Grab your hat, your horse, and your guitar. Here’s a look back at all the artists who have won Best Country Song at the Grammy Awards – from Chris Stapleton to Taylor Swift and beyond!
The 65th Grammy Awards are on Feb. 5, 2023.
The Grammys have celebrated the Best Country Song since 1965.
The first winner of the ‘Best Country & Western Song’ was Roger Miller.
This year, Ben Stennis and Matt Rogers won for the Cody Johnson-performed song, ‘Til You Can’t.’
The Grammy Awards continue to be the biggest night in music, honoring all sorts of genres and styles – including country music. Once called “Country and Western,” the genre has given the world Taylor Swift, Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, Mickey Guyton, Vince Gill, and so many more. The Grammys celebrates country music’s brightest songwriters – those busy music maestros who work hard behind the scenes – with the annual Best Country Song award.
It took the Recording Academy a few years before it started to celebrate the actual composition of the best Country song at its annual awards show. At the first Grammys in 1959, the ceremony awarded Best Country & Western Performance to The Kingston Trio for “Tom Dooley.” The first award for country music craftsmanship came in 1965 at the 7th Annual Grammy Awards. The first Best Country & Western Song was given to Roger Miller’s “Dang Me.” He would win again in 1966 for “King of the Road.” Roger also won the first Grammy for a country album. His Dang Me/Chug-A-Lug won the Best Country & Western Album.
In 1969, the category was changed to Best Country Song. In 1984, it was briefly titled “Best New Country Song” (Mike Reid, winning for Ronnie Milsap’s “Stranger In My House.”) Afterward, it was changed back to Best Country Song.
There have been some noteworthy winners of Best Country Song over the past half-decade. Shel Silverstein, the author and cartoonist best known for The Giving Tree and Where the Sidewalk Ends, won the award in 1970 for Johnny Cash’s “A Boy Named Sue.” Kris Kristofferson won in 1972 for Sammi Smith’s “Help Me Make It Through The Night.” Willie Nelson won in 1981 for “On The Road Again,” and the following year, Dolly Parton claimed the award with “9 to 5.” In 1986, Jimmy Webb’s song for The Highwaymen (“Highwayman”) won the Best Country Song Grammy. Thirty-five years later, The Highwomen’s “Crowded Table” won the award for Brandi Carlile, Natalie Hemby, and Lori McKenna.
The nominees for the Best Country Song at the 65th Grammy Awards spotlight some of the talents that have produced the biggest songs of the last year. 2022’s winner Chris Stapleton is nominated for writing Willie Nelson‘s “I’ll Love You Till The Day I Die,” and though he performed on Taylor Swift’s Vault Track, “I Bet You Think About Me,” he didn’t get a songwriting credit. In the end, the Cody Johnson-performed track “‘Til You Can’t,” written by Matt Rogers and Ben Stennis won the honor.
The rest of the nominees showcase some familiar faces in the country genre.
Ryan Hurd, Julia Michaels, Maren Morris & Jimmy Robbins, “Circles Around This Town” (Maren Morris)
Luke Combs, Drew Parker & Robert Williford, “Doin’ This” (Luke Combs)
Lori McKenna & Taylor Swift, “I Bet You Think About Me (Taylor’s Version) (From The Vault)” (Taylor Swift featuring Chris Stapleton)
Jesse Frasure & Miranda Lambert, “If I Was a Cowboy”(Miranda Lambert)
Rodney Crowell & Chris Stapleton, “I’ll Love You Till The Day I Die” (Willie Nelson)
Matt Rogers & Ben Stennis, “‘Til You Can’t”(Cody Johnson)
Recent Best County Song Winners
Here is a rundown of the recent winners and nominees for Best Country Song. The songwriters are listed ahead of the song title, with the song’s performer in parentheses.
2022: Dave Cobb, J.T. Cure, Derek Mixon, Chris Stapleton, “Cold” (Chris Stapleton)
Jessie Jo Dillon, Maren Morris, Jimmy Robbins, Laura Veltz “Better Than We Found It” (Maren Morris)
Ian Fitchuk, Kacey Musgraves, Daniel Tashian, “Camera Roll” (Kacey Musgraves)
Zach Crowell, Ashley Gorley, Thomas Rhett, “Country Again” (Thomas Rhett)