Country Music Association Award for Video of the Year
From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia
Country Music Association Award for Video of the Year | |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Presented by | Country Music Association |
First awarded | 1985 |
Currently held by | Hardy, Lainey Wilson and Justin Clough (2023) |
The Country Music Association Awards is a major awards show in country music. Formerly known as the Music Video of the Year Award, Video of the Year was originally presented at the 1985 Country Music Association Awards. The category honours excellence in country music videos that have been released during the eligibility years and is awarded to both the artist and the director. Below are the winners and nominees of the award.[1]
he inaugural recipients of the award were Hank Williams Jr. and John Goodhue in 1985 for "All My Rowdy Friends Are Coming Over Tonight", with Martina McBride becoming the first female winner of the award in 1994 for "Independence Day" and Trey Fanjoy becoming the first female director winner in 2009 for Taylor Swift's "Love Story". Among artists, Brad Paisley holds the record for most wins in the category, with four, while two-time recipient Alan Jackson has a leading twelve nominations. Carrie Underwood holds the record for most nominations without a win, with six. Among directors, Fanjoy and Michael Salomon are tied for most wins in the category, with three each, while Fanjoy leads with a record eighteen nominations. Jack Cole and Jon Small are tied for most nominations without a win, with six. The current holders of the award are Cody Johnson and Dustin Haney for the video to Johnson's hit single "'Til You Can't".
Recipients
[edit]Category facts
[edit]Artists
[edit]Artists with multiple wins
Rank | 1st | 2nd | 3rd |
---|---|---|---|
Total wins | 4 wins | 3 wins | 2 wins |
Artist | Brad Paisley | Hank Williams Jr. | Garth Brooks Kenny Chesney Dixie Chicks Alan Jackson Toby Keith Miranda Lambert Taylor Swift |
Artists with multiple nominations
- 12 nominations
- 11 nominations
- 10 nominations
- 6 nominations
- 5 nominations
- 4 nominations
- 3 nominations
- 2 nominations
Directors
[edit]Directors with multiple wins
Rank | 1st | 2nd | 3rd |
---|---|---|---|
Total wins | 3 wins | 2 wins | |
Artist | Trey Fanjoy Michael Salomon | Robert Deaton Wes Edwards George J. Flanigan IV Steven Goldmann TK McKamy Jim Shea Peter Zavadil |
Directors with multiple nominations
- 18 nominations
- 10 nominations
- Jim Shea
- 8 nominations
- 7 nominations
- 6 nominations
- Jack Cole
- Jon Small
- Wes Edwards
- 5 nominations
- Reid Long
- Shaun Silva
- 4 nominations
- 3 nominations
- Bill Pope
- David Hogan
- Marc Ball
- Martin Kahan
- Patrick Tracy
- Roman White
- Shane Drake
- 2 nominations
- Bud Schaetzle
- David McClister
- Declan Whitebloom
- Ethan Russell
- George J. Flanigan IV
- Justin Clough
- Michael Merriman
- Randee St. Nicholas
- Roger Pistole
- Sherman Halsey
References
[edit]- ^ "CMA Awards Past Winners & Nominees".
- ^ "First-Timer Lainey Wilson Leads Nominations for 2022 CMA Awards: Full List". Billboard.
- ^ McCarthy, Kelly (August 28, 2018). "2018 CMA Awards nominations: See the full list". ABC News. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
- ^ "Snubs and Surprises of 2017 CMA Awards Nominees: Taylor Swift Returns, Blake Shelton Nowhere to be Found". Billboard.
- ^ "2016 cma winners - Google Search". www.google.co.uk.
- ^ "CMA Awards 2015: The Complete Winners List". Rolling Stone. 5 November 2015.
- ^ "CMA Awards 2014: And the Winners Are ..." Billboard.
- ^ "CMA Awards 2013: Full Winners List". Billboard.
- ^ "2012 CMA Awards Winners – Full List". Taste of Country. 2 November 2012.
- ^ "2011 CMA Awards Winners". The Boot. 10 November 2011.
- ^ "CMA Awards 2010: List of Winners". CBS News. 11 November 2010.