Thursday, February 10, 2022

The nominations for the
ACM Awards exemplify the
Academy of Country Music’s continued commitment to diversity and recognition of artists who might otherwise fall between the cracks.
Chris Young, perennially the “nice guy" who just misses the major nominations, leads with seven—including Album of the Year for
Famous Friends, plus Single, Vocal Event and Video for the title song, a duet with
Kane Brown. Three of his nominations are for co-production.
Receiving five nominations each are
Walker Hayes, who blew up with “Fancy Like,” and
Miranda Lambert and
Chris Stapleton, both up for Entertainer of the Year. Also noteworthy (stunning, to some) is the return of
Morgan Wallen, who picks up Male, Album and Song of the Year nods for
Dangerous: The Double Album and “7 Summers Ago.”
Females account for 37% of the nominees and women are nominated in every non-gendered category, including Entertainer, with
Carrie Underwood and Lambert joining Stapleton,
Eric Church and
Luke Combs. A strong category in any year, Entertainer is even more significant in 2022, with touring not yet in full swing. Additionally, Underwood’s duet with
Jason Aldean, “If I Didn’t Love You” was acknowledged for Vocal Event, Single and Event, Lambert’s
The Marfa Tapes with
Jack Ingram and
Jon Randall was recognized for Album and Lambert's pairing with
Elle King on “Drunk (And I Don’t Want to Go Home)” was nominated for Video of the Year. These eclectic projects gave both women widespread visibility amid the pandemic.

Co-hosts and 2021 New Male/Female winners
Jimmie Allen and
Gabby Barrett pick up Male and Female Vocalist nods. Could they be on their way to Entertainer of the Year noms, potentially securing the ACM's coveted Triple Crown?
In the New Male Artist category, Hayes will face off with writer/producer
HARDY, songwriter
Ryan Hurd, Texas sensation
Parker McCollum and heatseeker
Elvie Shane, while songwriter
Caitlyn Smith, viral spark plug
Priscilla Block, mainstreamer
Tenille Arts, alt-leaning
Lily Rose and firestarter
Lainey Wilson will vie for New Female Artist.
Wilson also picks up a Song of the Year nomination for “Things a Man Oughta Know.” Making a mark in Song, Single of the Year and Vocal Event is
Jordan Davis with “Buy Dirt,” featuring
Luke Bryan.
Intriguingly,
Taylor Swift returns to the ACM ballot as “I Bet You Think About Me (Taylor’s Version),” featuring Stapleton, notches a Best Video nod for its
Blake Lively-directed clip.
Brooks & Dunn are in the Top Duo lineup alongside
Brothers Osborne,
Dan + Shay, LOCASH and
Maddie & Tae. Vocal Group includes perennials
Lady A,
Little Big Town,
Midland,
Old Dominion and
The Cadillac Three.

Other standout nominees include reigning AOTY champ Stapleton, whose recent #1 “You Should Probably Leave” picks up a Single of the Year nod, and
CMA-winning Female Vocalist
Carly Pearce, who nabbed noms for Female, Album (
29: Written in Stone), Video and Vocal Event (“Never Wanted to Be That Girl” with
Ashley McBryde). Pearce joins Male Vocalist nominee
Thomas Rhett in Album; he's nominated in the category for
Country Again: Side A.
Kelsea Ballerini and
Kenny Chesney are up for Video and Vocal Event—categories they won in at last fall’s CMA Awards—for “half of my hometown.”
Beyond the increased presence of women—and that women make up 50% of the producers and directors in Video of the Year—the Academy's PR materials also note three members of the LGBTQ+ community among the nominees: Brothers Osborne’s
TJ, Lily Rose and four-time-nominated überproducer/songwriter
Shane McAnally.
Times change, music moves forward—and awards shows explore new horizons; in a first for any major awards presentation, in any genre, the ACMs will be exclusively livestreamed to the world, via
Amazon Prime Video,
creating a truly global conversation about winners, nominees, the outfits,
Dolly Parton’s one-liners and the performances.