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50th Annual Country Music Association Awards

The 50th Annual Country Music Association Awards, commonly known as CMA 50 or the 50th CMA Awards, were held on November 2, 2016 at the Bridgestone Arena in Nashville. The ceremony recognizes some of the best country music released during the eligibility period (between July 1, 2015 and July 20, 2016[1]). It is the eleventh ceremony to be held at the Arena, the seventeenth to be held in November and the ninth night to be co-hosted by country stars Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood. The ceremony was directed by Paul Miller.

50th Annual Country Music Association Awards

November 2, 2016

Maren Morris
Chris Stapleton (5 each)

ABC

12.5 million

As it was the 50th anniversary of the awards, the Country Music Association ran an extensive promotional campaign and CMA Executive Produced Robert Deaton stated that the aim of the ceremony was to include a lot of "heritage artists" and honor the history of country music, stressing that there would be less of a focus on artists promoting their current singles as is usually the case so that greater time could be spent including "exciting throwbacks".[2]


Nominations for the 50th CMA Awards were revealed on October 5, 2016 during Good Morning America by Dierks Bentley, Keith Urban and Cam live from the Grand Ole Opry.[3]

Note: only the Pinnacle Award and the were presented during the ceremony itself

Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award

- introduced Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood.

Barbara Mandrell

- introduced Carrie Underwood

Bill Anderson

- introduced Tim McGraw

Matthew McConaughey

- sang Elvira (transition to commercials)

Oak Ridge Boys

- presented the "Pinnacle Award" to Kenny Chesney

Peyton Manning

Controversy[edit]

The 50th CMA Awards attracted a large amount of media attention for both the return of the Dixie Chicks to the CMA stage following their controversial statements about George Bush which saw them shut out of the country music industry as well as the appearance of Beyoncé. Their performance of "Daddy Lessons" from Beyoncé's Lemonade album polarised viewers, artists and critics alike, with some praising the collaboration[7] and others denouncing the performance, stating that Beyoncé, largely recognized as a pop/R&B artist, had no place at a country music awards show. Many saw the criticisms as retaliation to an outspoken woman of color standing alongside three equally strong independent women on the stage of an award show notorious for its conservative attitudes and lack of diversity, with several reviewers noting that many of the negative comments surrounding Beyoncé's inclusion at the ceremony as hateful and racist, pointing to the fact that there was not backlash on such a scale when Meghan Trainor performed with Miranda Lambert, Ariana Grande performed with Little Big Town or when Justin Timberlake performed with Chris Stapleton at previous CMA ceremonies, with several in fact referring to the latter as one of the best CMA performances of all time.[8] Scholarly attention given to the performance has described it as representing "genre surveillance" in country music broadly,[9] as well as a type of musical Black Lives Matter protest.[10] Many also took issue with Beyoncé being allegedly "anti-police" and branded the Dixie Chicks as "anti-American".[11]


Following the immediate, potent and unexpected backlash of some viewers, the CMA reportedly removed all mention of the performance from its social media website but later issued a statement explaining that "CMA has not erased any mentions of Beyoncé's performance. In advance of the broadcast, CMA removed a five second clip from ABC.com and CMA's Facebook page. The promo was unapproved and CMA removed it prior to broadcast. Beyoncé's performance with the Dixie Chicks was a highlight of the evening and we are continuing to share the amazing full-length performance clip via our official social channels".[12]


Immediately following the performance, Dixie Chick's lead singer Natalie Maines had enthusiastically shared a photograph of the quartet, declaring it as "one of the best weeks of [her] life", thanking Beyoncé and humorously mentioning how she had once swore she would never play on the CMA stage again.[13] In response to the controversy, Maines joked that "the CMA's called and asked us to co-host next year's show with Beyoncé. Unfortunately, I've got a thing that night so no"[14] before following with a quotation from Beyoncé's song "Formation".[15] She went on to say that she had "used" the CMA's in order to fulfil her dream to perform with Beyoncé "on their dime".[16]


Several country stars declared their support for Beyoncé, including Dierks Bentley who said that "Daddy Lessons" is undoubtedly a country song: "it's not just choruses and verses that could be intermixed anywhere as some pop songs are, it's a real story that she tells about what's going on in her life growing up". Karen Fairchild of Little Big Town echoed this, explaining "she's got some stories to tell - that's what makes country music great".[17]


Rhiannon Giddens (who performed earlier in the night alongside Eric Church) stated via a Facebook post that "there were two other people of color at the CMA Awards who were singing country music, Charley Pride and myself. Company I'm honoured to be in. Not to mention The McCrary Sisters who rocked as usual". The post also included a link to her performance with Church and the words "no it's not Beyoncé and the Dixie Chicks, it was a little quieter but it was really saying something important to me". Responding to a comment who questioned whether she had discounted the "Daddy Lessons" performance as something that was not country music, Giddens added that "she doesn't make the genres" and that she was "just suggesting that there are other ways of making a statement" as the Beyoncé/Chicks performance has received "plenty of ink".[18] Giddens would later collaborate with Beyoncé as an instrumentalist on the song "Texas Hold 'Em", which appears on the latter's eighth studio album Cowboy Carter.

"" - Shane Nicholson

Lucille

"" - T. Graham Brown

I Don't Need Your Rockin' Chair

"" - John Berry

Back Home Again

"" - Una Healy, Jon Pardi

Forever and Ever, Amen

"" - Melanie Dyer, Tegan Marie

This Kiss

"" - Catherine Britt

Whiskey Lullaby

"" - Kane Brown

Check Yes or No

"" - Collin Raye, Michael Ray

Sunday Mornin' Comin' Down

"" - Chris Janson, Lorrie Morgan

Help Me Make It Through the Night

"" - Aaron Tippin

The Carroll County Accident

"" - Lindsay Ell

Strawberry Wine

"" - Scotty McCreery

In Color

"" - Steve Wariner

Behind Closed Doors

"" - Ricky Skaggs, Shanendoah

There Goes My Everything

"" - George Canyon

Rhinestone Cowboy

"" - Clare Dunn

I Hope You Dance

"" - Eric Paslay, Lucie Silvas, Johnny Reid

Always on My Mind

"" - The Wilkinsons

Go Rest High on That Mountain

"" - Lee Ann Womack

Chiseled in Stone

"" - Jill Johnson, Jess Moskaluke

Girl Crush

"" - Mark Collie

A Boy Named Sue

"" - The Common Linnets, David Nail

When I Call Your Name

"" - Deana Carter

Look at Us

"" - Chad Brownlee

I Drive Your Truck

"" - Brett Kissel

The House That Built Me

"" - Tim Hicks, Mark Wills

The Gambler

"" - William Michael Morgan

When You Say Nothing at All

"" - Carolyn Dawn Johnson

Independence Day

"" - Josh Turner

Three Wooden Crosses

"" - Canaan Smith

Please Remember Me

"" - Billy Ray Cyrus

He Stopped Loving Her Today

"" - Drake White

Good Hearted Woman

"" - Dustin Lynch

Friends in Low Places

"" - Lauren Alaina

Believe