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The 2026 ACM Awards Were the Most Historic Night Country Music Has Seen in Years

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Las Vegas has always been a city that rewards audacity. So it felt entirely right that when the 61st Academy of Country Music Awards descended on the MGM Grand Garden Arena on May 17th, the night turned into one of the most electrifying, history-rewriting evenings country music has seen in years. Hosted by Shania Twain and streamed live on Prime Video, the ceremony brought together the genre’s biggest names under the neon glow of the desert, and by the time the last trophy was handed out, the record books had been torn up and rewritten.

Ella Langley won a record seven awards at the 2026 ACM Awards, surpassing the previous single-night record of six wins shared by Garth Brooks, Faith Hill, and Chris Stapleton. That sentence alone should stop you cold. Seven. In one night. Her victories included Female Artist of the Year, Song of the Year, Single of the Year for “Choosin’ Texas,” Music Event of the Year for “Don’t Mind If I Do” with Riley Green, and Artist-Songwriter of the Year. The Alabama native didn’t just have a good night. She had the best single night any artist has ever had in the award’s history. No other artist in ACM Awards history has amassed 12 awards in just two years, with the old record held by Faith Hill, who won 10 awards across the 1998 and 1999 ceremonies.

The evening opened with Song of the Year going to “Choosin’ Texas,” a nine-week Billboard Hot 100 number one, with Langley accepting alongside co-writers Luke Dick, Miranda Lambert, and Joybeth Taylor. Her first words at the microphone: “If you’ve ever met me, you know I am not at a loss for words very often. All I gotta say is thank you, God, for putting me in a room with these three people right here.” It was a moment of genuine disbelief, and as the night wore on and trophy after trophy landed in her arms, that disbelief never entirely left her face.

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Backstage, Langley tried to put the surreal weight of the evening into words. “I keep wondering when this is going to feel like real life and it yet to have done that,” she said. “I’ve wanted this my whole entire life. My whole entire life. I’ve watched these award shows and I’ve watched a lot of these people that love me and support me up here from back home, in my living room on the TV. And standing up on stage and looking out at those women that have continuously had my back, made me emotional.” That’s not acceptance speech filler. That’s someone still in the middle of processing what just happened to them.

When Female Artist of the Year was announced, Lainey Wilson, the two-time defending champion, was the first to run over and hug Langley before she reached the stage. That moment was not rehearsed. It was not a handoff. It was one woman who had held the title genuinely celebrating the one taking it. Langley would later reveal that earlier in the day she had been having a rough morning and walked straight into Wilson’s room in tears. Wilson wrapped her up and prayed for her. Country music, for all its tensions and contradictions, produced something real on Sunday night.

The night’s other defining story was Cody Johnson, a man who has been building his career brick by brick for over a decade, playing underpaying gigs on the circuit long before anyone in Nashville was paying close attention. Johnson took home Entertainer of the Year, earning the top prize for the first time in his career. He also claimed Male Artist of the Year. And yet, in the most revealing moment of his night, he admitted backstage that after winning Male Artist, he had quietly accepted that Entertainer wasn’t coming his way. “When they called it for Male Artist of the Year, I thought, well… that’s it,” he said. “You know, that’s the one I got because I feel like guys like me that have kind of been the underdog in a lot of situations. Like that was the thing that I was handed. It was like a consolation prize.” He caught himself. “Which is crazy to think about from a kid from Sebastopol, Texas, thinking that Male Artist of the Year is a freaking consolation prize.”

When the “C” in Cody came out of the envelope for Entertainer, he said it hit him like a wall. “God is good and hard work pays off,” he told the room. “If I never win another award musically for the rest of my life, I truly feel like I’ve accomplished what I wanted to accomplish.” He went straight to the bus to FaceTime his wife and kids. No afterparty first. Bus first. That’s Cody Johnson.

Parker McCollum took home Album of the Year for his self-titled record, and in his speech gave a shoutout to Cody Johnson for “talking me off the ledge a few months ago.” Asked to elaborate backstage, Johnson delivered perhaps the night’s most unexpectedly chaotic sidebar: the conversation had taken place over 27 holes of golf because 18 hadn’t been enough to sort things out, and somewhere in the middle of it, Johnson had tried to throw an alligator at McCollum, not knowing that alligators were McCollum’s singular greatest fear. “I’m very thankful that the alligator slipped out of my hands,” Johnson said, with the calm of a man who has clearly been in situations far worse than an escaped alligator.

McCollum, for his part, was still struggling to believe he deserved to be in the room at all. “If I did it seven nights a week for the rest of my life, I still don’t think I would really feel like I belong with those people,” he said of sharing a stage with Chris Stapleton, George Strait, and Miranda Lambert. “So, maybe just for a night, I do.”

Speaking of Lambert, she extended her lead as the most decorated artist in ACM history, now holding 35 awards. Her eighth win for Song of the Year set yet another record, and she tied her own mark with a fourth Single of the Year win, both coming as a collaborator on Langley’s “Choosin’ Texas.” Lambert also delivered what many called a showstopping performance of her new country disco single “Crisco.” The woman keeps finding new ways to announce herself.

Brooks and Dunn took home Duo of the Year, their 18th such honor, and remained as gloriously unbothered by the whole thing as ever. “You’ll never see us pull a piece of paper out of our pocket to thank our managers and the record label and our mothers,” Kix Brooks said. “The whole thing freaks us both out.” Ronnie Dunn put it more succinctly: “We’re in Vegas, so it’s a good time to say we’re real lucky.” After 18 of these, they’ve earned the right to be casual about it.

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The newcomers made their presence impossible to ignore. Tucker Wetmore was named New Male Artist of the Year, and backstage he looked genuinely stunned, the kind of stunned that doesn’t come from false modesty. “I don’t think this is real,” he said. “If I wake up tomorrow and it’s all fake, I wouldn’t be surprised. It’s all God. It’s all it is.” Avery Anna won New Female Artist and seized on her moment to deliver something more than gratitude. If she’d had the chance to give an acceptance speech, part of it would have gone directly to the young women watching at home: “Pour yourself into the person that God made you to be and don’t let self-doubt get in the way of that.” She then stepped onstage and performed a mash-up of Cher’s “Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)” with her own song “Blood Runs Thicker,” locked eyes with her father in the crowd, and sang “I am my father’s daughter.” “It felt exhilarating,” she said afterward. “I can’t believe that I did that in front of all my favorite artists.”

The Red Clay Strays won Group of the Year and nearly missed the whole thing, with one member admitting they almost sent their bandmate to grab a beer before the category was called. Stephen Wilson Jr. took Visual Media of the Year for his video for “Cuckoo,” which he and co-director Tim Cofield cheerfully described as “the antithesis of country videos” and “upside down.” They had no idea it would win anything when they made it. That’s usually when the best things happen.

The show closed with Blake Shelton covering Kenny Rogers’ “The Gambler,” written by Don Schlitz, who died last month, a quiet, aching tribute that landed like a reminder of what country music, at its core, is still capable of. Earlier, Lauren Alaina became emotional while introducing Dan and Shay, who performed “Say So” as a tribute to Ben Vaughn, the beloved Warner Chappell Nashville president and CEO who died by suicide last year.

What the 61st ACM Awards ultimately gave us was a portrait of a genre at a crossroads, choosing authenticity over safety almost every time the envelope was opened. Ella Langley rewrote the record books. Cody Johnson cashed in a decade of sweat equity. New voices showed up fearless. And in the middle of it all, on a stage in Las Vegas, two women who had once competed for the same title embraced each other without hesitation.

Country music can be a lot of things. Sunday night, it was its best self.

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