
Charley Crockett Reignites Debate Over the GRAMMYs’ Relationship with Country Music in New Post
By Laura Halse
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Charley Crockett has never been one to let the music industry define success, and his latest Instagram post only cements this.
Reflecting on this year's Grammy Awards where he unexpectedly found himself seated at the ceremony, after his tickets were upgraded at the last minute, Crockett speculates in the post, "I think so few Country artists showed up they fell to me."
Whether Crockett meant the comment as a throwaway observation or something more pointed, it does from our perspective raise an interesting question. At a time when country music is arguably the hottest it's been in decades, breaking streaming records, dominating the Billboard charts and selling out stadiums across the globe, why would so few country artists attend one of music's biggest nights?
Crockett doesn't offer an answer but he does spark a story.
After the ceremony, he kept a crisp $2 bill handed out by an executive at his former label. Weeks later, while travelling through Durango, Colorado, he came across a young banjo player busking on Main Street. Rather than hold onto the keepsake from the Grammys, Crockett quietly dropped it into the musician's case before heading off for dinner. If ever there was a full-circle moment, that was it. Almost a practical dig at the Grammys - if you won't support true artists, I'll quite literally use your money to do so.
It's a small moment, but one that perfectly sums up an artist who's always seemed more interested in musicians than music executives.
The post also doubles as a subtle celebration of his latest album, Age of the Ram, with Crockett revealing that limited CDs have been delivered to a handful of independent record stores. Meanwhile, the comments beneath the post were dominated by discussion surrounding Twin Temple's removal from select dates of Crockett's upcoming tour (according to the duo, they were dropped because of their use of “Satanic imagery”). Crockett doesn't address the situation here, but it has inevitably become part of the wider conversation surrounding the post.
Whether intentional or not, Crockett's Grammy reflection taps into a broader debate. With artists such as Kacey Musgraves questioning genre boundaries and Zach Bryan reportedly stepping away from Grammy consideration altogether, it's fair to ask whether the Grammys are keeping pace with country music's rapid evolution.
As the genre continues its remarkable growth, perhaps the bigger question is no longer whether country music needs the Grammys, but whether the Grammys need country music.





