Neha Patil (Editor)

2006 in country music

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This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in the year 2006.

Contents

Events

  • January 14 — With the song, "She Let Herself Go," George Strait scores his 40th No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart, all of them solo. It ties a 20-year-old record for most No. 1's on the country chart, held by Conway Twitty (35 solo, five duet with Loretta Lynn).
  • January 21 — Kix Brooks, one half of the country superstar duo Brooks & Dunn, takes over as host of "American Country Countdown," succeeding longtime host Bob Kingsley.
  • April — Hank Williams Jr. is arrested in Memphis, Tennessee for assault after attempting to choke a teenage waitress at a hotel there.
  • May — People reports on the engagement of Keith Urban and actress Nicole Kidman. The two are married on June 25. Also during the month, Little Big Town members Jimi Westbrook and Karen Fairchild are wed; their marriage was announced in July.
  • May 3 — Lynn Anderson arrested in New Mexico after causing a traffic accident at a local intersection due to drunk driving. She was released the next day on bond. Anderson was taken to court later that year where all her previous charges were dropped, as long as she didn't commit any more offenses.
  • May 21 — Grand Ole Opry mainstay Billy Walker is killed in a car accident near Fort Deposit, Alabama, when the van he was riding in overturned along Interstate 65. Also killed in the wreck are Walker's wife, Bettie; and two member of his band. His 21-year-old grandson, Joshua Brooks, is critically injured. Walker was returning home from a show near Gulf Shores, Alabama.
  • May 23 — The Tennessean of Nashville reports plans by Academy of Country Music to move its awards show to April, after consistently being drubbed in the ratings by powerhouse American Idol. The ACMs, which aired May 24 on CBS, appeared opposite Fox's American Idol for the fourth year in a row.
  • June 24 — The first Midsummer Day country music festival in Drottningstorp is held.
  • July 4 — Johnny Cash releases American V which instantly hits #1.
  • August 17 — Los Angeles' lone country music station, KZLA-FM, switches its format to urban pop.
  • August 19 — Keith Urban's "Once in a Lifetime" becomes the highest-ever debuting song on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart during the Broadcast Data Systems-era, ranking at No. 17 in its first week. "Lifetime" breaks the 10-month-old BDS-era standard set by "Good Ride Cowboy" by Garth Brooks.
  • September 12 — Sara Evans and professional partner Tony Dovolani begin competing on ABC's Dancing with the Stars, to rousing reviews. Evans' gig will last four weeks.
  • September 18 — Willie Nelson and several of his band members are charged with misdemeanor drug possession in Louisiana. State police had pulled Nelson's tour bus over for a routine commercial inspection and, after smelling a suspicious odor inside, searched the bus and found marijuana and psychedelic mushrooms.
  • September 30 — George Strait finally breaks Conway Twitty's record by scoring his record 41st No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart with "Give It Away."
  • September 30 — The documentary Dixie Chicks: Shut Up and Sing is released. The film chronicles the lives of the Dixie Chicks band members and the fallout that resulted after lead singer Natalie Maines made critical remarks about U.S. President George W. Bush during a 2003 concert in London, England.
  • October 13 — One day after abruptly leaving Dancing with the Stars, news breaks that Sara Evans was seeking a divorce from her husband, Craig Schelske. Allegations Evans levied against Schelske included his affair with the family's ex-nanny, that he watched and downloaded pornography in the house, and his removal of $275,000 from the couple's joint bank account on the day the divorce decree was filed.
  • October 19 — Keith Urban checks himself into a rehabilitation center for alcohol abuse.
  • October 20 — Flicka, an adaptation of the 1941 children's novel, hits the movie theaters. Tim McGraw is in the leading adult male role as Wyoming rancher Rob McGlaughlin.
  • November 6 — The Country Music Association awards airs for the first time on ABC. The awards show had been on CBS since 1972. Keith Urban, who won the Male Vocalist of the Year, is absent due to his rehab stint, and co-host Ronnie Dunn read Urban's acceptance letter. Hall of Fame inductee Kris Kristofferson presented the inductions for 2006 inductees George Strait, Harold Bradley and Sonny James, each of whom gave brief acceptance speeches; Strait also performed his No. 1 hit "Give It Away." Controversy reigned when Faith Hill appeared to react angrily after Carrie Underwood won the Female Vocalist of the Year award.
  • December 3 — The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts honors Dolly Parton for her lifetime contributions to the arts.
  • No dates

  • No less than nine acts enjoyed their first No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart during 2006, the most since 1991. Those artists were Carrie Underwood, Josh Turner, Bon Jovi along with Jennifer Nettles of Sugarland, Jack Ingram, Jason Aldean, Rodney Atkins, The Wreckers, Heartland and Sugarland. Four of those acts - Bon Jovi, Nettles, The Wreckers and Heartland - turned the trick with their first charted country single. (Although she previously had two Top 5 hits and a Top 10 hit as a member of Sugarland, Jennifer Nettles made her first entry on the Hot Country Songs chart under her own name as part of a collaboration with Bon Jovi, which, in turn, also made their first Hot Country Songs chart entry. Their collaboration, "Who Says You Can't Go Home," ultimately peaked at No. 1 on that chart - a first for both Nettles and Bon Jovi - and as of late, it is the only No. 1 hit for either act there. Sugarland, Nettles' group, would eventually score their first career No. 1 hit on the same chart by the end of the year.)
  • During that same 12-month time span, chart veteran George Strait extended his No. 1 string to a Billboard-best 41, beating Conway Twitty's record of 40 No. 1's, while Dolly Parton scored her 25th No. 1 (as part of a duet with Brad Paisley) and Kenny Chesney extended his string of No. 1's to 10.

    Top hits of the year

    The following songs placed within the Top 20 on the Hot Country Songs charts in 2006:

    Top new album releases

    The following albums placed within the Top 50 on the Top Country Albums charts in 2006:

    Deaths

  • March 23 — Cindy Walker, 87, prolific songwriter ("You Don't Know Me," "Cherokee Maiden"). (extended illness)
  • March 25 — Alvis Edgar "Buck" Owens Jr., 76, one of the pioneers of the Bakersfield Sound; co-host of Hee Haw. (heart attack)
  • April 24 — Bonnie Owens, 76, singer-songwriter and ex-wife of Buck Owens and Merle Haggard (complications from Alzheimer's disease).
  • May 21 — Billy Walker, 77, Grand Ole Opry legend best known for "Charlie's Shoes" and "Cross the Brazos at Waco" (car accident).
  • August 14 — Johnny Duncan, 67, country music stalwart of the 1970s, best known for a series of duets with Janie Fricke. (heart attack)
  • October 14 — Freddy Fender, 69, Tex Mex-styled singer-songwriter who achieved his greatest success in the mid-1970s ("Before the Next Teardrop Falls," "Wasted Days and Wasted Nights"), and recorded with two Tejano bands. (lung cancer)
  • November 1 - Buddy Killen, 73, record producer and music publishing owner.
  • December 22 — Dennis Linde, 63, well-respected songwriter of hits for acts ranging from Elvis Presley and Roger Miller to Garth Brooks and the Dixie Chicks. (idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis)
  • Country Music Hall of Fame inductees

  • Harold Bradley (born 1926)
  • Sonny James (born 1929)
  • George Strait (born 1952)
  • Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees

  • Terry Carisse
  • Brian Ahern
  • Curley Gurlock
  • Grammy Awards

    (presented February 11, 2007 in Los Angeles)

  • Best Female Country Vocal Performance — "Jesus, Take the Wheel," Carrie Underwood
  • Best Male Country Vocal Performance — "The Reason Why," Vince Gill
  • Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal — "Not Ready to Make Nice," Dixie Chicks
  • Best Country Collaboration with Vocals — "Who Says You Can't Go Home," Bon Jovi with Jennifer Nettles
  • Best Country Instrumental Performance — "Whiskey Before Breakfast," Bryan Sutton and Doc Watson
  • Best Country Song — "Jesus, Take the Wheel," Brett James, Hillary Lindsey and Gordie Sampson
  • Best Country AlbumTaking the Long Way, Dixie Chicks
  • Best Bluegrass AlbumInstrumentals, Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder
  • Juno Awards

    (presented April 1, 2007 in Saskatoon)

  • Country Recording of the YearSomebody Wrote Love, George Canyon
  • CMT Music Awards

    (presented April 10 in Nashville)

  • Video of the Year — "Better Life," Keith Urban
  • Male Video of the Year — "Who You'd Be Today," Kenny Chesney
  • Female Video of the Year — "Jesus, Take the Wheel," Carrie Underwood
  • Group/Duo Video of the Year — "Skin (Sarabeth)," Rascal Flatts
  • Breakthrough Video of the Year — "Jesus, Take the Wheel," Carrie Underwood
  • Collaborative Video of the Year — "Who Says You Can't Go Home," Bon Jovi Featuring Jennifer Nettles
  • Hottest Video of the Year — "Must Be Doin' Somethin' Right," Billy Currington
  • Most Inspiring Video of the Year — "When I Get Where I'm Going," Brad Paisley Featuring Dolly Parton
  • Video Director of the Year — "Like We Never Loved at All," Faith Hill Featuring Tim McGraw (Director: Sophie Muller)
  • Johnny Cash Visionary Award — Hank Williams, Jr.
  • Academy of Country Music

    (presented May 15, 2007 in Las Vegas)

  • Entertainer of the Year — Kenny Chesney
  • Song of the Year — "Give It Away," Bill Anderson, Buddy Cannon and Jamey Johnson
  • Single of the Year — "Give It Away," George Strait
  • Album of the YearSome Hearts, Carrie Underwood
  • Top Male Vocalist — Brad Paisley
  • Top Female Vocalist — Carrie Underwood
  • Top Vocal Duo — Brooks & Dunn
  • Top Vocal Group — Rascal Flatts
  • Top New Male Vocalist — Rodney Atkins
  • Top New Female Vocalist — Miranda Lambert
  • Top New Duo or Group — Little Big Town
  • Video of the Year — "Before He Cheats," Carrie Underwood (Director: Roman White)
  • Vocal Event of the Year — "Building Bridges," Brooks & Dunn, Vince Gill and Sheryl Crow
  • ACM/Home Depot Humanitarian of the Year — Brooks & Dunn
  • Cliffie Stone Pioneer Award — Dolly Parton, Don Williams and the late Harlan Howard and Waylon Jennings
  • Jim Reeves International Award — Buck Owens
  • Mae Boren Axton Award — Jack Lameier
  • Canadian Country Music Association

    (presented September 11 in Saint John)

  • Kraft Cheez Whiz Fans' Choice Award — Terri Clark
  • Male Artist of the Year — George Canyon
  • Female Artist of the Year — Carolyn Dawn Johnson
  • Group or Duo of the Year — The Road Hammers
  • SOCAN Song of the Year — "Jesus, Take the Wheel," Brett James, Hillary Lindsey, Gordie Sampson
  • Single of the Year — "Somebody Wrote Love," George Canyon
  • Album of the YearHair in My Eyes Like a Highland Steer, Corb Lund
  • Top Selling AlbumThe Legend of Johnny Cash, Johnny Cash
  • CMT Video of the Year — "East Bound and Down," The Road Hammers
  • Chevy Trucks Rising Star Award — Johnny Reid
  • Roots Artist or Group of the Year — Corb Lund
  • Country Music Association

    (presented November 6 in Nashville, Tennessee)

  • Entertainer of the Year — Kenny Chesney
  • Song of the Year — "Believe," Craig Wiseman and Ronnie Dunn
  • Single of the Year — "Believe," Brooks & Dunn
  • Album of the YearTime Well Wasted, Brad Paisley
  • Male Vocalist of the Year — Keith Urban
  • Female Vocalist of the Year — Carrie Underwood
  • Vocal Duo of the Year — Brooks & Dunn
  • Vocal Group of the Year — Rascal Flatts
  • Horizon Award — Carrie Underwood
  • Video of the Year — "Believe," Brooks & Dunn (Directors: Robert Deaton and George J. Flanigen IV)
  • Vocal Event of the Year — "When I Get Where I'm Going," Brad Paisley and Dolly Parton
  • Musician of the Year — Randy Scruggs
  • Country Music Association
  • Inductees of the Country Music Hall of Fame
  • References

    2006 in country music Wikipedia