Little Big Town | |
|---|---|
Little Big Town in 2024 (L-R: Jimi Westbrook, Karen Fairchild, Kimberly Schlapman, and Philip Sweet) | |
| Background information | |
| Origin | Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. |
| Genres | Country |
| Works | Little Big Town discography |
| Years active | 1998–present |
| Labels | |
| Members |
|
| Website | littlebigtown |
Little Big Town is an Americancountry music vocal group fromNashville, Tennessee. Founded in 1998, the group has had the same four members since its founding:Karen Fairchild,Kimberly Schlapman (formerly Kimberly Roads), Phillip Sweet, and Jimi Westbrook. Fairchild and Westbrook have been married to each other since 2006. Little Big Town's musical style relies heavily on four-part vocal harmonies, with all four members alternating as lead vocalists.[1]
After a recording deal with theMercury Nashville Records label which produced no singles or albums, Little Big Town released its debut albumLittle Big Town onMonument Records in 2002. It produced two minor country chart singles before the group left the label. In 2005, the group signed toEquity Music Group, an independent record label owned byClint Black. Their second album,The Road to Here, was released that year, and received aplatinum certification from theRecording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and spawned their breakout single, "Boondocks."[2]A Place to Land, their third album, was released via Equity, then re-released viaCapitol Nashville after Equity closed in 2008. Seven more albums followed for Capitol:The Reason Why (2010),Tornado (2012),Pain Killer (2014),The Breaker (2017),Nightfall (2020),Mr. Sun (2022) andThe Christmas Record (2024), four of which have reached number one on theTop Country Albums chart.[3]
Their albums accounted for 24 singles onHot Country Songs andCountry Airplay, including the No. 1 singles "Pontoon", and "Better Man" along with the top 10 hits "Boondocks", "Bring It On Home", "Little White Church", "Tornado", "Day Drinking", and "Girl Crush".[4]
Fairchild and Schlapman met atSamford University in 1987, where they both sang in the school's vocal ensembles.[5] In the mid-1990s, Fairchild sang with the Christian vocal groupTruth and was featured as a lead singer in a few of their songs. She formed a duo called KarenLeigh with Leigh Cappillino, a member of Truth who joined the groupPoint of Grace. KarenLeigh produced the singles, "Save It for a Rainy Day" and "This Love Has". Fairchild and Schlapman both later moved toNashville, Tennessee to pursue solo singing careers, where they reunited and decided to form a vocal group.[6] Westbrook joined Schlapman and Fairchild in 1998, followed by Sweet.[7]
Little Big Town's first record deal was withMercury Nashville Records. The band was dropped from the label's roster without releasing a single or album.[6][7] In 2001, they sangbacking vocals onCollin Raye's albumCan't Back Down, while Sweet and Roads co-wrote the song "Back Where I Belong" onSherrié Austin's 2001 albumFollowin' a Feelin'.[8][9]
In 2002, the band signed withMonument Records Nashville. The band released its first album,Little Big Town, in 2002. The album produced the singles "Don't Waste My Time" and "Everything Changes", which peaked at 33 and 42, respectively, on theBillboard Hot Country Songs chart. Little Big Town was left without a label when Monument Records dissolved its Nashville branch. After Westbrook's father died, and Fairchild and Sweet got divorces, the band members got outside jobs while they continued to tour.[6]

In 2005, Little Big Town was signed toEquity Music Group, a label started and partially owned by country music singerClint Black.[6] Their third single, "Boondocks", was released in June, peaking at No. 9 on the country charts in January 2006.[10] It served as the first of four singles from the group's second album,The Road to Here, which was released on October 4, 2005. "Bring It On Home", the second single from the album, became Little Big Town's first top 5 hit on Hot Country Songs. It was followed by "Good as Gone" and "A Little More You", both of which were top 20 hits. By the end of 2006,The Road to Here had been certified Platinum in the United States. Unlike their first album, the group's members co-wrote the majority of the songs onThe Road to Here along withWayne Kirkpatrick, who also produced it. In 2007, the group sang backing vocals onJohn Mellencamp'sFreedom's Road album.[11]
Little Big Town releasedA Place to Land, their third studio album and second with Equity, on November 6, 2007. Its lead-off single, "I'm with the Band", peaked at number 32 on the country chart. On April 23, 2008, Little Big Town announced it was leaving Equity forCapitol Nashville.[12] Shortly afterward, they charted withSugarland andJake Owen on a live cover ofThe Dream Academy's "Life in a Northern Town". Taken from Sugarland's 2007 tour, it reached number 28 on the country chart based on unsolicited airplay. In October 2008, Capitol re-releasedA Place to Land, which added four new songs, and the label promoted two further singles from the album, "Fine Line" and "Good Lord Willing".
In the fall of 2008, Little Big Town opened up forCarrie Underwood on her Carnival Ride Tour. They began their first headlining tour in January 2009 in Jacksonville, Florida and continued through April.[13]
Fairchild recorded a duet with Mellencamp on his 2008 album,Life, Death, Love and Freedom. The song, "A Ride Back Home", was released as the album's third single and was accompanied by a music video. Fairchild also duetted with Mellencamp on "My Sweet Love" and appears in its music video.
Little Big Town was nominated for Vocal Group of the Year for the fourth year in a row at the 2009CMA Awards.
In March 2010, the group released a new single titled "Little White Church", as the lead-off single to their fourth studio album and first completely new album onCapitol Nashville,The Reason Why, which was released on August 24, 2010. "Little White Church" peaked at No. 6 on the country chart. The album produced two additional singles in "Kiss Goodbye" and the title track, but both failed to reach the top 40 ofHot Country Songs.[14]
The album's title track was released as a digital single on July 27, 2010, to begin an iTunes countdown to the album release on August 24, 2010. Three further digital singles – "Kiss Goodbye", "Why, Oh Why", and "All the Way Down" – were released weekly leading up until the album release. Also, in promotion ofThe Reason Why, Little Big Town went on tour as an opening act forSugarland on The Incredible Machine Tour, as well their own The Reason Why Tour.
Little Big Town's fifth studio album,Tornado, was released on September 11, 2012. It was also their first album to be produced byJay Joyce. "Pontoon" was released as the album's lead single on April 30, 2012, and became their first number one hit on Hot Country Songs in September 2012.[15] It was their first single to receive a Platinum certification. Thetitle track was released as the album's second single on October 1, 2012. It reached No. 2 on the Country Airplay chart in 2013. At the55th Grammy Awards, "Pontoon" won theGrammy Award forBest Country Duo/Group Performance.[16] The album was certified gold by theRIAA in December 2012.[17]
The band joinedRascal Flatts on their Changed Tour, along withEli Young Band andEdens Edge, for dates spanning Summer 2012. They played at theC2C: Country to Country festival in London on March 16, 2013.[18]
On August 31, 2013 the album's third single, "Your Side of the Bed" peaked at #29 on theCountry Airplay charts.[19]
The band sang background vocals onAshley Monroe's 2013 single, "You Got Me", featured on her 2013 release,Like a Rose. Fairchild co-wrote the song with Monroe.[20] However, it failed to appear on any majorBillboard Music Charts.[21]
The album's fourth single, "Sober" peaked at #27 on theHot Country Songs chart on November 23, 2013.[22]
Little Big Town performed harmony vocals onDavid Nail's 2014 album,I'm a Fire, on the song "When They're Gone (Lyle County)", co-written byBrett Eldredge. They were featured onMiranda Lambert's 2014 album,Platinum, on "Smokin' and Drinkin'", a song which the band had considered recording.[23] It debuted onBillboard's Country Airplay chart at No. 38 after their performance at theCMA Awards in 2014 and was released as a single in 2015.
The band began recording their sixth studio album,Pain Killer, in early 2014. The lead single, "Day Drinking", was released digitally June 3, and was sent to country radio on June 9.[24][25] It debuted on theCountry Airplay chart at No. 32, their highest-ever debut at the time, and went on to peak at No. 2 onCountry Airplay. It hit No. 1 on theCanada Country chart, becoming their second No. 1 single and first as songwriters.Pain Killer's track listing was announced on July 14, and the album was released on October 21.[26]
On October 3, 2014,Reba McEntire invited the group to join theGrand Ole Opry. They accepted and were inducted byVince Gill on October 17.[27]
The second single from the album, "Girl Crush", was released December 15, 2014. Some radio stations were reported to have pulled "Girl Crush" from their playlists, in response to concerns from listeners who interpreted the song's lyrics to be aboutlesbianism. The label created a commercial in which the band discussed the song and its meaning.[28]Billboard consulted radio program directors on its panel and found one who detailed a specific complaint from a listener.[29] The song became Little Big Town's second No. 1 on aBillboard chart in May 2015 and their highest showing on theBillboard Hot 100 after gaining exposure on "The Voice" and the 50th AnnualACM Awards. The album's third single and the title track, "Pain Killer", released to country radio on August 24, 2015.
On September 9, 2015, the group was nominated for five CMA Awards: Vocal Group of the Year, Album of the Year forPain Killer, Single of the Year for "Girl Crush", Music Video of the Year for "Girl Crush" and Musical Event of the Year for their collaboration on the Miranda Lambert single "Smokin' and Drinkin'". They tied Eric Church for most nominations that year. The songwriters of "Girl Crush" were recognized with a Song of the Year win.
For the58th Annual Grammy AwardsPain Killer was nominated for Best Country Album, "Girl Crush" was nominated for Best Country Duo/Group Performance, Song of the Year and Best Country Song. Little Big Town received nominations for Best Country Album and Best Country Duo/Group Performance.[30]
On January 24, 2016, the band sang the National Anthem before theArizona/CarolinaNFC Championship Game. On July 4 of that year, they performed with theBoston Pops at their annual Independence Day concert.
In February 2016, they appeared on "Take Me Down", a track onDown to My Last Bad Habit, the fourteenth album byVince Gill.
In March 2016, Little Big Town returned to the UK as part of theC2C: Country to Country tour, becoming one of four acts at the time (the others beingBrantley Gilbert,Sam Hunt andCarrie Underwood) to perform at the festival twice. They headlined the launch party in 2015 where they announced the full line-up, revealing they would be supporting Underwood along with Hunt andMaddie & Tae.
On May 24, 2016, the band announced their seventh studio album titledWanderlust. The album contains eight tracks produced byPharrell Williams and was released on June 10, 2016. Fairchild describes the album as, "It's not a country album and it's not like anything we've ever done. It's fun to be spontaneous and put it out there to the fans, because we want to, and not to overthink it, but just because it has brought us a lot of joy, and we think it will for them as well. So why not? We're going with our gut and putting it out there. It's just music, you know?"Fairchild stated that they are also working on a country record with Jay Joyce.[31] In July, they appeared on the 2000–2005 episode ofABC's Greatest Hits where they performed covers byAlicia Keys,Oasis andSheryl Crow. They were also selected as one of 30 artists to perform on "Forever Country", a mash-up track of "Take Me Home, Country Roads", "On the Road Again" and "I Will Always Love You", which celebrates 50 years of theCMA Awards.[32]
The band released "Better Man", which was written by singer-songwriterTaylor Swift, on October 20, 2016, as the lead single to their upcoming seventh studio album,The Breaker, that was released on February 24, 2017. Initially masking the song's writer, the band revealed that Swift wrote the song. The song's music video, directed by Reid Long and Becky Fluke, was released November 1, 2016. The band would follow up with singles "Happy People", their worst-charting single to date, and "When Someone Stops Loving You", a minor top 40 hit.
The band announced they would be the first act in history to have a residency at theRyman Auditorium in Nashville. Little Big Town announced a six-date UK tour supported bySeth Ennis beginning on September 28 and concluding inLondon on October 5[33] before revealing thatKacey Musgraves andMidland would support them on the American leg ofThe Breakers Tour beginning in February 2018.[34] On October 5 during their show at theRoyal Albert Hall, the band revealed that they would be headlining the 2018C2C: Country to Country festival, making history as the first act to play the event three times.[35]
"Summer Fever" was released as a stand-alone single on June 6, 2018. It debuted (and peaked) at number 29 on Country Airplay, becoming the band's highest debut to date. The song also peaked within the top 40 of Hot Country Songs and Canada Country charts.
The group then released "The Daughters" on April 5, 2019 as the first single from their ninth albumNightfall, which the band produced themselves. It was released on January 17, 2020.[36][37] "The Daughters" debuted at number 29 on Hot Country Songs but was not promoted to radio and thus failed to chart on Country Airplay. On September 8, 2019, Little Big Town released "Over Drinking", the second single fromNightfall. The band embarked on a 30-date theatre tour of the same name with supporting actCaitlyn Smith, beginning with a show at New York City's Carnegie Hall the day before the album release.[36]
On April 11, 2022, the band released the song "Hell Yeah".[38] On July 19, the band announced their tenth studio album,Mr. Sun, which was released on September 16.[39]
In 2023, the group toured lightly, headlining the 10-dateFriends of Mine tour, and opening forGeorge Strait on his 2023 tour.
In March 2024, the group announced the UK leg of theFriends of Mine tour. Also in March, the group announced on social media that they would be collaborating with "lifelong friends" Sugarland at the2024 CMT Music Awards. They performedPhil Collins' "Take Me Home", which was released as single the same day. The two groups will be co-headlining the Take Me Home Tour from October 24 to December 13, 2024.[40]
They announced on CMT Hot 20 Countdown on March 30, that they were in the process of recording a Christmas album, with an expected 2024 release.The Christmas Record was released on October 4, 2024.[41]
Schlapman was born and raised inCornelia, Georgia, and attended Demorest Baptist Church.[42][43] She is the oldest of three children, with a younger sister and brother. Her mother, Barbara, was a kindergarten and second grade teacher and church organ player.[43][44] Her father, Tolbert, worked for the telephone company.[44] She started taking piano lessons at age 8, and became her church's piano player at age 11 when their regular pianist left for another church.[45] She attendedHabersham Central High School, where she was very involved in extracurricular activities and was the vice president of her senior class.[46] Between her junior and senior years of high school, she was selected to attend theGeorgia Governor's Honors Program atValdosta State University for vocal music.[43][47] She received a music scholarship toSamford University.[43] While at Samford, she met Steven Roads, a law student, and they were married in 1990.[44] They moved toKnoxville for his job, and Schlapman transferred to theUniversity of Tennessee where she earned a degree in family and human development.[44][43] They struggled with infertility and were unable to get pregnant.[48] Roads died from a heart attack at home in April 2005 at the age of 41, while Little Big Town was on a radio tour inIndianapolis.[48][49] On November 28, 2006, Schlapman married Stephen Schlapman, who was previously Little Big Town's stage manager.[44] They eloped in Las Vegas six months earlier.[50] She gave birth to a daughter, Daisy Pearl Schlapman, on July 27, 2007.[44] They had multiple miscarriages and were unable to have another child despite artificial insemination andin vitro fertilization.[48] The couple adopted a daughter, Dolly Grace Schlapman, on December 31, 2016.[51] Schlapman's mother hasParkinson's disease.[52]
Fairchild was born inGary, Indiana and lived inGriffith, Indiana andSchererville, Indiana for the first 13.5 years of her life.[53] She has an older sister and a younger brother. Her father, Butch, is fromOneida, Tennessee, and worked in sales for building parts after initially starting as aJCPenney shoe salesman.[53][54] Her mother, Brenda, is fromGeraldine, Alabama.[53] Her parents were high school sweethearts, and moved to Indiana for her father's work before Fairchild was born.[53] They later moved toMarietta, Georgia, where Fairchild graduated fromLassiter High School.[55] She was very athletic, including being the quarterback of her high school's powder puff football team and played on the softball team.[56] She rushedAlpha Delta Pi while atSamford University and earned a degree in elementary education.[57][58] She grew up very religious, though now considers herself spiritual rather than religious.[53] She divorced her first husband, Mark Childers, in 2002.[59] Fairchild and Westbrook married on May 31, 2006.[59][60] She gave birth to a son, Elijah Dylan Westbrook, on March 5, 2010.[59]
Sweet was born inPocahontas, Arkansas, and raised inCherokee Village, Arkansas.[61] He attended the First Baptist Church of Hardy, and graduated fromHighland High School in 1992.[62] He was previously divorced.[63] Sweet married Rebecca Arthur on March 30, 2007, after meeting when she worked as an intern at Little Big Town's record label.[64] They welcomed a daughter, Penelopi Jane Sweet, on December 27, 2007.[64][65]
Westbrook was born inJacksonville, Arkansas and raised inSumiton, Alabama.[66][67] He also lived inTuscaloosa for four years beginning when he was four years old.[67] He is the youngest of five siblings, with one older brother and three sisters.[68]
Little Big Town's musical stylings are defined by four-part vocal harmonies. Unlike most vocal groups, Little Big Town does not feature a definitive lead vocalist.[7] Instead, their songs are either led by any one of the four members, or by all four in varying combinations (such as on "Boondocks" and "Life in a Northern Town").
| Year | Nominated work / recipient | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Little Big Town | Top New Vocal Duo/Group | Nominated |
| Top Vocal Group | Nominated | ||
| 2007 | Top New Vocal Duo/Group | Won | |
| Top Vocal Group | Nominated | ||
| 2008 | Nominated | ||
| 2009 | "Life in a Northern Town"(with Sugarland and Jake Owen) | Vocal Event of the Year | Nominated |
| Little Big Town | Top Vocal Group | Nominated | |
| 2010 | Nominated | ||
| 2011 | Nominated | ||
| 2013 | "Pontoon" | Single of the Year | Nominated |
| Tornado | Album of the Year | Nominated | |
| "Tornado" | Music Video of the Year | Won | |
| Little Big Town | Vocal Group of the Year | Won | |
| 2014 | Nominated | ||
| 2015 | Won | ||
| Pain Killer | Album of the Year | Nominated | |
| 2016 | Little Big Town | Vocal Group of the Year | Won |
| "Girl Crush" | Single Record of the Year | Nominated | |
| Song of the Year | Nominated | ||
| Video of the Year | Nominated | ||
| Smokin' and Drinkin' | Vocal Event of the Year(shared withMiranda Lambert) | Won | |
| Little Big Town | Crystal Milestone Award | Won | |
| 2017 | Little Big Town | Vocal Group of the Year | Won |
| 2018[69] | Nominated | ||
| The Breaker | Album of the Year | Nominated | |
| "Better Man" | Single of the Year | Nominated | |
| 2019 | Little Big Town | Vocal Group of the Year | Nominated |
| 2020 | Nominated | ||
| 2021 | Nominated |
| Year | Nominated work / recipient | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 | "Little White Church" | Music Video: Duo or Group | Nominated |
| Single of the Year: Duo or Group | Nominated | ||
| 2012 | "Pontoon" | Music Video of the Year: Group or Collaboration | Won |
| 2013 | "Tornado" | Nominated | |
| Single of the Year: Duo or Group | Nominated | ||
| Great American Country – Music Video of the Year | Nominated | ||
| Little Big Town | Artist of the Year: Duo or Group | Nominated |
| Year | Nominated work / recipient | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | "Girl Crush" | Digital Song of the Year | Won |
| Year | Nominated work / recipient | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Little Big Town | Favorite Duo or Group - Country | Nominated |
| 2017[70] | Won |
| Year | Nominated work / recipient | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | "Girl Crush" | Top Country Song | Nominated |
| Little Big Town | Billboard Chart Achievement Award | Nominated | |
| 2017 | "Better Man" | Top Country Song | Nominated |
| Year | Nominated work | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Themselves | International Act of the Year | Nominated |
| Year | Nominated work / recipient | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | Little Big Town | Horizon Award | Nominated |
| Vocal Group of the Year | Nominated | ||
| 2007 | Horizon Award | Nominated | |
| Vocal Group of the Year | Nominated | ||
| 2008 | Nominated | ||
| "Life in a Northern Town"(withSugarland andJake Owen) | Musical Event of the Year | Nominated | |
| 2009 | Little Big Town | Vocal Group of the Year | Nominated |
| 2010 | Nominated | ||
| 2011 | Nominated | ||
| 2012 | Won | ||
| "Pontoon" | Single of the Year | Won | |
| Music Video of the Year | Nominated | ||
| 2013 | Tornado | Album of the Year | Nominated |
| "Tornado" | Music Video of the Year | Nominated | |
| Little Big Town | Vocal Group of the Year | Won | |
| 2014 | Won | ||
| 2015 | Won | ||
| "Girl Crush" | Single of the Year | Won | |
| Music Video of the Year | Nominated | ||
| Pain Killer | Album of the Year | Nominated | |
| "Smokin' and Drinkin'"(withMiranda Lambert) | Musical Event of the Year | Nominated | |
| 2016 | Little Big Town | Vocal Group of the Year | Won |
| 2017 | Won | ||
| "Better Man" | Single of the Year | Nominated | |
| Music Video of the Year | Nominated | ||
| The Breaker | Album of the Year | Nominated | |
| 2018 | Little Big Town | International Artist Achievement Award | Won |
| Vocal Group of the Year | Nominated | ||
| 2019 | Nominated | ||
| 2020 | Nominated |
| Year | Nominated work / recipient | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2015 | Little Big Town | Artist of the Year | Won |
| 2018 | Karen Fairchild and Kimberly Schlapman | Artist of the Year | Won |
| Year | Nominated work | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | "Boondocks" | Duo/Group Video of the Year | Nominated |
| 2007 | "Good as Gone" | Group Video of the Year | Nominated |
| 2009 | "Life in a Northern Town"[A] | Collaborative Video of the Year | Nominated |
| CMT Performance of the Year | Nominated | ||
| 2011 | "Little White Church" | Group Video of the Year | Nominated |
| 2012 | "Fix You" from Music Builds | CMT Performance of the Year | Nominated |
| 2013 | "Tornado" | Video of the Year | Nominated |
| "Pontoon" | Group Video of the Year | Nominated | |
| 2014 | "Your Side of the Bed" | Nominated | |
| 2015 | "Day Drinking" | Nominated | |
| 2016 | "Girl Crush" | Group/Duo Video of the Year | Won |
| Video of the Year | Nominated | ||
| 2017 | "Better Man" | Video of the Year | Nominated |
| Group Video of the Year | Won | ||
| 2018 | "When Someone Stops Loving You"[71] | Group Video of the Year | Won |
| "Stand Up for Something"[B] | Performance of the Year | Nominated | |
| "I Won't Back Down"[C] | Nominated | ||
| 2019 | "I Can't Make You Love Me/Help Me Make It Through the Night[D] | Nominated | |
| "Summer Fever" | Group Video of the Year | Nominated | |
| 2020 | "Wine, Beer, Whiskey (Live Cut)" | Group Video of the Year | Nominated |
| 2021 | "Wine, Beer, Whiskey" | Duo/Group Video of the Year | Won |
^ A. withSugarland andJake Owen
^ B. withAndra Day,Common,Lee Ann Womack andDanielle Bradbery
^ C. withJason Aldean,Keith Urban andChris Stapleton
^ D. withGladys Knight
| Year | Nominated work | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2013 | "Good Afternoon" | Outstanding Original Song | Won |
| Year | Nominated work | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | The Road to Here | Best Country Album | Nominated |
| "Boondocks" | Best Country Vocal Performance by a Duo/Group | Nominated | |
| 2009 | "Life in a Northern Town"(with Sugarland and Jake Owen) | Best Country Collaboration with Vocals | Nominated |
| 2011 | "Little White Church" | Best Country Performance by a Duo/Group with Vocals | Nominated |
| 2013 | "Pontoon" | Best Country Duo/Group Performance | Won |
| 2014 | "Your Side of the Bed" | Nominated | |
| 2015 | "Day Drinking" | Nominated | |
| 2016[30] | "Girl Crush" | Won | |
| Pain Killer | Best Country Album | Nominated | |
| 2018[72] | The Breaker | Nominated | |
| "Better Man" | Best Country Duo/Group Performance | Won | |
| Little Big Town | On the Hill Award[73] | Won | |
| 2019 | "When Someone Stops Loving You" | Best Country Duo/Group Performance | Nominated |
| 2020 | "The Daughters" | Nominated | |
| 2021 | "Sugar Coat" | Nominated | |
| Nightfall | Best Country Album | Nominated |
Note: "Girl Crush" was also nominated forSong of the Year andBest Country Song in 2016 (winning the latter), but in this category the award goes to the composer(s) of the song, not to the performing artist(s). The song was written and composed by Lori McKenna, Hillary Lindsey, andLiz Rose
Note: "Better Man" was also nominated forBest Country Song in 2018, but in this category the award goes to the composer(s) of the song, not to the performing artist(s). The song was written and composed byTaylor Swift
Note: "When Someone Stops Loving You" was also nominated forBest Country Song in 2019, but in this category the award goes to the composer(s) of the song, not to the performing artist(s). The song was written and composed by Hillary Lindsey, Chase McGill, and Lori McKenna
| Year | Nominated work | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | Little Big Town | Favorite Country Group | Nominated |
| 2017 | Won |
| Year | Nominated work | Category | Result |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | Little Big Town | Choice Country Group | Nominated |
| 2013 | Nominated |
| Year | Series | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | CMT Crossroads | Themselves | (withLindsey Buckingham) |
| 2013-15 | CMA Music Festival: Country's Night To Rock | Themselves/Host | |
| 2014 | The Voice | Themselves / Adviser | Season 7 Battle Round withTeam Blake |
| 2016 | Themselves | Season 10 finale performance result | |
| Greatest Hits | Themselves | ||
| 2017 | Sesame Street | Themselves | Season 47, Episode 17 |
| 2017 | The Voice | Themselves | Season 12 finale performance result withLauren Duski |
| 2018–19 | CMT Music Awards | Themselves/Host | |
| 2019 | The Voice | Themselves | Season 17 final performance withJake Hoot |
| 2020 | The Disney Family Singalong | Themselves | Performing "A Spoonful of Sugar" with their respective children |
| 2022 | Monarch | Themselves | Episode: "There Can Only Be One Queen" |
| 2025 | The Voice | Themselves/Advisors | Season 27 for TeamKelsea |
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