NASHVILLE, Tenn. ā Hank Williams Jr., Marty Stuart and songwriter Dean Dillon are the newest inductees to the Country Music Hall of Fame.
Announced by the Country Music Association on Wednesday, Williams, who often is referred to as Hank Jr. or the nickname Bocephus, will join his father, country legend Hank Williams Sr., in the Hall of Fame's rotunda.
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āBocephus has been eyeing this one for awhile. Itās a bright spot during a difficult year,ā said Williams in a statement. Williams' 27-year-old daughter Katherine died in a car accident in June.
āI have been making Top 10 records for 56 years," said Williams, 71. "I fell off a mountain and tried to reinvent myself as a truly individual artist and one who stepped out of the shadows of a very famous man... one of the greatest. Iāve got to thank all those rowdy friends who, year after year, still show up for me. Itās an honor to carry on this family tradition. It is much appreciated.ā
Williams is known for his songs like āA Country Boy Can Survive,ā āFamily Tradition" and āAll My Rowdy Friends Are Comin' Over Tonight,ā which later became the opening theme song for āMonday Night Football." He has had 10 No. 1 Billboard Hot Country songs with his first one coming at the age of 21 in 1970.
While Williams' influence on country music has been undeniable, his absence from the Hall of Fame in previous years was widely considered a snub based on his outspoken politics. Williams has been a vocal critic of former President Barack Obama, falsely calling him a āMuslim president" from the stage and comparing a golf outing between Obama and John Boehner to Hitler playing golf with Benjamin Netanyahu. As a result, ESPN pulled his song from āMonday Night Football,ā although it has since returned.
He won entertainer of the year at the CMA Awards twice, in 1987 and 1988, and three times at the Academy of Country Music Awards between 1986 and 1988. In 1989, he won CMA vocal event of the year for āThereās a Tear in My Beer,ā a virtual duet with his late father, which also earned him a Grammy for best country vocal collaboration.
Stuart, a five-time Grammy winner, started his career as a sideman playing in bands led by bluegrass legend Lester Flatt and Johnny Cash before starting his own artist career in the 1980s. Stuart charted six top 10 Billboard Country songs, mostly during the 1990s, with songs like āHillbilly Rock," āLittle Thingsā and āTempted.ā
āIt is the ultimate honor in country music,ā said Stuart, 61, in a statement. āIām so honored to be included in this class and Iām honored to be included alongside Hank Jr. and Dean Dillon. I love those people. To be officially inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame is beyond words. Iām usually not at a loss for words.ā
He has won Grammys for his collaborations with Asleep at the Wheel, Earl Scruggs and Travis Tritt, including their well known duet āThe Whiskey Ain't Workin.'ā Stuart is also a photographer, a producer and an archivist of country music history, with plans to open a museum in his hometown of Philadelphia, Mississippi.
Dillon is known for being the tunesmith behind George Strait's dozens of hits, including āThe Chair," āOcean Front Propertyā and āHere For a Good Time." With Linda Hargrove, he also wrote the timeless classic āTennessee Whiskey," which has been covered by David Allan Coe, George Jones and Chris Stapleton, who turned it into a seven-time platinum hit.
Other hits he co-wrote include Kenny Chesney's āA Lot of Things Differentā and āIām Alive,ā as well as Toby Keithās āA Little Too Lateā and āGet My Drink On."
āI was just speechless,ā said Dillon, 65, in a statement. āTrying to soak in the words that I had just heard. My life flashed before my eyes. You couldāve knocked me over with a feather.ā
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Online: https://countrymusichalloffame.org/