This is a list of notable events in country music that took place in 2018.
Events
- January â The critically acclaimed ABC/CMT series Nashville announces it will stop production after its sixth season which premiered on January 4, 2018. The show's last episode aired on July 26, 2018.
- January 17 â Kenny Chesney announces that he has left Sony Music Nashville after 23 years and has subsequently signed with Warner Music Nashville.
- February 2 â Montgomery Gentry release their final album together, Here's to You, following the death of Troy Gentry in September 2017.
- April 14 â Weeks after his impromptu performance of the Hank Williams Sr. hit song "Lovesick Blues" at his local Wal-Mart in southern Illinois had made him a viral country phenomenon, 11 year old Mason Ramsey realizes his dream of performing at the Grand Ole Opry. Five years later, a teenaged Ramsey would return to the Opry, performing the song again on the 75th anniversary of the country standard.
- April 15 â The Academy of Country Music awards return to Las Vegas for the first time since the October 2017 Las Vegas shooting, with Reba McEntire returning as host; Carrie Underwood makes her comeback performance after months out of the public eye while recovering from injuries she suffered in a fall at home.
- April 30 â USA Network announces Real Country, a reality competition show designed to find the next big country star and featuring Travis Tritt, Jake Owen and Shania Twain as judges.
- June 8 â Sugarland returns with the release of their first album together since 2010, Bigger.
- June 25 â Fox announces it will air "iHeartCountry Festival", featuring headliners Luke Bryan, Keith Urban, and more in August.
- June 26 â Dolly Parton, Emmylou Harris, Linda Ronstadt, and Faith Hill are announced to receive stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 2019.
- July 25 â Reba McEntire is announced as one of the recipients of the 2018 Kennedy Center Honors.
- August 8 â Carrie Underwood announces her pregnancy with her second child.
- September 20 â Carrie Underwood receives her star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
- November 20 â Jimmie Allen reaches number one on Country Airplay with "Best Shot", making him the first African American to send a debut single to the top of that chart.
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 2018:
Singles released by American and Australian artists
Singles released by Canadian artists
Notes
- "âÂÂ" denotes releases that did not chart
- A^ Current singles.
Top new album releases
The following albums placed on the Top Country Albums charts in 2018:
Other top albums
Deaths
- January 2 â Rick Hall, 85, record producer and owner of FAME Studios
- January 23 â Lari White, 52, singer-songwriter and actress best known for the hit "Now I Know" (advanced peritoneal cancer).
- February 12 â Daryle Singletary, 46, neotraditionalist singer-songwriter with hits including "I Let Her Lie", "Amen Kind of Love" and "Too Much Fun". (blood clot)
- February 25 â Bruce Nelson Stratton, 74, American radio personality (throat cancer).
- March 2 â Ronnie Prophet, 80, Canadian country music singer (multiple organ failure).
- March 18 â Hazel Smith, 83, American country music journalist, publicist and songwriter; first to coin the phrase "outlaw" in relation to country music.
- March 27 â Kenny O'Dell, 73, American country singer-songwriter ("Behind Closed Doors", "Lizzie and the Rainman", "Mama He's Crazy"), Grammy winner (1974).
- April 17 â Tom McBride, 81, Irish country star and lead singer of Big Tom and The Mainliners.
- April 18 â Randy Scruggs, 64, multiple Grammy-winning songwriter and guitarist; son of Earl Scruggs.
- June 2 â Wayne Secrest, 68, bassist for Confederate Railroad
- June 5 â Billy ThunderKloud, 70, Native American country music singer. (complications from stroke and pneumonia).
- August 4 â Lorrie Collins, 76, American rockabilly singer, member of The Collins Kids.
- October 27 â Freddie Hart, 91, singer-songwriter ("Easy Loving", "My Hang-Up Is You", "Trip to Heaven", "Hang In There Girl") (pneumonia).
- November 1 â Dave Rowland, 74, lead singer of Dave & Sugar (stroke).
- November 15 â Roy Clark, 85, country music singer, musician and host of Hee Haw (complications from pneumonia).
- December 15 â Jerry Chesnut, 87, songwriter ("It's Four in the Morning", "T-R-O-U-B-L-E")
- December 22 â Jimmy Work, 94, American country singer-songwriter ("Making Believe").
- December 31 â Ray Sawyer, 81, American country singer Dr. Hook & the Medicine Show (short illness).
Hall of Fame inductees
Bluegrass Hall of Fame
Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Ricky Skaggs, bluegrass-influenced-and-styled singer-songwriter-musician and leading figure in the neotraditionalist movement of the 1980s onward (born 1954).
- Dottie West, leading singer of the 1960s and early 1970s, enjoyed pop-styled resurgence in late 1970s and early 1980s (1932âÂÂ1991).
- Johnny Gimble, Western swing-styled musician and member of Bob Wills' Texas Playboys (1926âÂÂ2015).
Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductees
- Terri Clark, singer (born 1968)
- Jackie Rae Greening, broadcaster
Major awards
Academy of Country Music
(presented in Las Vegas on April 7, 2019)
ACM Honors <br> (presented August 22 in Nashville)
Americana Music Honors & Awards
(presented on September 12, 2018)
American Music Awards
(presented in Los Angeles on October 9, 2018)
ARIA Awards
(presented in Sydney on November 28, 2018)
Billboard Music Awards
(presented in Las Vegas on May 20, 2018)
CMT Awards
(presented on June 7, 2018, in Nashville)
CMT Artists of the Year <br> (presented on October 17, 2019, in Nashville)
Country Music Association Awards
(presented on November 15, 2018, in Nashville)
Grammy Awards
(presented in Los Angeles on February 10, 2019)
International Bluegrass Music Association Awards
(presented on September 27, 2018)
Juno Awards
(presented in London on March 16âÂÂ17, 2019)
Hollywood walk of Fame
Stars who were honored in 2018
Carrie Underwood
Kennedy Center Honors
Country stars who were honored in 2018
Reba McEntire
See also
References