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Jamey Johnson, Carrie Underwood Among ACM Winners
LAS VEGAS (AP) -- Jamey Johnson took home Song of the
Year honors and Rascal Flatts won their seventh in a
row for Top Vocal Group at the Academy of Country Music Awards, but Sunday's
ceremony was highlighted by performances that ranged from extravagant to
poignant, perhaps none more so than John Rich's angry anthem "Shuttin'
Detroit Down."
"I'd like to dedicate this song tonight to all the hard-working taxpaying
Americans from coast to coast who love this country as much as I do," Rich said
to the audience while holding a guitar tagged with the sticker "Made in the
U.S.A."
"We wrote this song specifically for you," he said before launching into his
searing song that feeds into taxpayer resentment about the bailouts on Wall
Street.
His performance roused the crowd at the MGM Grand in Las Vegas, but his
wasn't the only one. Teen sensation Miley Cyrus performed her new song as
she danced atop a high staircase on-stage, Heidi Newfield sang her song "Johnny
and June," inspired by the late Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash, surrounded by
an appropriate ring of fire, and Carrie Underwood unveiled a burgundy
dress during her performance so overwhelming that it took up most of the
stage.
"Can I borrow that?" host Reba McEntire quipped after
Underwood's performance. Underwood later won an award for Top Female Vocalist:
"I feel like I won 'American Idol' all over again," she said excitedly as she
picked up her trophy.
Taylor Swift had four nominations
going into Sunday's show, but for being the top-selling artist in country and
pop music, she got a special, unexpected honor after she performed the ballad
"You're Not Sorry" following a magical entrance courtesy of magician David
Copperfield.
McEntire stopped her and presented her with a special ACM Crystal Milestone
Award for bringing so many young people to country music.
"Are you serious?" a stunned Swift asked McEntire then hugged her. "To you
guys who come to my show, I have absolutely fallen in love with you and will
never forget you, ever."
Sugarland broke Brooks & Dunn's lock on the Vocal
Duo award, while "Dancing With the Stars" champ Julianne Hough took the Top New Artist
trophy during Sunday's Academy of Country Music Awards.
"Thank you for dreaming back every time we dream," said Sugarland's Kristian
Bush. The duo kept Brooks & Dunn from winning the category for the 14th
straight year.
A tearful Hough, who added country singer to her "Dancing With the Stars"
credentials, thanked "Everybody that has followed me from the beginning and
believed in me."
Earlier, newcomer Johnson beat out veterans such as George Strait and Brad Paisley in nabbing the
night's first honor, Song of the Year for his poignant hit about an old man
looking back on his life, "Living in Color."
"Thanks to my band going in off day and producing an off record," Johnson
quipped in a brief acceptance speech.
The show began by featuring country's top superstars in a medley of hits
anchored by Brooks & Dunn's "Play Something Country." It included Taylor
Swift's fiery "Picture to Burn," Sugarland's "It Happens," Carrie Underwood's
"All American Girl" and Rascal Flatts' "Me and My Gang."
Later, Keith Urban performed guitar-driven
"Kiss a Girl," with giant screen behind him flashing a montage of photos.
Lee Ann Womack, wearing a black dress
and heels and strumming a black guitar, performed her lonely drinking song
"Solitary Thinking."
Strait and Brad Paisley led all nominees with six. Paisley was linked up by
video from Nashville, Tenn., where his wife, Kimberly Williams-Paisley, is
expecting their second child, and accepted the trophy for Male Vocalist of the
Year from there.
Jamie Foxx introduced Strait's
performance of "Troubadour," and joked that the country scene was getting more
diverse.
"Things are changing," Foxx said, mentioning his repeat appearance at the
ACMs and Darius Rucker's success on the country
charts. "(An) African-American singing country. Things are changing. Got a black
man running the country. Things are changing. ... I mean what's next, white
people going to Tyler Perry movies?"
Besides Strait, nominees for Entertainer of the Year — the night's top trophy
— were Paisley, Kenny Chesney, Carrie Underwood and
Keith Urban.
Underwood took the award to become only the seventh female act to do so,
putting her alongside Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton, Barbara Mandrell, Reba
McEntire, Shania Twain and, most recently, the
Dixie Chicks in 2000.
The show aired live from the MGM Grand on CBS.
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