2025 in country music
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of notable events in country music that occurred in 2025.
Events
- January 20 â Carrie Underwood performs "America the Beautiful" during the swearing-in ceremony at the second inauguration of Donald Trump.[1]
- March 3 â Dolly Parton announces the death of her husband.[citation needed]
- March 19 â The Grand Ole Opry celebrated its 100th birthday with a concert special hosted by Blake Shelton which featured over 50 of the Opry's living members in attendance.[2]
- March 31 â Country singer Orville Peck makes his Broadway debut in Cabaret, playing the role of the Emcee previously played by Adam Lambert for a limited sixteen-show run at the August Wilson Theatre. Peck starred alongside Eva Noblezada as Sally Bowles.[3]
- April 25â27 â The 2025 edition of Stagecoach Festival takes place at Empire Polo Club in Indio, California, featuring headline performances from Zach Bryan, Jelly Roll and Luke Combs. The festival also featured a special country set from Lana Del Rey, who had notably headlined Stagecoach's sister festival Coachella a year prior. Conversely, Post Malone, who performed his own special country set at Stagecoach in 2024, headlines Coachella in 2025. Shaboozey notably performs at both Coachella 2025 and Stagecoach 2025.[4]
- April 26 â Steve Earle is invited to become the next member of the Grand Ole Opry by Vince Gill.[5] He was inducted on September 17 by Emmylou Harris.[6]
- May 7 â Gretchen Wilson wins season thirteen of The Masked Singer as "Pearl". Fellow country singer Brian Kelley, who appeared as "Mad Scientist Monster" came fourth. Wilson became the second country singer to win the show following LeAnn Rimes as "Sun" during season four.[7]
- June 8 â Conner Smith is involved in a car accident during which he struck Dorothy Dobbins, a 77-year-old woman who was crossing the sidewalk, and later died at the hospital.[8]
- July 4 â Pat Green announces that his younger brother John, his wife Julia, and their two youngest children were affected by the Central Texas floods.[9]
- August 9 â Kathy Mattea is invited to become the next member of the Grand Ole Opry by Charlie McCoy.[10] She was officially inducted on October 11 by Terri Clark.
- August 11 â Jim Asker resigns as the senior editor of the Billboard country, gospel, and Christian music charts after holding the position for ten years.[11]
- August 13 â George Strait is announced as one of the recipients of the 2025 Kennedy Center Honors.[12]
- August 17 â Miranda Lambert and Parker McCollum's Band Together Texas concert raises over $8.5 million for flood relief. Alongside Lambert and McCollum, the event featured performances from Wade Bowen, Lyle Lovett, Ronnie Dunn, Cody Johnson, Lukas Nelson, Pat Green, Jon Randall, Jack Ingram, Randy Rogers, Ryan Bingham, and Jason Aldean, and appearances by Matthew McConaughey, Dennis Quaid, Mack Brown, Emmanuel Acho, Colt McCoy, Vince Young, Roger Clemens, Chris Harrison, and Kendra Scott.[13]
- August 21 â Connie Smith celebrates her 60th anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry.
- August 26 â Chapel Hart announces their disbandment.[14]
- September 18 â Country songwriter Brett James is killed in a plane crash in North Carolina.[15]
- September 30 â Keith Urban and Nicole Kidman announce their divorce after 19 years of marriage.[16]
- October 7 â Vince Gill signs a lifetime record deal with long-time label MCA Records.[17]
- October 8 â Alan Jackson announces his final concert at Nissan Stadium, scheduled for June 27, 2026. Special guests scheduled include Luke Bryan, Eric Church, Luke Combs, Miranda Lambert, Jon Pardi, Carrie Underwood, Keith Urban, Riley Green, Cody Johnson and Lee Ann Womack.[18]
- October 11 â Moments after her own induction, Kathy Mattea, alongside Terri Clark and Trisha Yearwood invites Suzy Bogguss to become the next member of the Grand Ole Opry. The quartet were performing Mattea's "Eighteen Wheels and a Dozen Roses" when she interrupted her own song to surprise Bogguss with the invitation. It is the first time in Opry history than an induction and invitation have occurred in the same evening.[19]
- October 13 â Reid Perry announces his departure from The Band Perry, leaving sister Kimberly Perry as the only original member remaining.[20]
- October 30 â Carrie Underwood becomes the highest-certified female country artist of all time.[21]
- November 5 â CMT's "Hot 20 Countdown" hosted by Cody Alan is announced to end in December after twelve years on air. It was the final original regular music show still airing on the channel and its cancellation follows the departure of many key staff members and productions since the channel's owner, Paramount Skydance, completed their merger in August 2025.[22]
- December 8 â Maddie & Tae announce their split after fifteen years as a duo.[23]
- December 31 â Terri Clark is announced as a member of the Order of Canada, the country's highest civilian honour.[24]
Top hits of the year
The following songs placed within the Top 20 on the Hot Country Songs, Country Airplay, or Canada Country charts in 2025:
Singles released by American and Australian artists
Singles released by Canadian artists
| Songs | Airplay | Canada | Single | Artist | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| â | â | 7 | "Another One" | Brett Kissel | [71] |
| â | â | 3 | "Backfire" | Nate Haller and Tenille Townes |
[72] |
| â | â | 4 | "Bourbon" | Morgan Griffiths | [73] |
| â | â | 9 | "Broken Heart Thing" | Madeline Merlo (featuring Dustin Lynch) |
[74] |
| â | â | 12 | "Coming Home to You (Bigger Houses)" | MacKenzie Porter and Owen Riegling |
[75] |
| â | â | 4 | "Cowboys & Dreamers" | Brett Kissel | [71] |
| â | â | 6 | "CRZY" | Dallas Smith | [76] |
| â | â | 7 | "Doin' What She Does" | Tyler Joe Miller | [77] |
| â | â | 11 | "Happy Ever After You" | MacKenzie Porter & Jake Etheridge (Thelma & James) |
[75] |
| â | â | 9 | "Have Your Beer" | MacKenzie Porter | [75] |
| â | â | 6 | "Highway Money" | Josh Stumpf | [78] |
| â | â | 4 | "How Do You Miss Me" | Dallas Smith (featuring Alexandra Kay) |
[76] |
| â | â | 4 | "Leave Me Too" | Josh Ross | [79] |
| â | â | 13 | "Life for Me" | Jess Moskaluke | [80] |
| â | â | 10 | "Middle of the Bed" | Madeline Merlo | [74] |
| â | â | 5 | "Never Drinking Again" | The Reklaws | [81] |
| â | â | 15 | "Options" | Cameron Whitcomb | [82] |
| â | â | 8 | "Quitter" | Cameron Whitcomb | [82] |
| â | â | 13 | "Rally Around" | Sully Burrows | [83] |
| 22 | 2 | 2 | "Single Again" | Josh Ross | [79] |
| â | â | 18 | "Slow Go the Days" | Tim and the Glory Boys | [84] |
| â | â | 7 | "Smoke" | Zach McPhee | [85] |
| â | â | 6 | "Things My Mama Says" | Hailey Benedict | [86] |
| â | â | 17 | "Til I Don't" | Sacha | [87] |
| â | â | 7 | "What Good Is a Memory" | Tyler Joe Miller | [77] |
| â | â | 6 | "Worth the Double" | Jade Eagleson | [88] |
| â | â | 3 | "You Didn't Hear It From Me" | James Barker Band | [89] |
Top new album releases
Other top albums
| US | Album | Artist | Record label | Release date | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 27 | Look Up | Ringo Starr | UMG Nashville | January 10 | [102] |
| 12 | The Select | Ty Myers | Capitol Nashville | January 24 | [103] |
| 12 | Relapse, Lies & Betrayal | Warren Zeiders | Warner Records | March 14 | [104] |
| 25 | Lonesome Drifter | Charley Crockett | Island Records | [105] | |
| 29 | Arcadia | Alison Krauss & Union Station | Down the Road | March 28 | [106] |
| 27 | Honkytonk Hollywood | Jon Pardi | Capitol Nashville | April 11 | [107] |
| 28 | The Price of Admission | Turnpike Troubadours | Bossier City Records | [108] | |
| 47 | Country! (EP) | Hardy | Big Loud | May 2 | |
| 49 | Easy Does It | Dylan Scott | Curb | May 30 | [109] |
| 26 | Life Is a Highway: Refueled Duets | Rascal Flatts | Big Machine | June 6 | [110] |
| 41 | Broken Branches | Dierks Bentley | Capitol Nashville | June 13 | [111] |
| 48 | Spanish Moss | Cole Swindell | Warner Nashville | June 27 | [112] |
| 38 | The Mirror | Trisha Yearwood | MCA Nashville | July 18 | [113] |
| 24 | Westward | Dylan Gossett | Big Loud Texas | ||
| 34 | Famous Back Home | Russell Dickerson | Triple Tigers | August 22 | |
| 29 | Barbara | Old Dominion | RCA Nashville | ||
| 17 | Songbird | Waylon Jennings | Thirty Tigers | October 3 | |
| 50 | I Didn't Come Here to Leave | Chris Young | Black River | October 17 | [114] |
| 36 | Second Wind | Alexandra Kay | Wheelhouse | October 24 | |
| 49 | Snow Globe Town | Brad Paisley | Mercury Nashville | November 7 | |
| 21 | Memories and Empties | Colter Wall | La Honda/RCA | November 14 | [115] |
Hall of Fame inductees
Country Music Hall of Fame
(announced on March 25, 2025)[116]
- Tony Brown (born 1946)
- June Carter Cash (1929â2003)
- Kenny Chesney (born 1968)
Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame
(announced on June 3, 2025)[117]
- Lisa Brokop (born 1973)
- Joe Wood
International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame
(announced on July 16, 2025)[118]
Hollywood Walk of Fame
Stars who were honored in 2025
Kennedy Center Honors
Deaths
- January 1 â Chad Morgan, 91, Australian country singer and guitarist[119]
- January 4 â Eddie London, 68, American country singer ("If We Can't Do It Right")[120]
- January 13 â Buck White, 94, American bluegrass instrumentalist, member of The Whites[121]
- January 15 â Melba Montgomery, 86, American country singer ("No Charge")[122]
- January 24 â Buddy Brock, 72, American songwriter ("You've Got to Stand for Something", "Watermelon Crawl")[123]
- March 3 â Carl Dean, 82, husband of Dolly Parton[citation needed]
- March 6 â Troy Seals, 86, American songwriter ("Who's Gonna Fill Their Shoes", "Seven Spanish Angels")[124]
- March 20 â Eddie Adcock, 86, American bluegrass banjo player (The Country Gentlemen)[125]
- March 29 â Dick Damron, 91, Canadian singer and songwriter[126]
- April 1 â Johnny Tillotson, 86, American singer-songwriter of the 1960s ("It Keeps Right On a-Hurtin'")[127]
- April 16 â Mac Gayden, 83, American guitarist and songwriter[128]
- April 22 â David Briggs, 82, American country keyboardist[129]
- April 23 â Lulu Roman, 78, American comedian and singer (Hee Haw)[130]
- May 9 â Johnny Rodriguez, 73, American country singer ("Pass Me By (If You're Only Passing Through)", "Ridin' My Thumb to Mexico")[131]
- May 13 â Billy Earheart, 71, American country keyboardist (The Amazing Rhythm Aces, The Bama Band)[132]
- June 19 â Gailard Sartain, 81, comedian and longtime cast member of Hee Haw[133][134][135]
- July 18 â Helen Cornelius, 83, American country singer best known for the Jim Ed Brown duet "I Don't Want to Have to Marry You"[136]
- July 26 â Sandy Pinkard, 78, songwriter ("Coca-Cola Cowboy") and one-half of duo Pinkard & Bowden[137]
- July 31 â Flaco Jiménez, 86, American musician (Texas Tornados, Los Super Seven)[138]
- August 1 â Jeannie Seely, 85, American singer ("Don't Touch Me")[139]
- September 4 â Robby Turner, 62, American pedal steel guitarist[140]
- September 18 â Brett James, 57, American songwriter ("Jesus, Take the Wheel", "I Hold On")[141]
- September 19 â Sonny Curtis, 88, American musician and songwriter ("Walk Right Back", I'm No Stranger to the Rain") and member of The Crickets[142]
- November 2 â John Wesley Ryles, 74, American singer ("Kay") and session vocalist[143]
- November 14 â Todd Snider, 59, American singer and songwriter[144]
- November 19 â Walt Aldridge, 70, American songwriter and record producer[145]
- December 8 â Raul Malo, 60, American singer, songwriter and lead singer of The Mavericks[146]
- December 15 â Joe Ely, 78, American singer-songwriter (The Flatlanders)[147]
- December 25 â Stu Phillips, 92, Canadian-American country singer.[148]