NASHVILLE, Tenn. (April 20, 2016) – The
National Music Council will bring its annual American Eagle Awards
presentation to Nashville, Tennessee, for a second year in a row on
Saturday, June 25, 2016. The highly prestigious Eagle Awards are
presented each year in national celebration of an individual’s or an
organization’s long term contribution to America’s musical culture and
heritage. This year, music legends Emmylou Harris and Vince Gill will be
honored, along with the iconic Grand Ole Opry.
Past American Eagle Award recipients include Kris Kristofferson,
Quincy Jones, Herbie Hancock, Clive Davis, Van Cliburn, Benny Goodman,
Lionel Hampton, Dizzy Gillespie, Morton Gould, Dave Brubeck, Marian
Anderson, Jim Halsey, Lena Horne, Roy Clark, Elliott Carter, The Oak
Ridge Boys, Roberta Peters, Odetta, Sherman Halsey, Stephen Sondheim,
Sesame Street, Hard Rock Cafe, Music Makes Us, and VH-1 Save the Music
Foundation. This year’s event in Nashville will mark the 33rd year of
formal presentations of the Awards.
Emmylou Harris is one of the most admired and respected female
vocalists in music history. With 13 Grammy Awards and a trio of CMA
trophies, her work has garnered admiration and praise from her peers.
Beginning with her 1975 masterpiece Pieces Of The Sky, Harris
began to carve out a reputation as one of the genre’s most progressive
talents – though one with a clear reverence toward the history of the
Country format. She made songs by The Louvin Brothers, Buck Owens, and
Hank Snow hits again. She also teamed up with Dolly Parton and Linda
Ronstadt for the iconic Trio album in 1987. Harris was inducted as a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 1992, and into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2008.
Whether it be Country, Rock, Bluegrass, or Gospel, there is no genre
of music that Vince Gill hasn’t excelled in during his much-heralded
career. Starting out playing in a Bluegrass band called Mountain Smoke
when he was a teenager, he later joined Boone Creek – a band fronted by
future Country star Ricky Skaggs. He spent three years as lead singer of
the Pop / Rock group Pure Prairie League before moving to Nashville in
the early 1980s. It took him a few years to find his artistic path, but
he hit big in 1990 with “When I Call Your Name.” Future hits included
“Liza Jane” and “Go Rest High On That Mountain.” Twenty Grammy Awards
later, Gill stands as one of the most revered male artists of all time.
He was inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in 1991, and the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2007.
Musical artists have come from all over the world for a chance to perform on the stage that is the Grand Ole Opry.
Starting as the WSM Barn Dance in the fall of 1925, the show has
enchanted artists and fans alike ever since. Legends such as Hank
Williams and Patsy Cline have dazzled with their talents there, as have
modern-day hit-makers like Carrie Underwood and Brad Paisley. It’s been
called the “home of American music” and “country’s most famous stage.”
Every year, hundreds of thousands of people make pilgrimages across town
or around the world to the Grand Ole Opry to see the show live. Millions more tune in to Opry broadcasts via a mobile app, SiriusXM Satellite Radio, Nashville’s 650 AM WSM, and on opry.com and wsmonline.com.
The event will also feature the New York Emmy award winning animation
created by the NMC and the Music Publishers Association of the United
States, as part of a primary school lesson plan that encourages kids to
think about the ramifications of taking other people’s creative works
without permission. NMC Director David Sanders frames the animated piece
as “part of a world-wide effort by creators to change the narrative in
terms of fostering an understanding that the online protection of
creative works enhances freedom of speech and the marketplace of ideas,
rather than encroaching on them.”
The National Music Council continues to serve as a forum for the free
discussion of this country’s national music affairs and challenges.
Founded in 1940 to act as a clearinghouse for the joint opinion and
decision of its members and to work to strengthen the importance of
music in our life and culture, the Council’s initial membership of 13
has grown to almost 50 national music organizations, encompassing every
important form of professional and commercial musical activity.
Through the cooperative work of its member organizations, the
National Music Council promotes and supports music and music education
as an integral part of the curricula in the schools of our nation, and
in the lives of its citizens. The Council provides for the exchange of
information and coordination of efforts among its member organizations
and speaks with one voice for the music community whenever an
authoritative expression of opinion is desirable. Proceeds from the
event support the Council’s music education advocacy efforts.
The awards will be presented at a 1:00 pm ceremony in the Davidson
Ballroom of the Nashville Music City Center as part of the Summer NAMM
Show. A VIP luncheon and interview/reception with the honorees will
accompany the awards presentation. For tickets, schedule, and
sponsorship information, visit musiccouncil.org,