Our CMA Flashback series concludes with the biggest honor of them all: Entertainer of the Year.
For a look back at the other major categories, visit our CMA Awards page.
2022
Luke Combs
Miranda Lambert
Chris Stapleton
Carrie Underwood
Morgan Wallen
Luke Combs repeated as Entertainer of the Year on the same evening he earned his second Album of the Year award.
2021
Eric Church
Luke Combs
Miranda Lambert
Chris Stapleton
Carrie Underwood
2020
Eric Church
Luke Combs
Miranda Lambert
Carrie Underwood
Keith Urban
For the first time in six years, Entertainer of the Year went to a first time winner. Eric Church took home the prize on his fourth try, a remarkable achievement in a year where his legendary touring was limited by COVID-19 and his musical output was sparse.
2019
Garth Brooks
Eric Church
Chris Stapleton
Carrie Underwood
Keith Urban
Garth Brooks won his seventh and presumably final Entertainer of the Year trophy. In the aftermath of his victory, he responded to the backlash over this win by requesting that he no longer be nominated.
2018
Jason Aldean
Luke Bryan
Kenny Chesney
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban
Keith Urban returned to win this category for the second time, a full thirteen years since his first victory in 2005.
2017
Garth Brooks
Luke Bryan
Eric Church
Chris Stapleton
Keith Urban
Garth Brooks strengthened his hold on this category, winning for a record sixth time.
2016
Garth Brooks
Luke Bryan
Chris Stapleton
Carrie Underwood
Keith Urban
On the evening that celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of the CMA Awards, Garth Brooks returned to the winner’s circle for the fifth time, breaking the all time record for wins in this category.
2015
Garth Brooks
Luke Bryan
Kenny Chesney
Eric Church
Miranda Lambert
Luke Bryan became the tenth artist in CMA history to win two Entertainer of the Year awards, taking home the award for the second year in a row. Meanwhile, four time winner Garth Brooks returned to the category for the first time in sixteen years, thanks to his wildly successful comeback tour.
2014
Luke Bryan
Miranda Lambert
Blake Shelton
George Strait
Keith Urban
Luke Bryan’s first win for Entertainer of the Year was also his first CMA Award. He currently holds the distinction of being the only artist to win two Entertainer of the Year awards from the CMA without winning an award in any other category.
2013
Jason Aldean
Luke Bryan
Blake Shelton
George Strait
Taylor Swift
George Strait’s victory this year was primarily due to his record-breaking farewell tour, and it produced one of the most enthusiastic standing ovations in CMA history. Before his win this evening, the longest gap between wins in this category was seven years. The gap between Strait’s previous victory and this one? 23 years.
2012
Jason Aldean
Kenny Chesney
Brad Paisley
Blake Shelton
Taylor Swift
Blake Shelton dominated the Male Vocalist category from 2010-2014, and in 2012, he earned his only Entertainer of the Year trophy to add to his impressive collection.
2011
Jason Aldean
Brad Paisley
Blake Shelton
Taylor Swift
Keith Urban
Taylor Swift’s second victory in this category made her the second woman in history to earn this award twice, exactly thirty years after Barbara Mandrell achieved the same feat in 1981.
2010
Lady Antebellum
Miranda Lambert
Brad Paisley
Keith Urban
Zac Brown Band
2010 shook up the category, with three first-time contenders in the running for the crown for the first time since 1981. Despite all the new blood, sixth time proved to be the charm for Brad Paisley, who finally won this award after five consecutive losses. Paisley’s persistent popularity helped him earn the nod in a year where the two previous winners weren’t even nominated.
2009
Kenny Chesney
Brad Paisley
George Strait
Taylor Swift
Keith Urban
Taylor Swift both made history and prevented it with her win in this category. She simultaneously became the youngest artist ever and the first female solo artist in ten years to take home the prize. She also kept Kenny Chesney from becoming the sole all-time champion, remaining tied with Garth Brooks until Garth won another three the following decade.
2008
Kenny Chesney
Brad Paisley
George Strait
Sugarland
Keith Urban
As Sugarland became only the third duo in history to receive a nomination and George Strait extended his record number of nominations to sixteen, Kenny Chesney tied Garth Brooks for the most wins in this category with his fourth victory.
2007
Kenny Chesney
Brad Paisley
Rascal Flatts
George Strait
Keith Urban
Chesney entered the elite company of Garth Brooks, Alabama, and Alan Jackson with his third victory in this category. Rascal Flatts, meanwhile, became the first group since the Dixie Chicks to score back-to-back nominations, a feat also accomplished by Alabama and the Oak Ridge Boys.
2006
Brooks & Dunn
Kenny Chesney
Brad Paisley
Rascal Flatts
Keith Urban
It’s pretty rare to come back and win this award for a second time, as most multiple wins have been consecutive in this category. But Kenny Chesney returned to the winner’s circle two years after his last victory.
2005
Kenny Chesney
Alan Jackson
Toby Keith
Brad Paisley
Keith Urban
One of the most surprising and endearing wins in the history of this category, a shocked and humbled Urban accepted this award in New York City. He couldn’t have picked a better night to bring his Australian parents to the ceremony.
2004
Brooks & Dunn
Kenny Chesney
Alan Jackson
Toby Keith
Tim McGraw
Chesney’s long dry spell at the CMAs came to a satisfying end as the superstar collected both Entertainer and Album of the Year trophies. He had been charting for eleven years before finally winning his first CMA awards.
2003
Brooks & Dunn
Kenny Chesney
Alan Jackson
Toby Keith
Tim McGraw
The ACM had chosen Toby Keith as their standard bearer a few months earlier, but the CMA stuck with the previous year’s winner Alan Jackson, who joined the elite company of Garth Brooks and Alabama with his third Entertainer of the Year win.
2002
Brooks & Dunn
Kenny Chesney
Alan Jackson
Toby Keith
George Strait
Alan Jackson’s dominant sweep of the 2002 CMA Awards included his second win in this category, which he had first won in 1995. At the time, it was the longest gap between wins.
2001
Brooks & Dunn
The Chicks
Alan Jackson
Tim McGraw
George Strait
After winning two Male Vocalist and two Album of the Year honors in the previous three years, Tim McGraw finally won the big one. It was a satisfying acknowledgment of an artist who’d had his talent underestimated in the first few years of his stardom.
2000
The Chicks
Faith Hill
Alan Jackson
Tim McGraw
George Strait
The 2000 CMA Awards belonged to the Chicks, who won Album, Vocal Group, and Music Video along the way to their Entertainer of the Year victory. The inclusion of Faith Hill in the category made 2000 the first time in twelve years that two female acts were nominated at the same time.
1999
Garth Brooks
The Chicks
Tim McGraw
George Strait
Shania Twain
With her victory in this category, Shania Twain became the first woman in thirteen years to win Entertainer of the Year. This remains her only competitive CMA award to date.
1998
Garth Brooks
Brooks & Dunn
Vince Gill
Tim McGraw
George Strait
As hard as it is to believe that there were any records left for him to break by 1998, Garth Brooks shattered another one, becoming the first artist in the history of the CMA to win four Entertainer of the Year awards.
1997
Garth Brooks
Brooks & Dunn
Vince Gill
Alan Jackson
George Strait
In a year when all five nominees had won this award before, it was Garth Brooks who returned to the winner’s circle, tying Alabama’s long-standing record of three victories in this category.
1996
Garth Brooks
Brooks & Dunn
Vince Gill
Alan Jackson
George Strait
They were already winners of five CMA awards, thanks to their domination of the Vocal Duo category. But they finally won another race, and it was a big one. Brooks & Dunn remain the only duo to win this award, and only the second to be nominated, after The Judds.
1995
Garth Brooks
Brooks & Dunn
Vince Gill
Alan Jackson
Reba McEntire
Alan Jackson was relieved when he came up to accept his first Entertainer of the Year trophy, as it spared him some embarrassment. He’d brought his parents with him that night, and he’d lost every other race he was nominated for.
1994
Garth Brooks
Brooks & Dunn
Vince Gill
Alan Jackson
Reba McEntire
Soft-spoken Gill won for a second year, which was no big surprise given his widespread popularity in Music City. He also went home with Album and Male Vocalist the same night.
1993
Garth Brooks
Brooks & Dunn
Vince Gill
Alan Jackson
Reba McEntire
Vince Gill capped off an amazing night at the 1993 CMAs with his first victory in this category. It was his fifth win of the night, as he also took home Male Vocalist, Song, Album and Vocal Event.
1992
Garth Brooks
Vince Gill
Alan Jackson
Reba McEntire
Travis Tritt
Given that he was already the biggest-selling country artist the world had ever seen, it was no surprise that Garth Brooks won his second Entertainer of the Year trophy in 1992.
1991
Clint Black
Garth Brooks
Vince Gill
Reba McEntire
George Strait
A mere year after winning the Horizon award, Garth Brooks was the Entertainer of the Year at the CMAs. He was breaking every sales record in the book by that point. His meteoric rise from newcomer to standard-bearer has only been matched by the Dixie Chicks, who also won Entertainer of the Year in only their third year on the charts.
1990
Clint Black
Kathy Mattea
Ricky Van Shelton
George Strait
Randy Travis
While Randy Travis dominated the Male Vocalist race, George Strait was given his due again in the Entertainer category. He remains the most nominated in this category.
1989
Reba McEntire
Ricky Van Shelton
George Strait
Randy Travis
Hank Williams, Jr.
Three years after his most recent Male Vocalist trophy, mega-star George Strait was named Entertainer of the Year. He would go on to have one of his biggest years at radio, with two multi-week #1 singles in the twelve months that followed his victory.
1988
The Judds
Reba McEntire
George Strait
Randy Travis
Hank Williams, Jr.
Hank Jr. may have waited a long time for some CMA love, but once it came, it was in droves. He won Album of the Year the same night that he repeated in this category.
1987
The Judds
Reba McEntire
George Strait
Randy Travis
Hank Williams, Jr.
Four new traditionalists fell to a man who had been the glorification of Southern Rock for the previous decade. Williams had cracked the previous year when he won the Music Video award, “I make audio, too.” Finally, the CMA acknowledged him for his remarkable contributions to the genre.
1986
The Judds
Reba McEntire
Willie Nelson
Ricky Skaggs
George Strait
Reba McEntire has received more nominations for this award than any female artist in history. She won it on the same night that she collected her third of four Female Vocalist awards.
1985
Alabama
Lee Greenwood
Reba McEntire
Ricky Skaggs
George Strait
Few country artists command as much respect as Ricky Skaggs, a consummate singer and musician. Skaggs’ victory in this category was a triumph for bluegrass music that would only be matched by the O Brother and Alison Krauss wins in the years to come.
1984
Alabama
Lee Greenwood
Barbara Mandrell
Ronnie Milsap
Oak Ridge Boys
A mere three years after Barbara Mandrell made history by being the first artist to win two Entertainer awards, Alabama went her one better and won three. They would remain the only act to win this award three years in a row until Kenny Chesney matched that streak from 2006-2008.
1983
Alabama
Merle Haggard
Barbara Mandrell
Willie Nelson
Ricky Skaggs
How big were Alabama back in the early eighties? They were selling multi-platinum back when even the biggest country artists were lucky to go gold.
1982
Alabama
Barbara Mandrell
Willie Nelson
Oak Ridge Boys
Ricky Skaggs
The massive success of Alabama at radio and retail helped them become the first group to ever win this award, and the only group other than the Dixie Chicks to ever take it home.
1981
Alabama
George Jones
Barbara Mandrell
Oak Ridge Boys
Kenny Rogers
Barbara Mandrell made history as the first artist ever to win this award twice.
1980
Charlie Daniels Band
Larry Gatlin & The Gatlin Brothers
Barbara Mandrell
Willie Nelson
Kenny Rogers
After losing Female Vocalist to Emmylou Harris, Mandrell could be forgiven for thinking her night would end without a win. Instead, she became the third woman to win Entertainer of the Year, after Loretta Lynn (1972) and Dolly Parton (1978.)
1979
Crystal Gayle
Barbara Mandrell
Willie Nelson
Kenny Rogers
Statler Brothers
He never won Male Vocalist of the Year, but superstar Willie Nelson was given his due by the CMA in 1979 when they awarded him Entertainer of the Year.
1978
Crystal Gayle
Ronnie Milsap
Dolly Parton
Kenny Rogers
Mel Tillis
Her famous quote – “I’m not leaving country. I’m taking it with me!” – must have held some water with the Nashville establishment, as Parton won this award at the height of her pop crossover success with “Here You Come Again,” the title track of her first platinum album.
1977
Merle Haggard
Waylon Jennings
Ronnie Milsap
Dolly Parton
Kenny Rogers
He has three Male Vocalist and three Album awards to his credit, but Milsap’s only victory in the biggest race came in 1977.
1976
Waylon Jennings
Ronnie Milsap
Willie Nelson
Dolly Parton
Mel Tillis
This 2007 Hall of Fame inductee won this award just as he was changing labels. His daughter, Pam Tillis, would win Female Vocalist eighteen years later, making them the only parent-child combination to date to win major CMA awards.
1975
John Denver
Waylon Jennings
Loretta Lynn
Ronnie Milsap
Conway Twitty
John Denver’s victory in this race led to the most infamous moment in CMA history. Though he claimed it was due to medication later on, presenter Charlie Rich seemed to be making a furious statement against the pop crossover artists dominating country music when he opened the envelope, read it, and then lit a cigarette lighter and burned the envelope. The paper went up in flames as he derisively snarled the winner’s name, “My friend, Mister John Denver.” Denver, accepting via satellite, was unaware of what was going on at the Opry house, and graciously accepted his award.
1974
Roy Clark
Mac Davis
Loretta Lynn
Olivia Newton-John
Charlie Rich
The massive success of “The Most Beautiful Girl” and “Behind Closed Doors” helped Charlie Rich win this award, a year after winning the award for Male Vocalist.
1973
Roy Clark
Merle Haggard
Tom T. Hall
Loretta Lynn
Charley Pride
He’s best known for Hee Haw, the country music variety show that he co-hosted, and it’s no coincidence that he won while the show was in its prime, although industry respect for Clark’s talent as a musician was another big contributing factor.
1972
Merle Haggard
Freddie Hart
Loretta Lynn
Charley Pride
Jerry Reed
Her husband Mooney went hunting because he didn’t want to watch her lose. He missed watching history unfold before his eyes as Loretta Lynn became the first woman to win Entertainer of the Year.
1971
Merle Haggard
Loretta Lynn
Charley Pride
Jerry Reed
Conway Twitty
The last of four consecutive years where the Male Vocalist winner matched the Entertainer winner, Charley Pride went home with both awards in 1971.
1970
Glen Campbell
Johnny Cash
Roy Clark
Merle Haggard
Charley Pride
Merle Haggard swept the show in 1970, winning Male Vocalist, Single and Album of the Year, so it was no surprise when he triumphed in the final category of the night.
1969
Glen Campbell
Johnny Cash
Roy Clark
Merle Haggard
Charley Pride
Johnny Cash dominated the CMA Awards in 1969. He wouldn’t win another major award from them during his lifetime, but was the posthumous victor for Single, Album, and Music Video in 2003.
1968
Eddy Arnold
Glen Campbell
Johnny Cash
Merle Haggard
Charley Pride
Glen Campbell not only won a ton of CMAs in 1968, he also was a big winner at the Grammys, a reflection of his status as a pop-country star in his prime.
1967
Bill Anderson
Eddy Arnold
Merle Haggard
Sonny James
Buck Owens
One year after being inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame, Eddy Arnold was named the very first Entertainer of the Year at the inaugural CMA awards in 1967. Arnold had enjoyed three #1 hits in the twelve months leading up to the ceremony, as he was in the middle of his impressive mid-sixties comeback that had been fueled by the 1965 classic, “Make the World Go Away.”
Facts & Feats
Multiple Wins:
- (7) – Garth Brooks
- (4) – Kenny Chesney
- (3) – Alabama, Alan Jackson, George Strait
- (2) – Luke Bryan, Luke Combs, Vince Gill, Barbara Mandrell, Taylor Swift, Keith Urban, Hank Williams, Jr.
Most Consecutive Wins:
- (3) – Alabama (1982-1984), Kenny Chesney (2006-2008)
- (2) – Garth Brooks (1991-1992, 1997-1998, 2016-2017), Luke Bryan (2014-2015), Luke Combs (2021-2022), Vince Gill (1993-1994), Barbara Mandrell (1980-1981), George Strait (1989-1990), Hank Williams, Jr. (1987-1988)
Most Nominations:
- (19) – George Strait
- (13) – Garth Brooks, Keith Urban
- (11) – Brooks & Dunn, Kenny Chesney
- (10) – Reba McEntire
- (8) – Vince Gill, Merle Haggard, Brad Paisley
- (6) – Luke Bryan, Miranda Lambert, Barbara Mandrell, Tim McGraw, Willie Nelson, Brad Paisley, Charley Pride, Chris Stapleton
- (5) – Alabama, Loretta Lynn, Ronnie Milsap, Kenny Rogers, Carrie Underwood
Most Nominations Without a Win:
- (6) – Miranda Lambert, Chris Stapleton
- (5) – Kenny Rogers, Carrie Underwood
- (4) – Jason Aldean, Toby Keith, Randy Travis
- (3) – Waylon Jennings, The Judds, Oak Ridge Boys
Winners in First Year of Nomination:
Eddy Arnold (1967), Garth Brooks (1991), Glen Campbell (1968), John Denver (1975), Charlie Rich (1974), Taylor Swift (2009), Mel Tillis (1976), Shania Twain (1999), Keith Urban (2005), Hank Williams, Jr. (1987)
Winners in Only Year of Nomination:
John Denver (1975), Charlie Rich (1974), Shania Twain (1999)
CMA Entertainers of the Year Who Have Never Won the ACM Award:
Eddy Arnold, Johnny Cash, Glen Campbell, Eric Church, Roy Clark, Luke Combs, John Denver, Vince Gill, Alan Jackson, Tim McGraw, Ronnie Milsap, Brad Paisley, Charlie Rich, Blake Shelton, Ricky Skaggs, Mel Tillis
ACM Entertainers of the Year Who Have Never Won the CMA Award:
Jason Aldean, Mac Davis, Mickey Gilley, Freddie Hart, Toby Keith, Miranda Lambert, Thomas Rhett, Kenny Rogers, Carrie Underwood
I don’t know what is more sad – the fact that Kenny Rogers never won this or that Kenny Chesney won it four times.
Agree w caj on KC. Although I never watched a CMA show til the 90’s, I’m glad that John Denver won it in ’75. He was a great entertainer, singer and songwriter.
Bob Dylan had it right when he sang “For the times, they are-a changin'”. It’s kind of amusing to look back at the furor caused by John Denver winning Entertainer of the Year in 1975, and then see him lionized by so many artists nowadays, a lot of whom were growing up in that era and heard something in John that Nashville so often seemed to miss. If anything, with his background in the 1960s folk music boom, which also gave rise to Linda Ronstadt and Emmylou Harris incidentally, Denver’s music is far closer to the truest roots of country than most anything that can be heard on the radio today (IMHO).
I think that one thing that has been missed in this series of article is that initially the ACM awards were not truly national in scope. Through 1969, every act that won had a strong connection to the west coast and California country music scenes. There was no way Nashville-based acts such as Eddy Arnold, Jack Greene, David Houston, Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn, Connie Smith or Tammy Wynette would win these awards.
You cannot consider the ACM awards to be the equal of the CMA until at least 1970, when Ray Price and Kris Kristofferson won awards
CMA Entertainers of the Year Who Have Never Won the ACM Award: Taylor Swift
This is wrong, Taylor won the awards twice.
@amy – Thanks for the Taylor Swift correction. It’s been fixed.
@Paul – The ACM was a West Coast award for only a handful of years, a drop in the bucket compared to the years that both the ACM and CMA have been giving out awards. They didn’t even begin awarding Entertainer of the Year until 1970 (awarded in 1971), and by then, Nashville artists were winning alongside California ones.
@Kevin – I believe you just agreed with my post. Until 1970 an ACM was not indicative of national activity – there was no ACM for Eddy Arnold or Jack Greene to win during their winning years (in whatever category)
I read an article in the NY Times yesterday, “How Country music has – and hasn’t – addressed the Me Too movement in a difficult year”. The article mentioned that The Tennessean recently reported the problem has gotten worse, with only 10.4 percent of songs by women on the radio charts in 2017, down from 13 percent the year prior.
The CMA Flashback articles you just posted indicate that the problem isn’t getting any better. The first one i looked at for the 2018 Entertainer of the Year did not include any women. The Horizon, Albums and Single categories were hardly any better.
I second your thoughts on the woman problem. In those blips that I’ve actually listened to one of Houston’s two contemporary country radio stations, I think I recall only catching one song by a woman: Carrie Underwood’s “Temporary Home”. That’s just unfair. It was a woman that got me into this genre, 60% of my top 5 list of country artists in any gender (for those curious: 1. Barbara Mandrell; 2. Suzy Bogguss; 3. George Strait; 4. Trisha Yearwood; 5. Larry Gatlin) is made up of women, most of the country albums I bring home when hitting anyplace with used records/CDs/etc. are by women most of the time, and the one classic country station ’round here treats women with more respect than the contemporary stations do (entirely because the 20th century was a better time for women in country). But in truth, I can’t get into the genre’s current woman troubles better than this Fusion Country piece from August can:
https://fusioncountrymusic.com/2018/08/13/the-toxic-masculinity-of-real-country-fans-is-rotting-country-musics-core/
@Jman – Interesting article. Thanks. The comment “What is often the most derided period of country music by “real country fans”? The 90s, which happen to be one of the best eras for women in country music.” I still think that the 90’s is the best w Suzy, Trisha, MCC, Kathy M, Jo Dee M, Pam T, the late Lari White (RIP), Faith, Lisa Brokop, Martina, Patty L, the Chicks, etc. etc.
I think the current era 2005-2018 is the period most derided by “real country” fans. The nineties were a pretty good period by my lights and I am about as much of a traditionalist as still exists
These articles are always such an interesting read. I think the Most Nominations section at the bottom needs a quick update for Kenny Chesney and Alan Jackson based on your write-up for this year.
As the risk of sounds emotional… It gets me so HEATED thinking about how Carrie lost to Garth twice from 2016-2019. For what? One completely failed single and album and 10 stadium shows? While she has hosted the CMAs for over 10 very successful years, is the face of SNF for over 10 years, sells out arenas consistently, sends every album and song to number 1 (apart from the last one), is the highest-certified female country artist of all time, extends a Las Vegas residency twice due to acclaim and demand, is asked to perform three times in one show and gets absolutely nothing for it. You can’t even argue that Luke Combs is a bigger star right now that she is because by that logic she should have won from 2008-2010. It’s just all the Nashville Good Ol’ Boys club.
It’s ridiculous that she doesn’t have at least two EOTY trophies. I’m also still salty that Kane Brown didn’t even get a nomination. It’s a good ol’ boys club, alright.
It always struck me as odd that the Statler Brother never won this award. In terms of being quality entertainers (as opposed to being simply big record sellers) they should have won multiple awards. They put on a superior stage show to about 90% of the winners listed above