Americana Honors & Awards Winners 2019

[Winners of the Americana Music Association’s member-voted awards, shown above (l.-r.): John Prine, Brandi Carlile, I’m With Her, The War and Treaty, and Chris Eldridge. Composite image courtesy of the Americana Music Association ]

Singer-Songwriter John Prine was the big winner in The 2019 Americana Honors & Awards that were presented on Wednesday, September 11 at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. His 2019 release, The Tree of Forgiveness, was named Album of the Year, while “Summer’s End” was voted Song of the Year.

An internationally acclaimed singer-songwriter, Prine has been touring and plying his craft for nearly 50 years. The Tree of Forgiveness is his first collection of new material since his Grammy-winning 2005 release, Fair and Square. It was the most-played album on folk radio during 2018 and also featured the year’s top song (“Knockin’ On You Screen Door”), according to charts compiled from radio playlists submitted to FOLKDJ-L, an electronic discussion forum for DJs and others in all folk-based music on the radio. Prine also was nominated for three Grammy Awards in the American Roots Music field last year — including Best Americana Album and Best American Roots Song (for both “Knockin’ On Your Screen Door” and “Summer’s End).”

Bonnie Raitt joined John Prine to perform one of his classic songs during the 2019 Americana Honors & Awards (Photo courtesy of the Americana Music Association)

Bonnie Raitt joined John Prine to perform one of his classic songs during the 2019 Americana Honors & Awards (Photo courtesy of the Americana Music Association)

Joined by Bonnie Raitt, Prine also performed one of his classic songs, “Angel From Montgomery,” during an awards ceremony that was the highlight of the 20th annual AMERICANAFEST –- a six-day festival and conference celebrating American roots-inspired music that is put on by the Americana Music Association. A live video stream of the show, hosted by The Milk Carton Kids (Kenneth Pattengale and Jory Ryan) and featuring an all-star band led by Buddy Miller, also was webcast via NPRMusic.org, while a live audio simulcast aired on SiriusXM’s Outlaw Country and several Nashville area radio stations. Performance highlights also will air beginning in November on a special edition of Austin City Limits on PBS television stations.

Produced by Dave Cobb, Prine’s The Tree of Forgiveness bested two other Cobb –produced albums – Amanda Shires’ To the Sunset and Lori McKenna’s The Tree – as well as British newcomer Yola’s Walk Through Fire, produced by Dan Auerbach.

“Summer’s End, –which Prine co-wrote with Pat McLaughlin– took top song honors over “By Degrees” by Mark Erelli, “Mockingbird” by Ruston Kelly, and “People Get Old” by Lori McKenna (who also was among the artists featured on Erelli’s song).

Artist of the Year honors went to Brandi Carlile, a folk-rock and Americana singer-songwriter, who also was the big winner in the American Roots Music Field during the 61st annual Grammy Awards presented by the Recording Academy in February at which her eighth album, By The Way, I Forgive You, was named Best Americana Album, while one of its tracks (“The Joke”) was named both Best American Roots Performance and Best American Roots Song. Carlile also is part of a newly-formed group called The Highwomen.

I’m With Her — the up-and-coming female Americana-folk trio comprised of Sarah Jarosz, Aoife O’Donovan and Sara Watkins –- was voted Duo/Group of the Year. Named as Emerging Act of the Year was The War and Treaty, the husband-and-wife duo of Michael and Tanya Trotter, who initially wowed folks when they filled in for Buddy Miller (who produced their album, Healing Tide) during the 2017 Americana Music Festival & Conference at Nashville’s Cannery Ballroom. In accepting the award on 9-11, the duo paid tribute to everyone suffering with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The custom-designed award for Instrumentalist of the Year was presented to Chris Eldridge, a guitarist and member of Punch Brothers, who also was a founding member of the bluegrass group The Infamous Stringdusters.

Legacy of Americana award recipient Rhiannon Middens performs during the 2019 Americana Honors & Awards in Nashville. (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld via NPR Music livestream)

Legacy of Americana award recipient Rhiannon Middens performs during the 2019 Americana Honors & Awards in Nashville. (iPhone Photo: Michael Kornfeld via NPR Music livestream)

In addition to the six Americana Music Association member-voted awards categories, several Lifetime Achievement Awards and the inaugural Legacy of Americana Award also were presented, while AMA’s 2019 President’s Award was given posthumously to Felice and Boudleaux Bryant – who were known as Nashville’s first professional songwriting team. Lifetime Achievement Awards were presented to Elvis Costello (Songwriting), Delbert McClinton (Performance), and Maria Muldaur (Trailblazer) – each of whom also spoke briefly and performed during the show – as did Mavis Staples, who received an Inspiration Award in recognition of a career that has spanned nearly seven decades.

The recipients of the new Legacy of Americana Award, presented in partnership with the National Museum of African-American Music that is slated to open next year in Nashville, were Rhiannon Giddens and the late Frank Johnson. Giddens, honored for her “unstinting devotion to African-American folk tradition” currently performs solo as a powerhouse vocalist and as part of Our Native Daughters, a group of four female African-American artists that was among the nominees for Duo/Group of the Year. Formerly a founding member of the Grammy Award-winning Carolina Chocolate Drops, Giddens also accepted the award for Jackson. In doing so, she referred to him as “an inextricable part of American music [whose] legacy I carry and will, God willing, pass on in my time.”

AMERICANAFEST, which began Sept. 10, continues through Sept. 15. Filled with daytime panel discussions and seminars and evenings chock-full of artist showcases at venues throughout the Music City, the annual event attracts several thousand artists, music industry professionals and fans.

Established in 1999, the Americana Music Association is a professional not-for-profit trade association whose mission is to advocate for the authentic voice of American roots music around the world. For more information, visit www.americanamusic.org.