. It did help a homecoming crowd of about 70,000 go home happy – or at least, not mad.

And it did show a lot of resourcefulness and resolve.

Yes, those are two of Tennessee coach Butch Jones’ favorite words.

But he’s right about what happened against Southern Miss.

Tennessee won despite losing another quarterback, despite playing without six offensive linemen who have started, despite gaining just 210 yards (95 rushing), despite going 2-for-13 on third down, despite going three-and-out on six of nine second-half possessions and despite a heavy cloud hanging over Jones’ head.

Quarterback Jarrett Guarantano, making his fourth start in place of the injured Quinten Dormady, suffered an apparent ankle injury and didn’t play in the second half. He was 9-of-13 for 102 yards in the first half. Jones said Guarantano could have played in the second half but wasn’t sure about Guarantano’s availability this Saturday at Missouri.

Guarantano was replaced by freshman Will McBride, who was supposed to redshirt this year. McBride threw a couple of nice passes, but was 1-of-8 for 13 yards, not exactly stellar numbers.

McBride was working behind a makeshift offensive line that was underachieving before it was battered by injuries. Three starters — Brett Kendrick (concussion), Marcus Tatum (ankle), Drew Richmond (concussion) – were out, joining Chance Hall (knee), Jack Jones (quit due to injury) and Venzel Boulware (quit due to lack of playing time) on the sideline.

That forced the Vols to start converted tight end Devante Brooks at right tackle. The redshirt freshman hadn’t played in a game since 2013 since he missed both his junior and senior years of high school due to torn ACLs. Guard Ryan Johnson, a redshirt freshman, got his first start. And guard Riley Locklear, a running back as a high school sophomore, got his first action of the season as a true freshman.

Behind that backdrop, Tennessee knew it wouldn’t generate much offense against a defense that ranked No. 27 in the nation in total yards and held Kentucky to 78 rushing yards earlier this season.

The victory culminated a tumultuous homecoming week on Rocky Top. Many awaited a Sunday press conference after the Kentucky game thinking Jones would be fired. Didn’t happen.

Then it was learned Kendrick played against Kentucky with a concussion. Exactly when he suffered the head injury isn’t known. Jones said emphatically that he would never play anyone with a head injury, wasn’t told of the injury during the game and correctly noted that if a player did have a head injury, playing him would be in the hands of doctors.

Then, former UT All-American Antone Davis resigned from his position as Vol for Life Coordinator, saying he was bullied and verbally abused by Jones.

With all those distractions, UT players managed to focus well enough to chalk one up in the win column.

“I’m excited for our players, proud for our players,’’ Jones said.

UT relied on a defense that hadn’t been very reliable. But this time, the defense came through, limiting the Golden Eagles to a mere field goal until midway in the fourth quarter when USM drove 95 yards on 10 plays to cut the margin to 24-10 with 6:45 left.

It didn’t matter that UT’s offense went three-and-out on its last five possessions and that it needed to drive just 39 yards to score two second half touchdowns. It did what it had to do to defeat a team that looked every bit like the squad that was upset the week before by Alabama-Birmingham.

Southern Miss managed 279 yards, 70 coming on one play. It didn’t have another gain of more than 15 yards.

“I was particularly pleased to sit back and see them sing the fight song,’’ Jones said of his players, who hadn’t tasted victory in 42 days.

Linebacker Colton Jumper, who had seven tackles and 2.5 for loss, was relieved.

“Six weeks without a win,’’ said Jumper, whose defense has forced eight turnovers in the last three games. “It feels good when you haven’t won in a while.’’

Running back John Kelly led the Vols with 79 yards and two touchdowns on 20 carries.

“It feels good to finally get a win,’’ said Kelly, who was suspended last week for the Kentucky game after a marijuana citation. “Honestly, it hurt me to miss the game last week.’’

Postgame, UT played joyous music in the locker room. But players didn’t move at first.

“For a minute,’’ Kelly said. “I think we forgot how to celebrate.’’

That can happen when you go 42 days between victories.


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: The wings that changed it all

James McMurtry & Jason Isbell: Tour

James McMurtry & Jason Isbell: Tour

Jan. 4
Oklahoma City, OK
The Criterion

Jan. 5
Dallas
The Bomb Factory

Jan. 6
Baton Rouge, LA
Baton Rouge River Center

Jan. 7
Mobile, AL
Saenger Theatre

Jan. 18
Birmingham, AL
Alabama Theatre

Jan. 19
Birmingham, AL
Alabama Theatre

Jan. 20
Birmingham, AL
Alabama Theatre

Jan. 21
Little Rock, AR
Robinson Performance Hall

Jan. 23
Cedar Rapids, LA
Paramount Theatre

Jan. 24
Milwaukee, WI
The Riverside Theatre

Jan. 26
Ann Arbor, MI
Ann Arbor Folk Festival

Jan. 27
Indianapolis, IN
Murat Theatre At Old National Center

Jan. 29
Pittsburgh, PA
Heinz Hall

Jan. 30
Buffalo, NY
UB Center For The Arts

Jan. 31
Albany, NY
The Palace Theatre

Feb. 2
Providence, RI
Veterans Memorial

Feb. 3
Brooklyn, NY
Kings Theatre

Feb. 5
Red Bank, NJ
Count Basie Theatre

Feb. 6
Baltimore, MD
The Modell Lyric

Feb. 8
Atlanta, GA
Fox Theatre

Feb. 9
Atlanta, GA
Fox Theatre

Feb. 10
Durham, NC
Durham Performing Arts Center

Feb. 11
Durham, NC
Durham Performing Arts Center

Feb. 13
Ithaca, NY
State Theatre Of Ithaca

Feb. 14
Reading, PA
The Santander Performing Arts Center

Feb. 16
Richmond, Va
Altria Theatre Richmond

Feb. 17
Charleston, WV
Charleston Municipal Auditorium

Marty Stuart: Tour

Marty Stuart: Tour

November 3
Columbus, OH
Nationwide Arena*

November 4
Grand Rapids, MI
Van Andel Arena*

November 8
Wilson, NC
Edna Boykin Cultural Center

November 9
Athens, GA
The Foundry

November 10
Tampa, FL
MIDFLORIDA Credit Union Amphitheatre*

November 11
Jacksonville, FL
Jackson Veterans Memorial Arena*

November 16
Little Rock, AR
Verizon Arena*

November 17
Oklahoma City, OK
Chesapeake Energy Arena*

November 18
Omaha, NE
CenturyLink Center Omaha*

December 2
Huntingdon, TN
The Dixie Carter Performing Arts Center

December 7
Ardmore, PA
Ardmore Music Hall

December 8
Fall River, MA
Narrows Center for the Arts

December 9
Plymouth, NH
Flying Monkey

December 15
Cleveland, OH
House of Blues

December 16
Chicago, IL
Old Town School of Folk Music

January 10
Folsom, CA
Harris Center

January 11
Red Bluff, CA
State Theatre

January 12
Petaluma, CA
McNear’s Mystic Theatre

January 13
Berkeley, CA
Freight & Salvage

January 14
Berkeley, CA
Freight & Salvage (Acoustic Set)

January 17
West Hollywood, CA
The Troubadour

January 18
Bakersfield, CA
Buck Owens’ Crystal Palace

January 19
Phoenix, AZ
MIM Music Theater

January 20
Santa Fe, NM
The Lensic

January 25
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL
Ponte Vedra Concert Hall

February 15
New Braunfels,TX
Brauntex Theatre

February 17
Houston, TX
The Heights Theater

February 18
Dallas, TX
The Kessler Theater

February 21
Kansas City, MI
Madrid Theatre

February 23
Iowa City, IA
The Englert Theatre

February 24
Stoughton, WI
Stoughton Opera House (2 Shows)

March 17
Hopkins, MN
Hopkins Center for the Arts

April 6-7
Alexandria, VA
The Birchmere

September 28
Mount Airy, NC
Mayberry Festival

* w/ Chris Stapleton
(More Dates To Be Announced)

Tickets for the new dates will go on sale on November 10 at 10 a.m. local time.

photo courtesy Shore Fire Media

Listen to “Scarecrow in the Garden” From Chris Stapleton’s New Album, “From A Room: Vol 2”

Listen to “Scarecrow in the Garden” From Chris Stapleton’s New Album, “From A Room: Vol 2”

Following the release of From A Room: Volume 1 in May 2017, Chris Stapleton announced that Volume 2 will be released on Dec. 1.

Taking its name from Nashville’s historic RCA Studio A—where it was recorded in 2016 with producer Dave Cobb—Volume 2 will feature nine songs. Seven of the nine songs were co-penned by Chris, including “Scarecrow in the Garden,” which was released today (listen below).

From A Room: Volume 1 debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Country Albums chart and No. 2 on the all-genre Billboard 200 chart. It remains the best-selling country album of 2017.

From A Room: Volume 2 Track List & Songwriters

  1. “Millionaire” (Kevin Welch)
  2. “Hard Livin’” (Chris Stapleton, Kendell Marvel)
  3. “Scarecrow in the Garden” (Chris Stapleton, Brice Long, Matt Fleener)
  4. “Nobody’s Lonely Tonight” (Chris Stapleton, Mike Henderson)
  5. “Tryin’ to Untangle My Mind” (Chris Stapleton, Jaron Boyer, Kendell Marvel)
  6. “A Simple Song” (Chris Stapleton, Darrell Hayes)
  7. “Midnight Train to Memphis” (Chris Stapleton, Mike Henderson)
  8. “Drunkard’s Prayer” (Chris Stapleton, Jameson Clark)
  9. “Friendship” (Homer Banks, Lester Snell)

 

photo by Jason Simanek

Blake Shelton Talks New Album, New Tour & New Chapter of His Life

Blake Shelton Talks New Album, New Tour & New Chapter of His Life

Jim Casey talks with Blake Shelton about:

  • the excitement of releasing his 11th studio album, Texoma Shore
  • having a career that spans 17 years
  • recording the new album in his studio on the shore of Lake Texoma on the Texas/Oklahoma border
  • his earliest memory of Lake Texoma, which involves his mother screaming
  • the catalyst for creating the album, which was the single “I’ll Name the Dogs”
  • the new chapter of his life
  • the balance of the new album, including songs “The Wave,” “Got the T-shirt” and “Hangover Due”
  • co-writing “Turnin’ Me On”
  • the two or three words that pop into his mind when he thinks of various tracks on the album
  • hitting the road in 2018 with Brett Eldredge, Carly Pearce and Trace Adkins on the Country Music Freak Tour

Quote Worthy:

  • Blake: “Man, I’m in a new chapter of my life and I’m ready to express that. And I’m very proud of the If I’m Honest record, but it had some dark tones to it. No question, that was a tough time I was coming out of and I’m just not there anymore. I don’t want to wallow in it by promoting that album anymore. I want to promote this new chapter of my life.”

Show Participants:

  • Blake Shelton
  • Jim Casey, NCD editor in chief

Vegas Strong: CMA Awards Co-Host Brad Paisley Speaks Out Regarding “Ridiculous & Unfair Press Guidelines” at This Year’s Show

Vegas Strong: CMA Awards Co-Host Brad Paisley Speaks Out Regarding “Ridiculous & Unfair Press Guidelines” at This Year’s Show

CMA Awards co-host Brad Paisley is speaking out via Twitter regarding suggested media guidelines from the Country Music Association for their upcoming show on Nov. 8.

The CMA requested media members refrain from talking about the Las Vegas shooting tragedy on Oct. 1 that killed 58 people and injured more than 500 during Jason Aldean’s set at the Route 91 Harvest music festival.

A portion of the CMA media guidelines is below:

By accepting a media credential to the CMA Awards, you are agreeing that you (and all representatives from your organization) have read the Media Guidelines and agree to follow them. Anyone found violating the Media Guidelines risks forfeiting their CMA Awards credentials.

In light of recent events, and out of respect for the artists directly or indirectly involved, please refrain from focusing your coverage of the CMA Awards Red Carpet and Backstage Media Center on the Las Vegas tragedy, gun rights, political affiliations or topics of the like. It’s vital, more so this year than in year’s past due to the sensitivities at hand, that the CMA Awards be a celebration of Country Music and the artists that make this genre so great. It’s an evening to honor the outstanding achievements in Country Music of the previous year and we want everyone to feel comfortable talking to press about this exciting time. If you are reported as straying from these guidelines, your credential will be reviewed and potentially revoked via security escort. We appreciate your cooperation in advance. If you have any concerns on your coverage plans, please reach out to the CMA Communications team in advance so we can be a great partner as we celebrate “The 51st Annual CMA Awards.”

Maren Morris also chimed in via Twitter.

We’ll keep you posted on updates.

[Update—11:52 a.m.]

The Country Music Association released a statement, which lifted the media guidelines. You can read the statement below.

“CMA apologizes for the recently distributed restrictions in the CMA Awards media guidelines, which have since been lifted. The sentiment was not to infringe and was created with the best of intentions to honor and celebrate Country Music.”

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