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| occupation = Singer, songwriter, musician
| occupation = Singer, songwriter, musician
| years_active = 1975–present
| years_active = 1975–present
| discography = [[Vince Gill discography]]
| label = {{Hlist|[[RCA Records Nashville|RCA Nashville]]|[[MCA Records|MCA]]|[[Universal Music Group Nashville|MCA Nashville]]}}
| label = {{Hlist|[[RCA Records Nashville|RCA Nashville]]|[[MCA Records|MCA]]|[[Universal Music Group Nashville|MCA Nashville]]}}
| current_member_of = [[Eagles (band)|Eagles]]
| current_member_of = [[Eagles (band)|Eagles]]
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'''Vincent Grant Gill''' (born April 12, 1957) is an American [[country music]] singer, songwriter and musician. He has achieved commercial success and fame both as frontman of the [[country rock]] band [[Pure Prairie League]] in the 1970s and as a solo artist beginning in 1983, where his talents as a vocalist and musician have placed him in high demand as a guest vocalist and a [[duet]] partner.
'''Vincent Grant Gill''' (born April 12, 1957) is an American [[country music]] singer, songwriter and musician. He and as of the [[ rock]] band [[Pure Prairie League]] as a beginning in [[]] .


His commercial peak came in the first half of the 1990s, accounting for a number of [[Grammy Awards]] as well as awards from the two main organizations awarding within the field of country music, the [[Academy of Country Music]] (ACM) and [[Country Music Association]] (CMA). Overall, Gill has won 22 Grammy Awards, the most of any solo male country music singer. Gill also had a large number of charted singles on the ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'' [[Hot Country Songs]] charts, including four solo number one hits: "[[I Still Believe in You (Vince Gill song)|I Still Believe in You]]", "[[Don't Let Our Love Start Slippin' Away]]", "[[One More Last Chance]]", and "[[Tryin' to Get Over You]]", all between 1992 and 1994. He has also had number-one singles as a guest on [[Reba McEntire]]'s "[[The Heart Won't Lie]]" (1993), [[Chris Young (singer)|Chris Young]]'s "[[Sober Saturday Night]]" (2016-17), and the multi-artist collaboration "[[Forever Country]]" (2016). All of Gill's albums released in the 1990s were certified platinum or higher by the [[Recording Industry Association of America]] (RIAA), with the highest being 1992's ''[[I Still Believe in You (album)|I Still Believe in You]]'' at quintuple-platinum.
He has recorded more than 20 studio albums, charted over 40 singles on the U.S. ''Billboard'' charts as [[Hot Country Songs]], and has sold more than 26 million albums. He has been honored by the [[Country Music Association]] with 18 [[CMA Awards]], including two Entertainer of the Year awards and five Male Vocalist Awards. As of 2022, Gill has also earned 22 [[Grammy Awards]], more than any other male country music artist. In 2007 he was inducted into the [[Country Music Hall of Fame]]. In 2016, Gill was inducted into the Guitar Center Rock Walk by [[Joe Walsh]] of the [[Eagles (band)|Eagles]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wincountry.com/news/articles/2016/jan/13/eagles-guitarist-joe-walsh-to-induct-vince-gill-into-hollywoods-rockwalk-next-month/|title=Eagles Guitarist Joe Walsh to Induct Vince Gill into Hollywood's RockWalk Next Month|author=Midwest Communications Inc.|work=WIN 98.5|access-date=May 23, 2016}}</ref> In 2017, he and [[Deacon Frey]] were hired by the Eagles in place of the late [[Glenn Frey]].


Gill was a member of [[the Time Jumpers]] from 2010 to 2020, and joined the [[Eagles (band)|Eagles]] in 2017 following the death of longtime member [[Glenn Frey]]. He has also participated in a wide variety of collaborations, including songs by [[Patty Loveless]], [[Brooks & Dunn]], [[Kelly Clarkson]], and [[Maren Morris]] among others. He was married to Janis Oliver, one-half of country duo [[Sweethearts of the Rodeo]], from 1980 to 1997, and married Christian pop singer [[Amy Grant]], another frequent collaborator of his, in 2000. Gill has also written songs for [[Alabama (band)|Alabama]] and [[Ty Herndon]].
== Early life ==
Gill was born in [[Norman, Oklahoma]].<ref>{{Cite book|title=The Encyclopedia of Country Music|last=Kingsbury|first=Paul|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|year=1998|isbn=0195116712|location=New York|pages=200}}</ref> He had an elder maternal half-brother, Bob Coen.<ref name=Rescue>{{cite web|url=http://blog.al.com/live/2013/05/for_vince_gill_a_personal_refl.html|last=Sharp|first=John|title=Vince Gill Talks About Helping the Mobile Rescue Mission|website=Blog.al.com|date=May 2, 2013|access-date=December 8, 2015}}</ref>


Gill's music is known for his songwriting, his [[tenor]] singing voice, and his lead guitar work, with many critics noting his prolificacy in both ballads and up-tempo material. His personal life is defined by his charitable and easygoing demeanor, leading many to term him as the "nicest guy in Nashville".
His father, J. Stanley Gill, was a [[lawyer]] and [[administrative law]] [[judge]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pga.com/pgachampionship/2003/news_081303_vgill.html |title=The 85th PGA Championship/News/Vince Gill: A man whose life is in tune (8/13/03)|website=Pga.com|access-date=August 20, 2013}}</ref> who played in a country music band part-time and encouraged Gill to pursue a music career. His father encouraged him to learn to play banjo and guitar, which he did along with bass, mandolin, Dobro and fiddle.<ref name=Official>{{cite web|url=http://www.vincegill.com/wired/?page_id=306#sthash.FvGQa6UF.dpuf|title=Vince Gill Official Site|website=Vincegill.com|access-date=December 8, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151226094045/http://www.vincegill.com/wired/?page_id=306#sthash.FvGQa6UF.dpuf|archive-date=December 26, 2015|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==Biography==
Gill attended high school at Oklahoma City's [[Northwest Classen High School]]. While there he played on the golf team and performed bluegrass in the band Mountain Smoke, which built a strong local following. After graduating from high school in 1975, he moved to [[Louisville, Kentucky]], to join the band Bluegrass Alliance. Afterwards he spent a brief amount of time in [[Ricky Skaggs]]'s Boone Creek band before moving to Los Angeles to join Sundance, a bluegrass group fronted by fiddler [[Byron Berline]].{{citation needed|date=December 2017}}
Vincent Grant Gill was born April 12, 1957, in [[Norman, Oklahoma]],{{Sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}}<ref name="allmusic">{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/vince-gill-mn0000214162 | title=Vince Gill biography | publisher=[[AllMusic]] | accessdate=March 25, 2024 | author=Steve Huey}}</ref> to Jerene and Stan Gill.<ref name="okhistory">{{cite web | url=https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry?entry=GI006 | title=Vince Gill | publisher=The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture | accessdate=March 25, 2024}}</ref> Stan Gill worked as a [[judge]] and also played guitar and [[banjo]], both of which he also taught his son how to play.<ref name="allmusic"/><ref name="fame">{{cite web | url=https://www.countrymusichalloffame.org/hall-of-fame/vince-gill | title=Vince Gill | publisher=[[Country Music Hall of Fame]] | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> His mother also sang and played [[harmonica]].<ref name="cst remz"/> Both parents also enjoyed [[golf]], a pastime which Gill himself would develop as well.<ref name="bmi golf">{{cite web | url=https://www.bmi.com/news/entry/20030828_pga_honors_bmi_country_star_vince_gill | title=PGA Honors BMI Country Star Vince Gill | publisher=[[Broadcast Music, Inc.]] | date=August 27, 2003 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> Gill also learned how to play [[Dobro]], [[fiddle]], [[mandolin]], and [[bass guitar]] during his teenage years.<ref name="allmusic"/> After graduating high school, Gill chose to become a [[bluegrass music]] performer. He briefly founded his own bluegrass band called Mountain Smoke, which once opened for [[Kiss (band)|Kiss]] to unfavorable reception, according to Gill.<ref name="cst remz"/> After Mountain Smoke disbanded, Gill moved to the state of [[Kentucky]].<ref name="allmusic"/> There he played in the bands Bluegrass Allliance and Boone Creek, the latter of which also featured [[Ricky Skaggs]] as a member.<ref name="encyclopedia">{{cite book | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tLZz02EzmBYC | title=The Encyclopedia of Country Music | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=2012 | pages=200-201 | editor=Michael McCall, John Rumble, Paul Kingsbury}}</ref> In 1976, he moved to [[Los Angeles, California]], where he briefly joined fiddle player [[Byron Berline]]'s backing band, Sundance.<ref name="encyclopedia"/>


== Career ==
== ==
===Early 1980s: Pure Prairie League===
Gill debuted on the national scene with the [[country rock]] band [[Pure Prairie League]] in 1979, appearing on that band's album ''[[Can't Hold Back (Pure Prairie League album)|Can't Hold Back]]''. He is the lead singer on their song "[[Let Me Love You Tonight]]". [[Mark Knopfler]] once invited him to join [[Dire Straits]], but he declined the offer (although he sang backup on the Dire Straits' album ''[[On Every Street]]'').
{{main|Pure Prairie League}}


In 1978, Pure Prairie League was auditioning new lead singers after their previous vocalist Larry Goshorn departed. Gill attended the auditions at the recommendation of a friend, as he had served as an opening act for the band while in Mountain Smoke.<ref name="allmusic"/>{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=51}} By October 1978, Gill had been selected as lead vocalist and guitarist for Pure Prairie League.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/128476775/ | title=Willie Nelson: A different kind of country | work=[[The Des Moines Register]] | date=October 17, 1978 | accessdate=March 25, 2024 | author=Jim Healey | pages=8A}}</ref> He appeared as an official band member on their 1979 album ''[[Can't Hold Back (Pure Prairie League album)|Can't Hold Back]]'' in addition to writing several songs on it.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/cant-hold-back-mw0000052071 | title=''Can't Hold Back'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 11, 2024}}</ref> Gill sang lead on the band's single "[[Let Me Love You Tonight]]", a top-ten hit on the [[Billboard Hot 100|''Billboard'' Hot 100]] in 1980;{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=52}}<ref name="encyclopedia"/> he also wrote its follow-up "I'm Almost Ready",<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lyQEAAAAMBAJ | title=Top single picks | journal=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]] | pages=67 | date=August 16, 1980}}</ref> as well as five other songs on the corresponding album ''[[Firin' Up]]''. Of this album, Joe Viglione of [[AllMusic]] thought that Gill's contributions to the album were "highly entertaining" and showed more of a [[country pop]] and [[adult contemporary]] influence than his later works.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/firin-up-mw0000095926 | title=''Firin' Up'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=March 31, 2024 | author=Joe Viglione}}</ref> Overall, Gill recorded three albums as lead singer of Pure Prairie League,<ref name="encyclopedia"/> and stayed in the band until being replaced by [[Gary Burr]] in 1982.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/pure-prairie-league-mn0000371879#biography | title=Pure Prairie League biography | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=March 25, 2024 | author=William Ruhlmann}}</ref>
[[File:Albert Lee, Vince Gill + hosts in Australia, February 1988.jpg|thumb|Gill (right) with [[Albert Lee]] (left) and Australian tour promoters Ann and Andrew Pattison in Australia, 1988]]
Gill left Pure Prairie League in 1981 to join [[The Notorious Cherry Bombs|Cherry Bombs]], the stage band that backed [[Rodney Crowell]]. There he worked with Tony Brown and Emory Gordy Jr., both of whom would later produce many of his albums.<ref name=Official/> He recorded a bluegrass album, ''Here Today'', with [[David Grisman]] and friends before signing a solo deal with [[RCA Records|RCA]] with whom he achieved some success including the singles, "Victim of Life's Circumstance" (U.S. Country Top 40) and Country Top Ten with "If It Weren't for Him", "Oklahoma Borderline" and "Cinderella". However his albums achieved only moderate sales and in 1989, Gill left RCA to sign with [[MCA Records]]. Here, reunited with Tony Brown as producer, he sold over a million copies of his label debut, 1989's ''When I Call Your Name'', of which several songs, including the title track, made the U.S. Country charts' Top Ten / Top Twenty.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/vince-gill-mn0000214162/biography|title=Vince Gill – Biography & History – AllMusic|website=AllMusic}}</ref> This was followed by the similarly successful albums, ''Pocket Full of Gold'' (1991) and ''I Still Believe in You'', of which the title track went to U.S. Country No. 1.


===1983: Beginning of solo career===
Throughout the 1990s and into the 2000s Gill continued to release highly successful albums, capitalizing on the virtuoso quality of his electric and acoustic guitar playing, his pure, high and soulful tenor voice, and the excellent quality of his songwriting. According to his biography on AllMusic, Gill has won more [[Country Music Association Awards|CMA Awards]] than any performer in history,{{citation needed|date=January 2018}} and as of 2018 has also won 21 [[Grammy Award]]s, which represents the most ever by a country artist.{{citation needed|date=January 2018}}
[[File:Rodney Crowell 1.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Gill is a former member of [[Rodney Crowell]]'s backing band, the Cherry Bombs.|alt=Singer Rodney Crowell, seated on a stool and strumming an acoustic guitar.]]
Shortly after departing Pure Prairie League, Gill moved to [[Nashville, Tennessee]],<ref name="allmusic"/> and began playing lead guitar in [[Rosanne Cash]]'s touring band.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/764640668/ | title=Rosanne Cash close to the top | work=[[The Cincinnati Post]] | date=November 17, 1982 | accessdate=March 25, 2024 | pages=7C}}</ref> This led to him also serving in this capacity in the Cherry Bombs, the backing band for Cash's then-husband, [[Rodney Crowell]].{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=56}}<ref name="encyclopedia"/> Another member of the Cherry Bombs, keyboardist and record producer [[Tony Brown (record producer)|Tony Brown]], had become the president of [[artists and repertoire]] at [[RCA Records Nashville]]. Through this connection, Gill was signed with RCA Nashville in 1983 as a solo artist.<ref name="allmusic"/><ref name="encyclopedia"/> Shortly before his signing with RCA, Gill also appeared as a guest vocalist on [[David Grisman]]'s ''[[Here Today (David Grisman album)|Here Today]]'',<ref name="allmusic"/> and sang backing vocals on [[Steve Wariner]]'s "[[Midnight Fire (song)|Midnight Fire]]", on which Brown was a producer.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Archive-RandR/1980s/1983/RR-1983-07-29.pdf | title=Nashville this week: CMA talent seminar set | author=Sharon Allen | journal=[[Radio & Records]] | pages=39 | date=July 29, 1983}}</ref>


Gill debuted on RCA in 1984 with a six-song [[extended play]] titled ''[[Turn Me Loose (Vince Gill album)|Turn Me Loose]]''.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=61}} The project accounted for three singles on the ''[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]'' [[Hot Country Songs]] charts: "Victim of Life's Circumstances", "Oh Carolina", and the title track, all of which peaked just within the top 40.{{Sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}} [[Delbert McClinton]] wrote the former of these, while Gill wrote the title track. The album was produced by [[Emory Gordy Jr.]], also a former member of the Cherry Bombs.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=51}} Despite the minimal success of ''Turn Me Loose'', Gill won Top New Male Vocalist from the [[Academy of Country Music]] in 1984.<ref name="acm">{{cite web | url=https://www.acmcountry.com/winners?awardTitle=vince+gill&awardCategory=&awardYear=&actionButton=Submit | title=Search results for Vince Gill | publisher=[[Academy of Country Music]] | accessdate=March 31, 2024}}</ref> Word of mouth within the Nashville community towards Gill's extended play also led to him serving as a backing vocalist and [[session musician]] for a number of other country singers. He served in this capacity for [[Conway Twitty]] and [[Lee Greenwood]],{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=63-64}} in addition to providing backing vocals on Rosanne Cash's 1985 album ''[[Rhythm & Romance (Rosanne Cash album)|Rhythm & Romance]]''.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=66}}
[[File:VinceGillCrossroads2007.jpg|thumb|left|upright|Gill playing at the 2007 [[Crossroads Guitar Festival]]]]
Gill has been a member of the [[Grand Ole Opry]] since August 10, 1991.<ref>{{cite web|title=Vince Gill|url=http://www.opry.com/artist/vince-gill|publisher=Grand Ole Opry|access-date=October 29, 2014}}</ref> He celebrated his 25th Opry anniversary with a tribute show on August 13, 2016.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/country/live-reviews/vince-gills-silver-opry-anniversary-celebrated-with-epic-show-w434509|title=Vince Gill's Silver Opry Anniversary Celebrated With Epic Show|newspaper=Rolling Stone|access-date=January 23, 2017}}</ref>


After ''Turn Me Loose'', Gill performed a number of shows at Nashville's [[Bluebird Cafe]], a popular venue for songwriters, as a means of refining his own songwriting.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=64}} His first full album for RCA was 1985's ''[[The Things That Matter]]''.<ref name="allmusic"/> While the lead single "True Love" underperformed on the country charts, the follow-up "[[If It Weren't for Him]]" (a duet with Cash) became Gill's first top-ten country hit the same year. The song was originally to have been included on ''Turn Me Loose'', but was delayed until ''The Things That Matter'' due to legal complications between Gill's and Cash's labels.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=66}} The album accounted for another top-ten in "[[Oklahoma Borderline]]",{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}} which Gill wrote with Crowell and [[Guy Clark]].{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=65-66}} The last single, "With You", was less successful.{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}} To promote the album, Gill began touring as an opening act for Ricky Skaggs.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=67}}
In 1997, he received the Golden Plate Award of the [[Academy of Achievement|American Academy of Achievement]].<ref>{{cite web|title= Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement |website=Achievement.org|publisher=[[American Academy of Achievement]]|url= https://achievement.org/our-history/golden-plate-awards/}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=1997 |title=Vince Gill Biography Photo |url= https://achievement.org/achiever/vince-gill/|quote= Vince Gill and Amy Grant perform for the American Academy of Achievement members and student delegates at an evening outing and symposium at Fort McHenry during the 1997 “Salute to Excellence” program in Baltimore.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |date=2009 |title=2009 Summit Highlights Photo |url= https://achievement.org/summit/2009/|quote= Academy members Vince Gill and Amy Grant share the gift of music with the children of Ntshuxekani Preschool.}}</ref>


Author Jo Sgammato stated that while Gill's first two projects for RCA were not commercially successful, both were well-received by music critics and fans.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=71}} For his third RCA release, Gill intentionally wanted to choose a new producer to vary his sound. He selected [[Richard Landis]], whom he also allowed to select material for the album.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=71-73}} Titled ''[[The Way Back Home]]'', the project accounted for four singles. First was "[[Cinderella (Vince Gill song)|Cinderella]]", written by [[Reed Nielsen]], which peaked at number five on the country charts in 1987.{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}} Crowell provided backing vocals as did [[Sweethearts of the Rodeo]], a duo consisting of Gill's then-wife Janis Oliver and her sister Kristine.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=74}} The album's second and third singles "[[Let's Do Something]]" and "[[Everybody's Sweetheart (song)|Everybody's Sweetheart]]" were both top-20 hits, but the final single "The Radio" stopped at number 39 on the country charts.{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}} After this album, Gill ended his contract with RCA as label executive [[Joe Galante]] wanted Gill to record only songs by other writers. Despite this disagreement, Gill stated that he left RCA amicably and still considered Galante a friend.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=89-90}} During Gill's departure from RCA, [[Dire Straits]] guitarist [[Mark Knopfler]] invited Gill to join the band on their then-upcoming world tour, but Gill declined as he wanted to stay within country music.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=77-78}}
In 2010, Gill officially joined the country swing group [[The Time Jumpers]].<ref>{{cite web|last1=Chancellor|first1=Jennifer|title=Gill joins Time Jumpers for debut album|url=http://www.tulsaworld.com/scene/gill-joins-time-jumpers-for-debut-album/article_5789e059-ac96-584e-8cbc-6a427cabc8d4.html|website=Tulsa World|access-date=September 11, 2015}}</ref>


===1989{{Ndash}}1993: Early years with MCA Nashville===
In July 2011, Gill appeared as a guest on [[NPR]]'s news quiz show ''[[Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me]]''.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wwdt.me/shows/2011/07/02 |title=Show Info: 2011-07-02 &#124; Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me! Stats and Show Details |website=Wwdt.me |date=July 2, 2011 |access-date=February 13, 2016}}</ref> Also in 2011, he appeared on the second of two bluegrass tribute albums for the British rock band [[the Moody Blues]]: ''[[Moody Bluegrass]] TWO... Much Love (2011).''<ref>{{cite web|url=http://bluegrasstoday.com/moody-bluegrass-two%E2%80%A6much-love/ |title=Moody Bluegrass Two…Much Love |website=Bluegrasstoday.com |date=June 7, 2011 |access-date=August 25, 2015}}</ref> In May 2011, [[Carrie Underwood]] was one of the seven women to be honored by the [[Academy of Country Music]] at the ''Girls' Night Out: Superstar Women of Country'' special. At the ceremony, Gill introduced Underwood and presented her with the special award. He sang one of her hits, "Jesus, Take The Wheel", and joined Underwood on a rendition performance of "[[How Great Thou Art (hymn)|How Great Thou Art]]". The video of the performance went [[Viral video|viral]] within two days.<ref name="new.music.yahoo.com">[http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/ourcountry/94317/carrie-underwoods-how-great-thou-art-moves-the-masses/ Carrie Underwood's 'How Great Thou Art' Moves The Masses – Our Country] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501075744/http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/ourcountry/94317/carrie-underwoods-how-great-thou-art-moves-the-masses |date=May 1, 2011 }}. New.music.yahoo.com (April 25, 2011). Retrieved December 13, 2016.</ref>
Gill had remained in contact with Tony Brown, who by 1988 was president of [[MCA Nashville Records]] and helped him sign a contract with that label in 1989.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=80}}<ref name="telegram">{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/641561035/ | title=Songwriter is filled to the gills with country talent | work=[[Fort Worth Star-Telegram]] | date=October 13, 1989 | accessdate=March 31, 2024 | author=Shirley Jinkins | pages=11}}</ref> Brown would also go on to serve as Gill's producer for most of his tenure on MCA. Of their relationship, Brown stated that he considered himself more of a "coach" due to his perception of Gill's artistic identity.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=82}} Brown also chose to put more emphasis on Gill's vocals than previous producers had, by placing greater emphasis on the vocal track than the instrumentation in the audio mix.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=84}} His first single release for MCA was "[[Never Alone (Rosanne Cash song)|Never Alone]]",{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}} previously recorded by Cash on ''Rhythm & Romance''.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/rhythm-romance-mw0000193207 | title=''Rhythm & Romance'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=March 31, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> This was the first of four singles off his MCA debut ''[[When I Call Your Name (album)|When I Call Your Name]]'', considered by the editors of ''The Encyclopedia of Country Music'' to be Gill's breakthrough album.<ref name="encyclopedia"/> The project included guest vocals from Kathie Baillie (of [[Baillie & the Boys]]), [[Patty Loveless]], [[Emmylou Harris]], [[Reba McEntire]], and [[Herb Pedersen]].<ref name="telegram"/> The second single from the album was "[[Oklahoma Swing]]", a duet with McEntire. This charted within the top 20 in early 1990, with Sgammato noting that some stations refused to play the song due to its [[Western swing]] sound.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=86}} It was followed by the number two [[When I Call Your Name (Vince Gill song)|title track]] and number three "[[Never Knew Lonely]]" by year's end.{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=140-141}} "When I Call Your Name" also received a [[music video]].{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=88}} AllMusic writer Thom Jurek thought that the songs written by Gill were "filler" but praised the singles in particular, stating that the album "serves as the testament to Gill's arrival as a star and an enduring part of the country music legacy."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/when-i-call-your-name-mw0000203213 | title=''When I Call Your Name'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 11, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> ''When I Call Your Name'' went on to become [[music recording certification|certified double platinum]] by the [[Recording Industry Association of America]] (RIAA) in 1996.<ref name="riaa">{{cite web | url=https://www.riaa.com/gold-platinum/?tab_active=default-award&se=vince+gill#search_section | title=Search results for Vince Gill | publisher=[[Recording Industry Association of America]] | accessdate=April 11, 2024}}</ref> The title track accounted for Gill's first win at the [[Grammy Awards]] in 1991, for [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|Best Male Vocal Country Performance]]; it was also nominated for [[Grammy Award for Best Country Song|Best Country Song]].<ref name="grammy">{{cite web | url=https://www.grammy.com/artists/vince-gill/16740 | title=Vince Gill | publisher=Grammy.com | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> Additionally, the song won Single of the Year from the [[Country Music Association]] (CMA), his first award from that institution, in 1990; it would win Song of the Year in 1991, where Gill was also awarded Male Vocalist of the Year and Vocal Event of the Year. He would win the former again in 1993, 1994, and 1995.<ref name="cma">{{cite web | url=https://cmaawards.com/past-winners-and-nominees/ | title=CMA Awards: Past winners and nominees | publisher=[[Country Music Association]] | accessdate=April 18, 2024}} Select "Vince Gill" from search menu.</ref> The success of ''When I Call Your Name'' led to Gill touring in support of the album, which included a concert at [[SeaWorld San Antonio]] and one opening for McEntire at [[Caesars Palace]]; he was also inducted into the [[Grand Ole Opry]] in 1991.{{sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=91-92, 96-97}}


{{multiple image
[[File:Amy Grant, James Taylor, and Vince Gill.jpg|thumb|Gill (right) with [[Amy Grant]] (left) and [[James Taylor]] at [[Tanglewood]] in 2011]]
| width1 = 137
[[File:The Time Jumpers.jpg|thumb|Gill (third from right) with [[The Time Jumpers]] in [[Golden Gate Park]], 2012]]
| image1 = Reba McEntire (51936713933) (cropped).jpg
| alt1 = A head shot of singer Reba McEntire.
| width2 = 120
| image2 =Patty Loveless (3470011524).jpg
| alt2 = Singer Patty Loveless singing into a microphone.
| footer = Gill has collaborated with [[Reba McEntire]] (left) and [[Patty Loveless]] (right) on a number of occasions.
}}


Next on MCA was 1991's ''[[Pocket Full of Gold]]''.<ref name="allmusic"/> The [[Pocket Full of Gold (song)|title track]] charted at number seven on Hot Country Songs that same year, a peak matched by its follow-up single "[[Liza Jane (Vince Gill song)|Liza Jane]]".<ref name="whitburn"/> "[[Look at Us (Vince Gill song)|Look at Us]]" and "[[Take Your Memory with You]]" also charted within top five between then and 1992.<ref name="whitburn"/> Gill told Bob Paxman of the blog Sounds Like Nashville that he allowed Brown to select songs for the album, as he "trusted [Brown's] song sense".<ref name="paxman">{{cite web | url=https://www.soundslikenashville.com/news/years-later-vince-gill-pocket-full-gold/ | title=30 years later: Vince Gill's 'Pocket Full of Gold' album | publisher=Sounds Like Nashville | date=March 5, 2021 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Bob Paxman}}</ref> Gill wrote "Look at Us" with [[Max D. Barnes]]. "Pocket Full of Gold" was inspired by an idea given to him written by Brian Allsmiller, a friend of Gill's who at the time was playing basketball for [[Vanderbilt University]]'s college team. Although Gill wrote the song by himself, he credited Allsmiller as a co-writer.<ref name="paxman"/> Once again, Loveless and Pedersen were among the backing vocalists.<ref>{{Cite AV media notes |title=Pocket Full of Gold |others=Vince Gill |year=1991 |type=CD |publisher=MCA Records |id=MCAD-10140}}</ref> Another contributor to the album was [[pedal steel guitar]] player [[John Hughey]], whose intro on "Look at Us" Gill later described as "iconic".<ref name="paxman"/> Like its predecessor, ''Pocket Full of Gold'' was also certified double-platinum.<ref name="riaa"/> The album accounted for Gill's second consecutive Grammy nomination in the category of Best Male Vocal Country Performance,<ref name="grammy"/> as well as CMA Award for Song of the Year.<ref name="acm"/> In October 1991, Gill hosted the CMA awards telecast with [[Clint Black]].{{sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=109}} Gill went on to host the awards ceremony every subsequent year through 2003.<ref name="cma boot">{{cite web | url=https://theboot.com/vince-gill-cma-awards/ | title=30 years ago: Vince Gill wins five CMA awards | publisher=The Boot | date=September 29, 2023 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref>
In February 2012, Gill announced, "For the first time in 30 years, I don't have a record deal. Don't know that I want one."<ref>[http://theboot.com/vince-gill-leaves-mca-records Profile], theBoot website; retrieved August 15, 2013.</ref>


===1993{{ndash}}1995: ''I Still Believe in You'' and ''When Love Finds You''===
In March 2012, he performed at the Southern Kentucky Performing Arts Center in [[Bowling Green, Kentucky]], for its opening night. He was recruited for the show at the 11th hour when singer LeAnn Rimes canceled the day before the opening. Gill drove up from Nashville that night with only his guitar and played to repeated standing ovations from a standing-room only house.
1993's ''[[I Still Believe in You (album)|I Still Believe in You]]'' was Gill's third release on MCA.<ref name="allmusic"/> It also became his best-selling album, receiving a quintuple-platinum RIAA certification.<ref name="riaa"/> The [[I Still Believe in You (Vince Gill song)|title track]] became Gill's first number-one on Hot Country Songs, a peak also achieved by its follow-up "[[Don't Let Our Love Start Slippin' Away]]". After these, "[[No Future in the Past (Vince Gill song)|No Future in the Past]]" went to number three, followed by "[[One More Last Chance]]" and "[[Tryin' to Get Over You]]" which both topped Hot Country Songs between late 1993 and early 1994.<ref name="whitburn"/> The latter was also Gill's first solo entry on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100.<ref name="whitburn"/> In between "Don't Let Our Love Start Slippin' Away" and "No Future in the Past", Gill also provided duet vocals to Reba McEntire's number-one single "[[The Heart Won't Lie]]",<ref name="allmusic"/> on which Tony Brown was also a producer. She had originally intended to record the song as a duet with [[Kenny Rogers]], but after proving unable to find a key in which both of them could sing the song comfortably, she instead chose Gill.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://uk.style.yahoo.com/reba-mcentire-always-feel-terrible-215721198.html | title=Reba McEntire will always feel terrible about scrapping Kenny Rogers duet plans | publisher=Yahoo! | date=June 18, 2021 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> [[Alanna Nash]] of ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]'' contrasted ''I Still Believe in You'' favorably against then-labelmate [[Trisha Yearwood]]'s ''[[Hearts in Armor]]'' in a dual review, considering both singers to have emotive vocals and an affinity for mature lyrics. She praised the lyrics of "I Still Believe in You" and "No Future in the Past" in particular.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://ew.com/article/1992/09/18/i-still-believe-you/ | title=''I Still Believe in You'' / ''Hearts in Armor'' | publisher=[[Entertainment Weekly]] | date=September 18, 1992 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=[[Alanna Nash]]}}</ref> AllMusic writer Johnny Loftus considered Gill to have a "smooth" voice, while finding influences of [[soul music]] on the title track and of [[bluegrass music]] on "No Future in the Past".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/i-still-believe-in-you-mw0000084378 | title=''I Still Believe in You'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Johnny Loftus}}</ref> During promotion for ''I Still Believe in You'' in 1993, Gill also released his first Christmas album, ''[[Let There Be Peace on Earth (album)|Let There Be Peace on Earth]]''.<ref name="allmusic"/> The album included a number of traditional Christmas songs as well as a cover of the song "[[Let There Be Peace on Earth (song)|Let There Be Peace on Earth]]", a 1955 gospel song written by [[Harlene Wood]] and Sy Miller. Gill's rendition featured vocals from his daughter Jenny. Other vocalists on the album included [[Gene Merlino]], [[Sally Stevens]], and [[Chris Rodriguez (singer)|Chris Rodriguez]].<ref name="peace liner">{{cite AV media notes |title=Let There Be Peace on Earth |others=Vince Gill |year=1993 |type=CD insert |publisher=MCA Records |id=10877}}</ref> "I Still Believe in You" won both Best Country Song and Best Male Country Vocal Performance at the [[35th Annual Grammy Awards]] in 1993, while "The Heart Won't Lie" was nominated for [[Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals]] a year later.<ref name="grammy"/> Gill won five CMA Awards in 1993,<ref name="cma boot"/> including Album of the Year, Entertainer of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year, and Song of the Year, the last of which went to "I Still Believe in You".<ref name="cma"/>


His next release on MCA was 1994's ''[[When Love Finds You]]'', which would chart a total of six singles between then and 1995. First among these were "[[Whenever You Come Around]]" and "[[What the Cowgirls Do]]", both of which peaked at number two.<ref name="whitburn"/> Next were the [[When Love Finds You (song)|title track]], "[[Which Bridge to Cross (Which Bridge to Burn)]]", and "[[You Better Think Twice]]". All peaked within the top five throughout 1995.<ref name="whitburn"/> The sixth and final single was "[[Go Rest High on That Mountain]]" at number 14.<ref name="whitburn"/> Gill had originally written the song in 1989 as a tribute to [[Keith Whitley]] following his death that same year, but did not finish it until four years later when the death of Gill's half-brother Bob Cohen inspired him.<ref name="encyclopedia"/> Patty Loveless and Ricky Skaggs provided backing vocals on the track.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.wideopencountry.com/go-rest-high-on-that-mountain-behind-vince-gills-majestic-song/ | title='Go Rest High on That Mountain': The Story Behind Vince Gill's Majestic Song | publisher=Wide Open Country | date=September 16, 2022 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Courtney Campbell}}</ref> Despite its lower chart showing, "Go Rest High on That Mountain" remained popular among fans and critics. [[Dayton Duncan]]'s ''Country Music: An Illustrated History'' (adapted from the [[Ken Burns]] documentary ''[[Country Music (miniseries)|Country Music]]'') described it as a popular song for fans to commemorate the deaths of family members and friends.<ref>{{cite book | title=Country Music: An Illustrated History | publisher=Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group | author=[[Dayton Duncan]] | year=2019 | chapter=Go Rest High on That Mountain}}</ref> ''[[Rolling Stone]]'' ranked it number 17 in a list of the 40 Saddest Country Songs,<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/40-saddest-country-songs-of-all-time-158907/vince-gill-go-rest-high-on-that-mountain-147530/|title = 40 Saddest Country Songs of All Time| magazine=[[Rolling Stone]] |date =September 17, 2019}}</ref> In addition, the song received a platinum certification.<ref name="riaa"/> Jurek thought that ''When Love Finds You'' was more reliant on ballads than the preceding albums, but praised the lyrical qualities of each, as well as the [[country rock]] influence of "You Better Think Twice".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/when-love-finds-you-mw0000624918 | title=''When Love Finds You'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> Gill ended 1995 with the compilation ''[[Souvenirs (Vince Gill album)|Souvenirs]]'', a [[greatest hits]] album featuring most of his MCA singles to that point as well as selected collaborations. In a review for ''[[The Orange County Register]]'' reprinted in ''[[The Orlando Sentinel]]'', Gene Harbrecht thought the compilation showed Gill's artistic growth in the intervening years, while also noting its mix of ballads and up-tempo material.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/233527197/ | title=Vince Gill: ''Souvenirs'' | work=The Orlando Sentinel | date=December 15, 1995 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Gene Harbrecht | pages=10}}</ref> At the [[37th Annual Grammy Awards]], "When Love Finds You" won Best Male Country Vocal Performance and was nominated for Best Country Song; a year later, "Go Rest High on That Mountain" would receive both awards. ''When Love Finds You'' was nominated for [[Grammy Award for Best Country Album|Best Country Album]] during the former ceremony as well.<ref name="grammy"/>
In April 2012, it was confirmed that Gill had been working with [[Bonnie Tyler]] on her upcoming album, performing a duet with her entitled "What You Need from Me".{{Citation needed|date=September 2021}}


===1996{{ndash}}1999: ''High Lonesome Sound'' and ''The Key''===
In June 2012, he was touring and performing only [[Bluegrass music|bluegrass]] songs.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/2012/06/07/2869285/vince-gill-concert-will-be-all.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130129084954/http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/2012/06/07/2869285/vince-gill-concert-will-be-all.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 29, 2013|title=Vince Gill concert will be 'all bluegrass'|last=Palisin|first=Steve|work=[[The Sun News]]|date=June 7, 2012|access-date=June 8, 2012}}</ref>
[[File:VinceGillCrossroads2007.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Gill in 2007.|alt=Singer Vince Gill, playing an electric guitar.]]
In 1996, MCA released Gill's next studio album ''[[High Lonesome Sound]]'',<ref name="whitburn"/> with its [[High Lonesome Sound (song)|title track]] also serving as the lead single. Although this song only reached number 12 on the United States country music charts,<ref name="whitburn"/> it went to number one on the Canadian country music charts then published by ''[[RPM (magazine)|RPM]]''.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/RPM/90s/1996/RPM-1996-07-01.pdf | title=RPM Country Tracks | journal=RPM | pages=16 | date=July 1, 1996}}</ref> The album featured two versions of the song: one accompanied by studio musicians, and one accompanied by [[Alison Krauss & Union Station]].<ref name="high lonesome">{{cite web | url=https://www.countrystandardtime.com/d/cdreview.asp?xid=2864 | title=''High Lonesome Sound'' | publisher=[[Country Standard Time]] | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Brian Wahlert}}</ref> Next was the top five hit "[[Worlds Apart (Vince Gill song)|Worlds Apart]]", followed by "[[Pretty Little Adriana]]" and "[[A Little More Love (Vince Gill song)|A Little More Love]]", which both peaked at number two. Last was "[[You and You Alone (song)|You and You Alone]]", a top-ten country hit for him in 1997.<ref name="whitburn"/> Gill was inspired to write "Pretty Little Adriana" after reading a news story about a girl named Adriana Dickerson, who was shot to death outside a Nashville supermarket in 1995.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/111907111/? | title=Vince writes musical tribute for Adriane | work=The Tennessean | date=January 17, 1997 | accessdate=April 24, 2021 | pages=3A}}</ref> Michael McCall of AllMusic thought individual tracks off ''High Lonesome Sound'' showed influence of bluegrass, [[Chicago blues]], and [[Cajun music]], but thought the ballads such as "Pretty Little Adriana" were overall the strongest and were "more progressively atmospheric" than his previous ballads.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/high-lonesome-sound-mw0000179096 | title=''High Lonesome Sound'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Michael McCall}}</ref> Writing for [[Country Standard Time]], Brian Wahlert praised Gill's vocals and guitar work, but thought that some songs including "Pretty Little Adriana" and the title track were "trite" and "cliché".<ref name="high lonesome"/> The version of "High Lonesome Sound" featuring Alison Krauss & Union Station won Best Country Collaboration with Vocals, and "Worlds Apart" won Best Male Country Vocal Performance, at the [[39th Annual Grammy Awards]] in 1997; one year later, "Pretty Little Adriana" won the latter award as well.<ref name="grammy"/>


Gill released two albums in 1998. First was the studio release ''[[The Key (Vince Gill album)|The Key]]'' was led off by the song "[[If You Ever Have Forever in Mind]]", a top-five country hit.<ref name="whitburn"/> The song won the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance.<ref name="riaa"/> Also released as singles were "[[Kindly Keep It Country]]", "[[Don't Come Cryin' to Me]]", and "[[My Kind of Woman/My Kind of Man]]". The last of these, a duet with Patty Loveless, also appeared on her 1999 compilation ''[[Classics (Patty Loveless album)|Classics]]''.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/classics-mw0000602702 | title=''Classics'' | publisher=AllMusic | access-date=September 29, 2022}}</ref> ''The Key'' featured a number of backing vocalists, including [[Dawn Sears]] on "Don't Come Cryin' to Me", as well as [[Sara Evans]], [[Lee Ann Womack]], [[Alison Krauss]], [[Shelby Lynne]], [[Sonya Isaacs]], and [[Faith Hill]].<ref>{{Cite AV media notes |title=The Key |others=Vince Gill |year=1998 |type=CD booklet |publisher=MCA Nashville |id=MCAD-70017}}</ref> AllMusic writer Jana Pendragon summarized her review of the album by writing, "For emotional depth, honesty, and the kind of musical depth and artistry listeners have come to expect from Gill, ''The Key'' stands among his very finest recordings."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-key-mw0000039972 | title=''The Key'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Jana Pendragon}}</ref> ''[[No Depression (magazine)|No Depression]]'' writer Grant Alden also reviewed the album with favor, noting that Gill wrote most of the songs by himself; he also described the album's sound and lyrics as containing "emotion and elegance".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.nodepression.com/album-reviews/vince-gill-the-key/ | title=Vince Gill{{ndash}}''The Key'' | publisher=[[No Depression (magazine)|No Depression]] | date=November 1, 1998 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Grant Alden}}</ref> Later in the year was Gill's second Christmas project, ''[[Breath of Heaven: A Christmas Collection]]'', on which Gill was accompanied by [[Patrick Williams (composer)|Patrick Williams]] and his orchestra. AllMusic reviewer Jana Pendragon praised the album for the orchestral accompaniment, as well as its inclusion of both secular and Christian material.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/breath-of-heaven-a-christmas-collection-mw0000600730 | title=''Breath of Heaven: A Christmas Collection'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Jana Pendragon}}</ref> Nine years after its release, ''Breath of Heaven: A Christmas Collection'' was certified platinum.<ref name="riaa"/>
Gill received the 2,478th star of the [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]] on September 6, 2012.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://wdez.com/news/articles/2012/aug/24/vince-gill-getting-star-on-the-hollywood-walk-of-fame/|title=Vince Gill Getting Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame|website=Wdez.com|date=August 23, 2012|access-date=August 29, 2012|archive-date=May 31, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140531105438/http://wdez.com/news/articles/2012/aug/24/vince-gill-getting-star-on-the-hollywood-walk-of-fame/|url-status=dead}}</ref>


==21st century==
Gill was featured in a song by [[Kelly Clarkson]] titled "[[Don't Rush (Kelly Clarkson song)|Don't Rush]]", which appears on Clarkson's ''[[Greatest Hits – Chapter One (Kelly Clarkson album)|Greatest Hits – Chapter One]]''.{{citation needed|date=January 2017}}
===2000{{ndash}}2003: ''Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye'' and ''Next Big Thing''===
In 2000, Gill released the studio album ''[[Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye]]''. The album accounted for three singles in its [[Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye (song)|title track]], "[[Feels Like Love (Vince Gill song)|Feels Like Love]]", and "[[Shoot Straight from Your Heart]]". Of these, "Feels Like Love" was the most successful with a peak of number six on Hot Country Songs.<ref name="whitburn"/> [[Amy Grant]], to whom Gill would become married during recording of the album, co-wrote and provided duet vocals on the track "When I Look into Your Heart". Many critics considered the album's themes to have been influenced by the then-recent marriage. Jurek noted that the project was dominated by songs about falling in love, but praised Gill's lyrics and vocals, as well as Brown's production.<ref name="make sure">{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/lets-make-sure-we-kiss-goodbye-mw0000059121 | title=''Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> Nash criticized the sound of the album as "goop" and "tepid" outside the title track.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://ew.com/article/2000/04/21/lets-make-sure-we-kiss-goodbye/ | title=Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye | publisher=Entertainment Weekly | date=April 21, 2000 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Alanna Nash}}</ref> Similarly, in a review for [[Knight Ridder]] republished in the ''[[Ventura County Star]]'', Howard Cohen panned the project for "stock sentiments and imagery" of love and "overly slick balladry".<ref name="kiss cohen">{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/928396004/ | title=Listening Room | work=[[Ventura County Star]] | date=May 5, 2000 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | pages=34}}</ref> ''Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye'' was certified gold after release.<ref name="riaa"/>


Gill did not issue another studio album until 2003's ''[[Next Big Thing]]''. He wrote its lead single and title track "[[Next Big Thing (song)|Next Big Thing]]" with John Hobbs and former [[NRBQ]] member [[Al Anderson (NRBQ)|Al Anderson]]; the song would become Gill's last solo top-20 country chart entry upon release.<ref name="whitburn"/> Also released from the album were the less successful singles "[[Someday (Vince Gill song)|Someday]]" and "Young Man's Town".<ref name="whitburn"/> In a 2003 telephone interview with Country Standard Time, Gill said that many of the lyrics on ''Next Big Thing'' were inspired by his increasing age and the rise of younger artists who had surpassed him commercially in the intervening years. He also wanted the album to include more humorous material than his previous works. As Brown had stopped working for MCA at the time, this left him unavailable as a producer, so Gill produced the project by himself.<ref name="cst remz">{{cite web | url=https://www.countrystandardtime.com/d/print_article.asp?xid=450 | title=Vince Gill - the next big thing? | publisher=Country Standard Time | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Jeffrey B. Remz}}</ref> Jurek praised the album for including more songs than normal for a country album and having strong production. His review highlighted the singles in particular, additionally noting the contributions of Grant and [[Michael McDonald (musician)|Michael McDonald]].<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/next-big-thing-mw0000019091 | title=''Next Big Thing'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> The track "Real Mean Bottle" (inspired by a comment session guitarist [[Harold Bradley (guitarist)|Harold Bradley]] made about [[Merle Haggard]]'s "[[The Bottle Let Me Down]]"<ref name="cst remz"/>) was later covered by [[Bob Seger]] on his 2006 album ''[[Face the Promise]]''.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/face-the-promise-mw0000778354 | title=''Face the Promise'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=[[Stephen Thomas Erlewine]]}}</ref> "Next Big Thing" won the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance.<ref name="grammy"/>
In 2014, Gill received the Country Music Awards Irving Waugh Award of Excellence. Gill was only the sixth recipient since the inception of the award in 1983.{{Dubious|date=January 2020}}.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cmaworld.com/industry-honors/|title=Industry Honors – CMA World – CMA Country Music Association|website=CMA World|accessdate=February 28, 2022}}</ref>


===2004{{ndash}}2007: The Notorious Cherry Bombs and ''These Days''===
In 2016, Gill was selected as one of 30 artists to perform on ''Forever Country'', which celebrates 50 years of the [[CMA Awards]].<ref>{{cite web|url=https://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/scenes-cmas-historic-music-video-featuring-30-country/story?id=42129062|title=30 Country Music Stars Join Forces for Historic CMA Music Video|date=September 16, 2016|publisher=ABC News|access-date=September 17, 2016}}</ref>
In 2004, Gill and Rodney Crowell decided to re-establish Crowell's former backing band, the Cherry Bombs, after said members had reunited at an awards banquet for the [[American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers]] (ASCAP). This lineup included all the former members except for bassist [[Emory Gordy Jr.]], who declined to participate, and [[Larrie Londin]], who died of a heart attack in 1992. Their respective roles were taken over by [[Michael Rhodes (musician)|Michael Rhodes]] and [[Eddie Bayers]]. Crediting themselves as [[the Notorious Cherry Bombs]], this group of musicians recorded one [[The Notorious Cherry Bombs (album)|self-titled album]] for Universal South Records (now [[Show Dog-Universal Music]]) in 2004, which featured Gill and Crowell alternating as vocalists.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-notorious-cherry-bombs-mn0002319623#biography | title=The Notorious Cherry Bombs biography | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Jason Ankeny}}</ref> The project also charted one single on Hot Country Songs with "It's Hard to Kiss the Lips at Night That Chew Your Ass Out All Day Long".{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|page=261}}


Gill's next project for MCA was 2006's ''[[These Days (Vince Gill album)|These Days]]'', a [[box set]] comprising four albums each recorded in a different style. These individual albums each focused on a different style: ''Workin' on a Big Chill'' for [[country rock]], ''The Reason Why'' for [[soul music]], ''Some Things Never Get Old'' for [[neotraditional country]], and ''Little Brother'' for [[bluegrass music]]. Among the guest vocalists on the album were Grant, McDonald, Loveless, Crowell, [[Del McCoury]], [[LeAnn Rimes]], [[Sheryl Crow]], [[Diana Krall]], and [[Trisha Yearwood]]. Gill co-produced with Justin Niebank and John Hobbs, and wrote most of the songs by himself. Jurek reviewed the project favorably on AllMusic, highlighting the stylistic and lyrical diversity; he concluded his review by stating that the project was "an exhaustive, profound, fun and fulfilling set that not only gives fans something to delight in, but goes wide and if given half a chance could and would attract many new ones."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/these-days-mw0000402550 | title=''These Days'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> Scott Jordan of the ''[[Austin Chronicle]]'' panned the songs on ''The Reason Why'' but compared the tracks on ''Workin' on a Big Chill'' favorably to [[Delbert McClinton]] and praised the introspective lyrics in some of the tracks on ''Little Brother''.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.austinchronicle.com/music/2006-12-08/426573/ | title=Vince Gill{{Mdash}}''These Days'' | publisher=[[Austin Chronicle]] | date=December 8, 2006 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> The album charted two singles: "The Reason Why" (featuring [[Alison Krauss]]) and "What You Give Away" (featuring Sheryl Crow).<ref name="whitburn"/> At the end of 2006, ''These Days'' was certified platinum.<ref name="riaa"/> "The Reason Why" won Gill a Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance at the [[49th Annual Grammy Awards]] in 2007; one year later, the album won Best Country Album and was nominated for [[Grammy Award for Album of the Year|Album of the Year]].<ref name="grammy"/>
In his career Gill has sold more than 26 million albums and accumulated more than 50 Top 40 hits.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://theboot.com/vince-gill-i-still-believe-in-you/|last=Thompson|first=Gayle|title=23 Years Ago: Vince Gill Earns First No. 1 Hit With 'I Still Believe in You'|work=the Boot|date=September 5, 2015|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref>


===2008{{ndash}}2015: ''Guitar Slinger'' and ''Bakersfield''===
Gill joined [[Eagles (band)|the Eagles]], alongside Deacon Frey, following the death of [[Glenn Frey]]. Gill serves as co-lead guitarist, in addition to providing rhythm guitars, singing background, and frequently handling lead vocals in place of Glenn Frey. He initially started touring with the band in 2017, and continues to serve as a member of the band.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://eagles.com/news/293163|title=The Eagles call on family — and Vince Gill — to carry on without Glenn Frey for Classic West-East shows |last=Lewis |first=Randy |date=June 1, 2017 |website=Eagles |access-date=October 2, 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://eagles.com/news/295895|title=2018 North American Tour|website=Eagles.com|access-date=November 21, 2017}}</ref>
[[File:Station Inn.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Gill (center, seated and playing guitar) with the Time Jumpers in 2011.|alt=A black-and-white photo of the band The Time Jumpers.]]
Despite recording fewer albums throughout the first two decades of the 21st century, Gill remained active as a touring artist. He and Amy Grant also accompanied actor, comedian, and musician [[Steve Martin]] in May 2009 for his debut on the [[Grand Ole Opry]], which also served as promotion for Martin's album ''[[The Crow: New Songs for the 5-String Banjo]]''.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/360396749 | title=These days | work=[[The Post-Crescent]] | date=April 27, 2009 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Cheryl Anderson | pages=B5}}</ref> In 2010, Gill joined [[the Time Jumpers]], an informal collection of musicians who played a number of [[bluegrass music]] and [[Western swing]] concerts at various venues around Nashville. The ensemble recorded their self-titled second studio album at Gill's home studio in 2012.<ref name="giljoin">{{cite news |last1=McDonnell |first1=Brandy |title=The Time Jumpers carry sound, spirit of Bob Wills |volume=121 |url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/452819334/?terms=%22Vince%2BGill%22%2B%2B%2B%22Time%2BJumpers%22 |accessdate=December 31, 2019 |issue=251 |publisher=The Oklahoman |date=September 12, 2012 |page=6–D}}</ref> During his tenure in the band, Gill and the Time Jumpers won [[Grammy Award for Best American Roots Song]] for the track "Kid Sister" from their 2016 album of the same name.<ref name="grammy"/> Gill would continue to perform with the Time Jumpers until 2020.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-country/vince-gill-quits-time-jumpers-band-1065660/ | title=Vince Gill Exits the Time Jumpers, Western Swing Band Sets New Live Shows | publisher=Rolling Stone | date=September 23, 2020 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Joseph Hudak}}</ref> His next solo release was 2011's ''[[Guitar Slinger (Vince Gill album)|Guitar Slinger]]''.<ref name="allmusic"/> The album once again featured songs written or co-written by Gill, along with vocal contributions from [[Bekka Bramlett]], [[Chris Stapleton]], then-former [[McBride & the Ride]] member Billy Thomas, and Gill's daughter Jenny. Hobbs and Niebank also co-produced with Gill. Grant also provided a duet vocal on the track "True Love".<ref name="slinger">{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/guitar-slinger-mw0002143022 | title=''Guitar Slinger'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> The project charted one single in "Threaten Me with Heaven".<ref name="whitburn"/> Jurek thought this track and others on the album had themes of "mortality", which he considered unusual for Gill's work. Additionally, Jurek found influences of [[rhythm and blues]] and [[gospel music]] among individual tracks.<ref name="slinger"/>


Next was 2013's ''[[Bakersfield (album)|Bakersfield]]'', a compilation of various country songs from the [[Bakersfield sound]] from artists such as [[Merle Haggard]] and [[Buck Owens]]. The album was credited as a collaboration with session steel guitar player [[Paul Franklin (musician)|Paul Franklin]].<ref name="allmusic"/> Gill and [[J.T. Corenflos]] alternated as lead guitarists on the sessions, with other musical contributors including bassist [[Willie Weeks]], drummer [[Greg Morrow]], and backing vocalist [[Dawn Sears]].<ref name="roughstock bakersfield">{{cite web | url=https://roughstock.com/news/2013/07/14629-album-review-vince-gill-paul-franklin-bakersfield | title=''Bakersfield'' review | publisher=Roughstock | date=July 26, 2013 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Matt Bjorke}}</ref> Among the tracks covered were Owens's "[[Together Again (Buck Owens song)|Together Again]]" and Haggard's "[[The Bottle Let Me Down]]" and "[[The Fightin' Side of Me]]".<ref name="bakersfield"/> Jurek thought that the album's song choices highlighted the "edgier" nature of the Bakersfield sound, while also speaking favorably of Gill's vocals and Franklin's playing.<ref name="bakersfield">{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/bakersfield-mw0002554860 | title=''Bakersfield'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> Roughstock writer Matt Bjorke also praised the musicianship and song selection, stating that "Mainstream channels may not care much for this kind of music anymore but it's still as vibrant and fantastic as it has always been and in the loving hands of Vince Gill and Paul Franklin it shines once again."<ref name="roughstock bakersfield"/>
== Personal life ==
In 1968, Gill's older half-brother, Bob Coen, was involved in a severe car crash. Bob was 22 years old at the time, while Gill was 11. The accident left Bob in a coma for three months with irreversible brain damage. He subsequently struggled in life and would lose contact with his family and friends. He died in 1993.<ref name=Rescue/> Gill wrote the song "It Won't Be the Same This Year" for his brother. He dedicated his 1993 Christmas album ''[[Let There Be Peace on Earth (album)|Let There Be Peace on Earth]]'' and his first televised Christmas special that year to Bob.{{citation needed|date=December 2017}}


===2016{{ndash}}2019: ''Down to My Last Bad Habit'', membership in Eagles, and ''Okie''===
Gill met country music singer Janis Oliver of [[Sweethearts of the Rodeo]] in Los Angeles when they were both starting out in music. The two married in 1980. Their daughter Jennifer was born in 1982.<ref name=Academy>{{cite web|title= Vince Gill Biography and Interview |website=Achievement.org|publisher=[[American Academy of Achievement]] |url=https://www.achievement.org/achiever/vince-gill/#interview}}</ref> In 1983, the couple moved to Nashville. Gill worked as a session guitarist, sang back-up, and continued to write songs while his wife's career took off. Occasionally Gill would mix sound for his wife's band. The two divorced in 1997.<ref name=Charm>{{cite web|url=http://www.goodhousekeeping.com/life/inspirational-stories/interviews/a18080/amy-grant-vince-gill|last=Graham Kizer|first=Jennifer|title=For Amy Grant and Vince Gill, the Second Time's the Charm|work=Good Housekeeping|date=January 4, 2010|access-date=December 9, 2015}}</ref>
Gill released ''[[Down to My Last Bad Habit]]'' through MCA in 2016. The lead single to the project was "Take Me Down", featuring guest vocals from [[Little Big Town]]. He wrote the song with [[Richard Marx]] and [[Jillian Jacqueline]]. [[Cam (singer)|Cam]] also contributed vocals to the track "I'll Be Waiting for You".<ref>{{cite web|last=Moss |first=Marissa R. |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/vince-gill-readies-new-album-down-to-my-last-bad-habit-20151119 |title=Vince Gill Readies New Album 'Down to My Last Bad Habit' |publisher=Rolling Stone |date=2015-11-19 |accessdate=2016-02-18}}</ref> The former was issued as the project's lead single.<ref name="whitburn"/> [[Stephen Thomas Erlewine]] wrote that Gill "maintains an elegant, soulful air throughout the record", while highlighting the number of guest artists and considering the sound to be influenced by [[Memphis soul]].<ref name="bad habit">{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/down-to-my-last-bad-habit-mw0002904598 | title=''Down to My Last Bad Habit'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Stephen Thomas Erlewine}}</ref>
[[File:Amy Grant and Vince Gill.jpg|thumb|Amy Grant and Gill at a 2004 concert to show support for U.S. military men and women]]
Gill met Christian music artist [[Amy Grant]] in 1993 when he asked her to perform in his first televised Christmas special. Grant and then-husband [[Gary Chapman (musician)|Gary Chapman]] began divorce mediation in 1998, with Grant moving out of the home and filing for divorce in early 1999. The divorce was finalized in June 1999. Gill and Grant began to see each other publicly a few months later. In March 2000 they were married. Together they have one daughter, Corrina.<ref name=Charm/>


Following the death of [[Eagles (band)|Eagles]] member [[Glenn Frey]] in 2017, Gill was asked by the remaining band members to replace him. He accepted the offer, as he considered himself a fan of not only the Eagles, but also of Frey's solo material. Gill debuted as a member of the band at a concert held in [[Dodger Stadium]] in 2017.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://guitar.com/features/interview-vince-gill-eagle-soar/ | title=Interview: Vince Gill – Eagle Soar | publisher=Guitar.com | date=October 31, 2018 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> Both Gill and Frey's son Deacon have continued to tour as members of the band throughout the 2010s and 2020s, and plan to continue doing so until the end of the band's farewell tour in 2025.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://tasteofcountry.com/the-eagles-vince-gill-first-concert/ | title=Remember when Vince Gill stunned fans by joining the Eagles? | publisher=[[Taste of Country]] | date=July 15, 2023 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Sterling Whitaker}}</ref> Of his membership with the Eagles, Gill stated in an interview with [[Taste of Country]] in 2018 that he had a sense of "gratitude" for the other band members choosing him as Frey's replacement, but also added, "in my heart of hearts I wish I wasn’t doing it. That would mean Glenn would still be around, but life is what it is and you just go do what you can do because of what happens. Those songs deserve to live on as long as they can."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://tasteofcountry.com/vince-gill-the-eagles-interview/ | title=Vince Gill talks about his future with the Eagles | publisher=Taste of Country | date=August 25, 2018 | accessdate=18 April 2024 | author=Billy Dukes}}</ref>
Gill has played [[golf]] since early childhood. A [[handicap (golf)#Scratch and bogey golfers|scratch golfer]], he has organized and participated in many charity events centered around golf and was inducted into the [[Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame]] in 2005.<ref name="golfhof">{{cite web |title=Tennessee Golf Hall of Fame |url=https://www.tngolfhalloffame.com |website=tngolfhalloffame.com |publisher=Tennessee Golf Foundation |access-date=December 8, 2018}}</ref> In 1993, Gill founded the Vinny Pro-Celebrity Golf Invitational, which serves as the primary beneficiary for the Tennessee Golf Foundation. In 2003, the PGA awarded him the PGA Distinguished Service Award for his work in charity and in promoting junior golf.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.pga.com/pgachampionship/2003/news_081303_vgill.html |last=Denney|first=Bob|title=A man whose life is in tune|work=PGA.com|date=2003|access-date=December 9, 2015}}</ref> Gill was honored with the 2022 [[Old Tom Morris Award]] by the Golf Course Superintendents Association of America, for his lifetime commitment to the game of golf and help molding the welfare of the game. <ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.gcsaa.org/media/news-release/2021/12/14/country-music-hall-of-famer-vince-gill-to-receive-gcsaa-s-old-tom-morris-award |last=Strauss|first=Mike|title=Country music hall of famer Vince Gill to receive GCSAA's Old Tom Morris Award|work=GCSAA.org|date=December 14, 2021}}</ref>


His next release on MCA was 2019's ''[[Okie (album)|Okie]]''. Once again, Gill produced with Niebank, in addition to playing guitar alongside [[Jedd Hughes]] and [[Tom Bukovac]].<ref name="okie 1"/> According to [[Taste of Country]], Gill conceived the album as more autobiographical than his previous works. The track "Letter to My Mama" was promoted as the first single.<ref name="okie 2">{{cite web|url=https://tasteofcountry.com/vince-gill-new-album-okie-2019/|title=Vince Gill Embraces Oklahoma Roots on Upcoming New Album, 'Okie'|date=May 10, 2019}}</ref> Jurek considered the album "a laid-back collection of original songs that are more poignant and more nakedly autobiographical and topical than anything he's previously issued."<ref name="okie 1">{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/okie-mw0003286657 | title=''Okie'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Thom Jurek}}</ref> The album included a song about Amy Grant titled "When My Amy Prays",<ref>{{cite web | url=https://tasteofcountry.com/amy-grant-reaction-vince-gill-when-my-amy-prays/ | title=Amy Grant had an emotional reaction to Vince Gill's 'When My Amy Prays' | publisher=Taste of Country | date=April 2, 2021 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Cillea Houghton}}</ref> a song which won Gill the [[Grammy Award for Best Country Solo Performance]] after release.<ref name="grammy"/> With 22 wins from this association, Gill has the most wins of any male country music artist.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.grammy.com/news/who-are-the-top-grammy-awards-winners-of-all-time | title=Who Are The Top GRAMMY Awards Winners Of All Time? Who Has The Most GRAMMYs? From Georg Solti to U2 and Beyoncé, these are the top 2 | publisher=Grammy.com | date=May 15, 2017 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref>
Gill is a member of the board of directors of the Nashville Predators Foundation charity organization, affiliated with the [[Nashville Predators]] [[National Hockey League]] team.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://predators.nhl.com/club/page.htm?id=36958|title=Predators Foundation |website=Predators.nhl.com|access-date=December 12, 2015}}</ref>


[[File:Paul Franklin.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Steel guitarist [[Paul Franklin (musician)|Paul Franklin]] collaborated with Gill on the albums ''Bakersfield'' and ''Sweet Memories''.|alt=Musician Paul Franklin, seated while playing a pedal steel guitar.]]
Gill currently lives in Nashville, Tennessee. He also has a home studio there.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.southernliving.com/culture/celebrities/vince-gill-home-interview|title=Vince Gill On Fatherhood and His Happy Marriage|website=Southernliving.com|access-date=August 7, 2021}}</ref>

A second collaborative album with Paul Franklin followed in 2023. Titled ''Sweet Memories: The Music of Ray Price & the Cherokee Cowboys'', it features the two covering songs by [[Ray Price (singer)|Ray Price]]. In an interview with ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', both musicians stated that they wanted to do a second album following ''Bakersfield'', and chose Ray Price because both had contributed to some of his later albums.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://variety.com/2023/music/news/vince-gill-paul-franklin-ray-price-country-music-sweet-memories-interview-1235689041/ | title=Vince Gill and Paul Franklin on Teaming Up for an Album of Ray Price Classics: Authentic Country Music Is ‘Not Dead — It’s Just Not Real Popular’ | publisher=Variety | date=August 6, 2023 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Chris Willman}}</ref>

==Musical style==
Gill's music is defined by his [[tenor]] voice, guitar playing, and breadth of influences. The editors of ''The Encyclopedia of Country Music'' wrote of Gill, "With an aching tenor, award-winning songwriting skills, and virtuoso guitar chops that rivals those of any ace Nashville session player, Vince Gill is one of today's biggest country superstars."<ref name="encyclopedia"/> His vocal style has also been noted for its [[bluegrass music]] phrasing.<ref name="favorite"/> Steve Huey of AllMusic describes Gill as "one of the most respected musicians in the history of country music".<ref name="allmusic"/> He characterizes Gill's early work as influential in the [[neotraditional country]] movements of the late 1980s to early 1990s, but thought his membership in both Pure Prairie League and the Eagles showed an interest in his music outside of country music as well.<ref name="allmusic"/> Sarah Rodman of ''Entertainment Weekly'' referred to Gill as "the Oklahoma native with the tenor kissed by angels and the guitar prowess of a man who made a deal with the devil" and stated that he "rose to become one of the most respected names in country music, often serving as a link between the classic artists that preceded him and the generation of stars that have followed in his footsteps."<ref>{{cite web | url=https://ew.com/music/2019/08/29/vince-gill-okie-country-eagles-interview/ | title=Vince Gill on Okie, the new class of country artists, and playing with the Eagles | publisher=Entertainment Weekly | date=August 29, 2019 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Sarah Rodman}}</ref> Jeffrey B. Remz, writing for Country Standard Time, stated that Gill "was a fine singer with his sturdy tenor, and his guitar playing has always been considered top notch. A heavy touring schedule resulted from his success with concerts sometimes going on for three hours. He was not a paint-by-the-numbers kind of country performer."<ref name="cst remz"/> Joe Bosso of ''[[Guitar World]]'' describes Gill as having "virtuosic and sweetly expressive solos" in both [[flatpicking]] and [[fingerstyle guitar]]; in the same article, Gill himself stayed that he "play[s] what's necessary".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.guitarworld.com/artists/vince-gill-im-content-to-say-what-i-want-on-the-guitar-and-i-can-leave-it-at-that | title=Vince Gill: "I reached the point where I said, ‘I’m just going to play what’s necessary’" | publisher=Guitar World | date=December 23, 2019 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Joe Bosso}}</ref> Erlewine called Gill's songwriting style "tasteful and assured".<ref name="bad habit"/>

Gill cites [[Merle Haggard]] as one of his main influences. In 2003, he stated in an interview with Country Standard Time, "he's the greatest singer, the greatest phraser, and then on top of that, his songs are really poetic."<ref name="cst remz"/> He has also named female artists he grew up on, such as [[Patsy Cline]] and [[Kitty Wells]], as influences.<ref name="monroe boot">{{cite web | url=https://theboot.com/vince-gill-inspired-by-female-artists/ | title=Vince Gill: 'I've been inspired as much or more by women artists' | publisher=The Boot | date=June 9, 2015 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Christina Vinson}}</ref> Gill said that he characterized his own songwriting by "simplicity", a characteristic he also thought was present in the works of [[Hank Williams]].<ref name="gene">{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/902042794 | title=Vince Gill may be the nicest guy in Nashville | publisher=The Monitor | date=January 24, 1996 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Gene Harbrecht}}</ref>

==Work for other artists==
Gill is known for a large number of collaborative works. In 1987, [[Emmylou Harris]] chose Gill to appear on her album ''[[Angel Band (album)|Angel Band]]'', a compilation of [[gospel music]] standards. Gill played mandolin and sang backing vocals on the project, which also included Gordy and bluegrass musician [[Carl Jackson]].{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=76}} Also that year, [[Alabama (band)|Alabama]] recorded one of Gill's compositions, "[[Here We Are (Alabama song)|Here We Are]]", on their album ''[[Pass It On Down (Alabama album)|Pass It On Down]]''.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/pass-it-on-down-mw0000314734 | title=''Pass It On Down'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> Their version went to number two on the country music charts in 1991.{{Sfn|Whitburn|2017|pages=17-18}} In 1991, [[Mark O'Connor]] recorded a cover version of [[Carl Perkins]]' "[[Restless (Carl Perkins song)|Restless]]" for his album ''[[The New Nashville Cats]]''. This rendition featured O'Connor on [[fiddle]], with Gill, [[Steve Wariner]], and [[Ricky Skaggs]] alternating on lead vocals and guitar. Credited to Mark O'Connor & the New Nashville Cats, this rendition went to number 25 on the country charts.{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|page=262}} All four artists won [[Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals]] in 1992 for this song,<ref name="grammy"/> as well as CMA Vocal Event of the Year.<ref name="cma"/> Gill covered the [[Eagles (band)|Eagles]]' "[[I Can't Tell You Why]]" for the late-1993 tribute album ''[[Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles]]'',<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/common-thread-the-songs-of-the-eagles-mw0000621256 | title=''Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> with then-former Eagles member [[Timothy B. Schmit]] on backing vocals and [[Jim Horn]] on [[soprano saxophone]].<ref>{{Cite AV media notes |title=Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles |others=Various artists |year=1993 |type=CD insert |publisher=Giant Records |id=24531}}</ref> While not officially promoted as a single, this cover reached number 42 on Hot Country Songs due to unsoliciated airplay.<ref name="whitburn"/> On two occasions, Gill collaborated with [[Asleep at the Wheel]] on a cover of a [[Bob Wills]] song. The first was "[[Red Wing (song)|Red Wing]]" on the 1993 album ''[[Tribute to the Music of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys]]'';<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/a-tribute-to-the-music-of-bob-wills-the-texas-playboys-mw0000106917 | title=Tribute to the Music of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> the second was "Bob's Breakdowns" from ''[[Ride with Bob: A Tribute to Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys]]'' six years later. Both collaborations won [[Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance]] in their respective years of release.<ref name="grammy"/> Gill's third instrumental Grammy Award win came in 2001 on a rendition of [[Earl Scruggs]]'s "[[Foggy Mountain Breakdown]]", done for the collaboration album ''Earl Scruggs and Friends''.<ref name="grammy"/><ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/earl-scruggs-and-friends-mw0000011608 | title=''Earl Scruggs and Friends'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref>

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Gill was a frequent collaborator of [[Patty Loveless]]. starting with backing vocals on her 1987 [[Patty Loveless (album)|self-titled debut album]],{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|page=64}} and also on her 1989 hit "[[Timber, I'm Falling in Love]]".<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.vulture.com/article/vince-gill-best-worst-music-90s-country.html | title=Vince Gill on the Best and Toughest Music of His Career | publisher=Vulture | date=September 18, 2023 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Natalie Weiner}}</ref> Conversely, she sang on his "When I Call Your Name",<ref name="cst remz"/> "Pocket Full of Gold",<ref>{{Cite AV media notes |title=Pocket Full of Gold |others=Vince Gill |year=1991 |type=CD |publisher=MCA Records |id=MCAD-10140}}</ref> and "Go Rest High on That Mountain".<ref>{{Cite AV media notes |title=When Love Finds You |others=Vince Gill |year=1994 |type=CD |publisher=MCA Records |id=MCD 11078}}</ref> In 1994, Gill contributed to two collaborations. First was "[[House of Love (Amy Grant song)|House of Love]]", a duet with [[Amy Grant]] from her album [[House of Love (Amy Grant album)|of the same name]]. The song was a top-40 hit on the Hot 100 after its release.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.billboard.com/artist/amy-grant/chart-history/hsi/ | title=Billboard Hot 100 chart history for Amy Grant | publisher=Billboard | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> Gill's other collaboration in 1994 was on ''[[Kermit Unpigged]]'', an album released by [[Jim Henson]] performing in-character as [[Kermit the Frog]] alongside a number of musical guests. On this album, the two recorded a cover of [[the Lovin Spoonful]]'s "[[Daydream (The Lovin' Spoonful song)|Daydream]]";<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/kermit-unpigged-mw0000115762 | title=''Kermit Unpigged'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> this cover reached number 65 on the Canadian country music charts then published by ''[[RPM (magazine)|RPM]]''.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/CANADA/RPM/90s/1994/RPM-1994-10-31.pdf | title=RPM Country Tracks | journal=RPM | pages=16 | date=October 31, 1994}}</ref> A year later, Gill sang a duet with [[Dolly Parton]] on a re-recording of her hit "[[I Will Always Love You]]" on her album ''[[Something Special (Dolly Parton album)|Something Special]]''.<ref>{{cite journal | url=https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-All-Music/Billboard/90s/1995/BB-1995-09-16.pdf | title=Chart Beat | author=Fred Bronson | journal=Billboard | pages=96 | date=September 16, 1995}}</ref> This rendition charted simultaneously with "Go Rest High on That Mountain".<ref name="whitburn"/> Gill co-wrote and provided backing vocals on the track "You Just Get One", recorded in 1995 by [[Ty Herndon]] on his debut album ''[[What Mattered Most]]''.<ref>{{cite AV media notes |title=What Mattered Most |others=Ty Herndon |year=1995 |publisher=Epic Records |id=66397}}</ref> [[Jeff Wood (singer)|Jeff Wood]] later released a version of the song in 1997,{{Sfn|Whitburn|2017|page=405}} which featured Gill on both lead guitar and mandolin.<ref>{{cite AV media notes |title=Between the Earth and the Stars |others=Jeff Wood |year=1997 |publisher=Imprint Records |id=IMPCD10006}}</ref> Also in 1997, both Gill and [[Alison Krauss]] were credited for their backing vocals on [[Mark Chesnutt]]'s "[[It's Not Over (Vern Gosdin song)|It's Not Over]]"; the three had originally recorded it in 1992 for Chesnutt's album ''[[Longnecks & Short Stories]]'', but Chesnutt chose to include it on his 1997 album ''[[Thank God for Believers]]'' and release it as a single as he thought the song still had potential as a single.<ref name="over">{{cite magazine|last=Taylor|first=Chuck|date=10 January 1998|title=For Country's Mark Chesnutt, Reviving an Earlier Song Shows It Wasn't Over|magazine=Billboard|page=78}}</ref> Gill's second Grammy win for Best Country Instrumental Performance came in 1998, as a featured performer on [[Randy Scruggs]]'s "A Soldier's Joy" from his album ''Crown of Jewels''.<ref name="grammy"/>

Gill and [[Sheryl Crow]] were both credited for their backing vocals on [[Brooks & Dunn]]'s "[[Building Bridges (song)|Building Bridges]]", a top-five country hit in 2006.{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pp=55-56}} He was featured on [[Kelly Clarkson]]'s 2012 single "[[Don't Rush (song)|Don't Rush]]" as well.<ref name="Taste">{{cite web|url=http://tasteofcountry.com/kelly-clarkson-dont-rush-lyrics/|title=Kelly Clarkson (Featuring Vince Gill), 'Don't Rush' – Lyrics Uncovered |first=Alanna |last=Conaway |work=Taste of Country |date=December 6, 2012 |access-date=January 24, 2013}}</ref> [[Brad Paisley]]'s 2008 instrumental album ''[[Play: The Guitar Album]]'' featured Gill as one of several instrumentalists on the track "Cluster Pluck",<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/play-the-guitar-album-mw0000800460 | title=''Play: The Guitar Album'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Stephen Thomas Erlewine}}</ref> which accounted for Gill's fourth Grammy win in the category of Best Country Instrumental Performance.<ref name="grammy"/> Gill co-produced [[Ashley Monroe]]'s 2013 album ''[[Like a Rose (album)|Like a Rose]]'' and co-wrote two songs on it.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/like-a-rose-mw0002463373 | title=''Like a Rose'' | publisher=AllMusic | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Stephen Thomas Erlewine}}</ref> The two toured with [[Charlie Worsham]] in 2015.<ref name="monroe boot"/> Between late 2016 and early 2017, Gill was credited for his backing vocals and lead guitar on [[Chris Young (singer)|Chris Young]]'s "[[Sober Saturday Night]]",<ref>{{cite web|author1=Taste of Country Staff|title=Chris Young (Feat. Vince Gill), 'Sober Saturday Night' [Listen]|url=http://tasteofcountry.com/chris-young-vince-gill-sober-saturday-night/|accessdate=8 August 2016|website=Taste of Country|publisher=[[Townsquare Media]]|date=May 23, 2016}}</ref> which also went to number one on the country charts.{{sfn|Whitburn|2017|pp=412-413}} Gill also charted in 2017 as a guest vocalist on [[Maren Morris]]'s promotional single "Dear Hate".<ref name="whitburn"/> Overall, Gill holds a very high number of credits as a backing vocalist on other musicians' works; of his prolificacy in this capacity, Brown stated in 1998 that Gill often sang harmony for other artists because he enjoyed doing so.<ref name="favorite"/>

Three notable multi-artist collaborations have featured Gill as a performer. First was "Tomorrow's World", a charity single written by [[Kix Brooks]] and [[Pam Tillis]] featuring over 20 country music singers, and released by [[Warner Records]] to honor the 20th anniversary of [[Earth Day]].{{Sfn|Whitburn|2017|page=364}} In 1996, he participated in "Hope: Country Music's Quest for a Cure", a charity single by the [[Tony Martell|T.J. Martell Foundation]] to honor cancer and [[leukemia]] research.{{Sfn|Whitburn|2017|page=168}} He also participated in the 2016 collaboration "[[Forever Country]]", a medley of "I Will Always Love You", "[[On the Road Again (Willie Nelson song)|On the Road Again]]", and "[[Country Roads, Take Me Home]]" recorded by 30 country artists to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Country Music Association.<ref name="LATimes">{{cite web|url=http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/music/la-et-ms-forever-country-cma-music-video-20160920-snap-story.html|title=Country stars amass in 'Forever Country' video for 50th CMA Awards|author=Randy Lewis|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|date=September 20, 2016|access-date=September 25, 2016}}</ref> This collaboration went to number one on the ''Billboard'' country charts under the credit "Artists of Then, Now, and Forever".<ref name="Billboard October 8">{{cite magazine|url=http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/chart-beat/7519013/forever-country-artists-then-now-forever-charts|title='Forever Country' Debuts at No. 1 on Hot Country Songs|author=Gary Trust|magazine=[[Billboard (magazine)|Billboard]]|date=September 26, 2016|access-date=September 27, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160927123746/https://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/chart-beat/7519013/forever-country-artists-then-now-forever-charts|archive-date=September 27, 2016}}</ref>

==Personal life==
[[File:Amy Grant and Vince Gill.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Gill (right) and Amy Grant (left) in 2004.|alt=Singers Vince Gill and Amy Grant, seated next to each other in a recording studio.]]

In April 1980, Gill married singer Janis Oliver,<ref name="encyclopedia"/> who would also become a country singer in the 1980s alongside her sister Kristine in the duo [[Sweethearts of the Rodeo]]. Gill wrote both "Everybody's Sweetheart" and "The Radio" about his relationship to her.{{Sfn|Sgammato|1999|pages=74-75}} The two divorced in 1997, citing irreconcilable differences as the reason behind their divorce. The couple had one daughter, Jenifer "Jenny" Gill, of whom Janis assumed custody following their divorce.<ref>{{cite news | url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/1997/04/18/the-music-is-over-for-vince-janis-gill/ | title=The music is over for Janis, Vince Gill | work=[[Chicago Tribune]] | date=April 18, 1997 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref><ref name="encyclopedia"/> Jenny has contributed to her father's albums on a number of occasions, including ''Let There Be Peace on Earth''.<ref name="peace liner"/> Steve Huey, writing for AllMusic, noted that many critics thought songs from ''The Key'' were influenced by the divorce from Oliver.<ref name="allmusic"/> Gill began dating [[contemporary Christian music]] singer [[Amy Grant]] in 1999 following her divorce from singer [[Gary Chapman (musician)|Gary Chapman]]. The two had collaborated on a number of occasions prior, and they became married on March 10, 2000.<ref name="grant gill">{{cite web | url=https://people.com/music/amy-grant-vince-gill-relationship-timeline/ | title=Amy Grant and Vince Gill's Relationship Timeline | publisher=[[People (magazine)|People]] | date=December 16, 2023 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Alexandra Hurtado}}</ref> AllMusic writer Thom Jurek thought that certain tracks on ''Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye'' were inspired by his marriage to Grant, which occurred during the recording of that album.<ref name="make sure"/> Shortly after their marriage, the couple had a daughter named Corrinna. In 2023, Corrinna Gill began releasing her own music online.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.southernliving.com/amy-grant-vince-gill-daughter-corrina-music-7509955 | title=Amy Grant And Vince Gill’s 22-Year-Old Daughter Is Making Her Own Way With New Music | publisher=[[Southern Living]] | date=June 8, 2023 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Meghan Overdeep}}</ref>

Gill is known for his pleasant and laid-back demeanor and frequent contributions to charity,<ref name="encyclopedia"/> leading many publications to refer to him as the "nicest guy in Nashville".<ref name="gene"/><ref name="favorite">{{cite news | url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/133518336/ | title=Why Vince Gill is Nashville's favorite singer | work=[[The Palm Beach Post]] | date=September 25, 1998 | accessdate=April 18, 2024 | author=Richard Harrington | pages=17}}</ref> In an article for ''[[The Washington Post]]'' republished in ''[[The Palm Beach Post]]'', journalist Richard Harrington described Gill as "perpetually affable, easily approachable, [and] ego-deficient."<ref name="favorite"/> Gill enjoys [[golf]] and in 1993 started a golf charity known as the Vinny Pro-Celebrity Golf Invitational,<ref name="fame"/> which raises money for children's golf in the state of Tennessee. Gill received a 2003 Distinguished Service Award from [[Professional Golfers' Association of America]] to honor this charity.<ref>{{cite web | url=https://www.espn.com/golf/story?id=1542598 | title=Grammy-winner Gill honored for support of golf | publisher=[[ESPN]] | date=April 22, 2003 | accessdate=April 18, 2024}}</ref> In 1995, Gill held a concert to benefit the [[American Red Cross]] following the [[Oklahoma City bombing]].<ref name="okhistory"/> Overall, Gill is credited with contributing to over 60 charities,<ref name="bmi"/> including All for the Hall, an annual benefit concert for the [[Country Music Hall of Fame]].<ref name="fame"/>

Gill and Grant both live in Nashville, Tennessee, where he also owns a recording studio.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.southernliving.com/culture/celebrities/vince-gill-home-interview|title=Vince Gill On Fatherhood and His Happy Marriage|website=Southernliving.com|access-date=August 7, 2021}}</ref>


== Discography ==
== Discography ==
Line 114: Line 155:
* ''[[Okie (Vince Gill album)|Okie]]'' (2019)
* ''[[Okie (Vince Gill album)|Okie]]'' (2019)
* ''Sweet Memories'' <small>(with [[Paul Franklin (musician)|Paul Franklin]])</small> (2023)
* ''Sweet Memories'' <small>(with [[Paul Franklin (musician)|Paul Franklin]])</small> (2023)

== Selected awards and honors ==
{{BLP sources section|date=January 2017}}
[[File:Friend of West Point.jpg|thumb|upright|Gill and his wife [[Amy Grant]] receiving the Class of 1966 Friend of West Point award in 2008]]

=== Academy of Country Music ===
* [[Academy of Country Music|1984 Top New Male Vocalist]]
* [[Academy of Country Music|1992 Song of the Year]] <small>with [[John Barlow Jarvis]]</small> – "[[I Still Believe in You (Vince Gill song)|I Still Believe in You]]"
* [[Academy of Country Music|1992 Top Male Vocalist]]
* [[Academy of Country Music|1993 Top Male Vocalist]]

=== Country Music Association ===
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1990 Single of the Year]] – "When I Call Your Name"<ref>{{cite web|title=CMA Award Winners 1967–2011|url=http://www.cmaworld.com/cma-awards/winners/past-winners|publisher=[[Country Music Association]]|access-date=February 19, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130104080350/http://www.cmaworld.com/cma-awards/winners/past-winners|archive-date=January 4, 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref>
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1991 Male Vocalist of the Year]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1991 Song of the Year]] - "When I Call Your Name" with Tim DuBois
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1992 Male Vocalist of the Year]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1992 Song of the Year]] <small>with Max D. Barnes</small> – "[[Look at Us (Vince Gill song)|Look at Us]]"
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1993 Album of the Year]] – "[[I Still Believe in You (album)|I Still Believe in You]]"
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1993 Male Vocalist of the Year]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1993 Song of the Year]] <small>with [[John Barlow Jarvis]]</small> – "[[I Still Believe in You (Vince Gill song)|I Still Believe in You]]"
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1993 Entertainer of the Year]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1994 Entertainer of the Year]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1994 Male Vocalist of the Year]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1995 Male Vocalist of the Year]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|1999 Vocal Event of the Year]] <small>with [[Patty Loveless]]</small> – "[[My Kind of Woman, My Kind of Man]]"
* [[Country Music Association Awards|2014 Award of Excellence]]
* [[Country Music Association Awards|2017 Humanitarian Award]]

=== Grammy Awards ===
Gill has won 22 awards from 44 nominations.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://www.grammy.com/grammys/artists/vince-gill|title=Vince Gill|date=May 14, 2017|work=GRAMMY.com|access-date=August 24, 2017|language=en}}</ref>

* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|1990 Best Country Vocal Performance, Male]] – "When I Call Your Name"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals|1991 Best Country Vocal Collaboration]] <small>with [[Ricky Skaggs]] and [[Steve Wariner]]</small> – "[[Restless (Carl Perkins song)|Restless]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Song|1992 Best Country Song]] <small>with [[John Barlow Jarvis]]</small> – "[[I Still Believe in You (Vince Gill song)|I Still Believe in You]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|1992 Best Country Vocal Performance, Male]] – "[[I Still Believe in You (Vince Gill song)|I Still Believe in You]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance|1993 Best Country Instrumental Performance]] <small>with [[Asleep at the Wheel]], [[Chet Atkins]], [[Eldon Shamblin]], [[Johnny Gimble]], [[Marty Stuart]], and Reuben "Lucky Oceans" Gosfield</small> – "Red Wing"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|1994 Best Country Vocal Performance, Male]] – "When Love Finds You"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Song|1995 Best Country Song]] – "[[Go Rest High on That Mountain]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|1995 Best Male Country Vocal Performance]] – "[[Go Rest High on That Mountain]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|1996 Best Male Country Vocal Performance]] – "Worlds Apart"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals|1996 Best Country Collaboration with Vocals]] <small>with [[Alison Krauss and Union Station]]</small> – "[[High Lonesome Sound (song)|High Lonesome Sound]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance|1997 Best Country Instrumental Performance]] <small>with [[Randy Scruggs]]</small> – "A Soldier's Joy"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|1997 Best Male Country Vocal Performance]] – "Pretty Little Adriana"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|1998 Best Male Country Vocal Performance]] – "If You Ever Have Forever in Mind"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance|1999 Best Country Instrumental Performance]] <small>with [[Tommy Allsup]], [[Asleep at the Wheel]], [[Floyd Domino]], Larry Franklin, and [[Steve Wariner]]</small> – "Bob's Breakdowns"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance|2001 Best Country Instrumental Performance]] <small>with [[Jerry Douglas]], Glen Duncan, [[Albert Lee]], [[Steve Martin]], [[Leon Russell]], [[Earl Scruggs]], Gary Scruggs, [[Randy Scruggs]], [[Paul Shaffer]] and [[Marty Stuart]]</small> – "[[Foggy Mountain Breakdown]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|2002 Best Male Country Vocal Performance]] – "The Next Big Thing"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Southern, Country or Bluegrass Gospel Album|2005 Best Country Gospel Album]] – "[[Rock of Ages... Hymns and Faith]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance|2006 Best Male Country Vocal Performance]] – "The Reason Why"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Album|2007 Best Country Album]] – "[[These Days (Vince Gill album)|These Days]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance|2008 Best Country Instrumental Performance]] <small>with [[Brad Paisley]], [[James Burton]], [[John Jorgenson]], [[Albert Lee]], [[Brent Mason]], [[Redd Volkaert]] and [[Steve Wariner]]</small> – "Cluster Pluck"
* [[Grammy Award for Best American Roots Song|2017 Best American Roots Song]] – "[[Kid Sister (The Time Jumpers album)|Kid Sister]]"
* [[Grammy Award for Best Country Solo Performance|2021 Best Country Solo Performance]] – "[[Okie (Vince Gill album)|When My Amy Prays]]"

=== Hall of fame inductions ===
* [[Oklahoma Hall of Fame|1997]]: [[Oklahoma Hall of Fame]]
* [[Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame|2005]]: [[Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame]]
* [[Inductees of the Country Music Hall of Fame|2007]]: [[Country Music Hall of Fame]]
* [[Hollywood Walk of Fame|2012]]: [[Hollywood Walk of Fame]]

== See also ==
* [[Best selling music artists]]


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

===Works cited===
* {{cite book|last=Sgammato|first=Jo|title=For the Music: The Vince Gill Story|year=1999|publisher=Ballantine Books|isbn=978-0-345-47275-5}}
* {{cite book|last=Whitburn|first=Joel|authorlink=Joel Whitburn|title=Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2017|publisher=Record Research, Inc|year=2017|isbn=978-0-89820-229-8}}


== External links ==
== External links ==
{{commonscat}}
{{commonscat}}
* {{official website|http://www.vincegill.com}}
* {{official website|http://www.vincegill.com}}
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20081110085343/http://www.gibson.com/en-us/Lifestyle/Features/how-to-capture-vince-gills/ How to Capture Vince Gill's Guitar Tone]
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20100729082255/http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/G/GI006.html Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture – Gill, Vince]


{{Vince Gill}}
{{Vince Gill}}

Revision as of 03:49, 19 April 2024

Vince Gill
Musician Vince Gill playing an acoustic guitar
Gill performing live with the Eagles in February 2019
Background information
Birth nameVincent Grant Gill
Born (1957-04-12) April 12, 1957 (age 67)
Norman, Oklahoma, U.S.
OriginNashville, Tennessee, U.S.
Genres
Occupation(s)Singer, songwriter, musician
Instruments
DiscographyVince Gill discography
Years active1975–present
Labels
Member ofEagles
Formerly of
Spouses
(m. 1980; div. 1997)
(m. 2000)
WebsiteVince Gill

Vincent Grant Gill (born April 12, 1957) is an American country music and rock music singer, songwriter and musician. He began in a number of local bluegrass music bands in the 1970s, and from 1978 to 1982, he achieved his first mainstream attention as lead singer of the soft rock band Pure Prairie League. After leaving that band, Gill served as a backing musician for Rodney Crowell before beginning a solo career in 1984. Gill recorded for RCA Records Nashville until 1988. A year later, he signed with MCA Nashville, where he would have his country music breakthrough with When I Call Your Name between then and 1990. Gill has remained with MCA for all subsequent solo albums.

His commercial peak came in the first half of the 1990s, accounting for a number of Grammy Awards as well as awards from the two main organizations awarding within the field of country music, the Academy of Country Music (ACM) and Country Music Association (CMA). Overall, Gill has won 22 Grammy Awards, the most of any solo male country music singer. Gill also had a large number of charted singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts, including four solo number one hits: "I Still Believe in You", "Don't Let Our Love Start Slippin' Away", "One More Last Chance", and "Tryin' to Get Over You", all between 1992 and 1994. He has also had number-one singles as a guest on Reba McEntire's "The Heart Won't Lie" (1993), Chris Young's "Sober Saturday Night" (2016-17), and the multi-artist collaboration "Forever Country" (2016). All of Gill's albums released in the 1990s were certified platinum or higher by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), with the highest being 1992's I Still Believe in You at quintuple-platinum.

Gill was a member of the Time Jumpers from 2010 to 2020, and joined the Eagles in 2017 following the death of longtime member Glenn Frey. He has also participated in a wide variety of collaborations, including songs by Patty Loveless, Brooks & Dunn, Kelly Clarkson, and Maren Morris among others. He was married to Janis Oliver, one-half of country duo Sweethearts of the Rodeo, from 1980 to 1997, and married Christian pop singer Amy Grant, another frequent collaborator of his, in 2000. Gill has also written songs for Alabama and Ty Herndon.

Gill's music is known for his songwriting, his tenor singing voice, and his lead guitar work, with many critics noting his prolificacy in both ballads and up-tempo material. His personal life is defined by his charitable and easygoing demeanor, leading many to term him as the "nicest guy in Nashville".

Biography

Vincent Grant Gill was born April 12, 1957, in Norman, Oklahoma,[1][2] to Jerene and Stan Gill.[3] Stan Gill worked as a judge and also played guitar and banjo, both of which he also taught his son how to play.[2][4] His mother also sang and played harmonica.[5] Both parents also enjoyed golf, a pastime which Gill himself would develop as well.[6] Gill also learned how to play Dobro, fiddle, mandolin, and bass guitar during his teenage years.[2] After graduating high school, Gill chose to become a bluegrass music performer. He briefly founded his own bluegrass band called Mountain Smoke, which once opened for Kiss to unfavorable reception, according to Gill.[5] After Mountain Smoke disbanded, Gill moved to the state of Kentucky.[2] There he played in the bands Bluegrass Allliance and Boone Creek, the latter of which also featured Ricky Skaggs as a member.[7] In 1976, he moved to Los Angeles, California, where he briefly joined fiddle player Byron Berline's backing band, Sundance.[7]

Music career

Early 1980s: Pure Prairie League

In 1978, Pure Prairie League was auditioning new lead singers after their previous vocalist Larry Goshorn departed. Gill attended the auditions at the recommendation of a friend, as he had served as an opening act for the band while in Mountain Smoke.[2][8] By October 1978, Gill had been selected as lead vocalist and guitarist for Pure Prairie League.[9] He appeared as an official band member on their 1979 album Can't Hold Back in addition to writing several songs on it.[10] Gill sang lead on the band's single "Let Me Love You Tonight", a top-ten hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1980;[11][7] he also wrote its follow-up "I'm Almost Ready",[12] as well as five other songs on the corresponding album Firin' Up. Of this album, Joe Viglione of AllMusic thought that Gill's contributions to the album were "highly entertaining" and showed more of a country pop and adult contemporary influence than his later works.[13] Overall, Gill recorded three albums as lead singer of Pure Prairie League,[7] and stayed in the band until being replaced by Gary Burr in 1982.[14]

1983: Beginning of solo career

Singer Rodney Crowell, seated on a stool and strumming an acoustic guitar.
Gill is a former member of Rodney Crowell's backing band, the Cherry Bombs.

Shortly after departing Pure Prairie League, Gill moved to Nashville, Tennessee,[2] and began playing lead guitar in Rosanne Cash's touring band.[15] This led to him also serving in this capacity in the Cherry Bombs, the backing band for Cash's then-husband, Rodney Crowell.[16][7] Another member of the Cherry Bombs, keyboardist and record producer Tony Brown, had become the president of artists and repertoire at RCA Records Nashville. Through this connection, Gill was signed with RCA Nashville in 1983 as a solo artist.[2][7] Shortly before his signing with RCA, Gill also appeared as a guest vocalist on David Grisman's Here Today,[2] and sang backing vocals on Steve Wariner's "Midnight Fire", on which Brown was a producer.[17]

Gill debuted on RCA in 1984 with a six-song extended play titled Turn Me Loose.[18] The project accounted for three singles on the Billboard Hot Country Songs charts: "Victim of Life's Circumstances", "Oh Carolina", and the title track, all of which peaked just within the top 40.[1] Delbert McClinton wrote the former of these, while Gill wrote the title track. The album was produced by Emory Gordy Jr., also a former member of the Cherry Bombs.[8] Despite the minimal success of Turn Me Loose, Gill won Top New Male Vocalist from the Academy of Country Music in 1984.[19] Word of mouth within the Nashville community towards Gill's extended play also led to him serving as a backing vocalist and session musician for a number of other country singers. He served in this capacity for Conway Twitty and Lee Greenwood,[20] in addition to providing backing vocals on Rosanne Cash's 1985 album Rhythm & Romance.[21]

After Turn Me Loose, Gill performed a number of shows at Nashville's Bluebird Cafe, a popular venue for songwriters, as a means of refining his own songwriting.[22] His first full album for RCA was 1985's The Things That Matter.[2] While the lead single "True Love" underperformed on the country charts, the follow-up "If It Weren't for Him" (a duet with Cash) became Gill's first top-ten country hit the same year. The song was originally to have been included on Turn Me Loose, but was delayed until The Things That Matter due to legal complications between Gill's and Cash's labels.[21] The album accounted for another top-ten in "Oklahoma Borderline",[1] which Gill wrote with Crowell and Guy Clark.[23] The last single, "With You", was less successful.[1] To promote the album, Gill began touring as an opening act for Ricky Skaggs.[24]

Author Jo Sgammato stated that while Gill's first two projects for RCA were not commercially successful, both were well-received by music critics and fans.[25] For his third RCA release, Gill intentionally wanted to choose a new producer to vary his sound. He selected Richard Landis, whom he also allowed to select material for the album.[26] Titled The Way Back Home, the project accounted for four singles. First was "Cinderella", written by Reed Nielsen, which peaked at number five on the country charts in 1987.[1] Crowell provided backing vocals as did Sweethearts of the Rodeo, a duo consisting of Gill's then-wife Janis Oliver and her sister Kristine.[27] The album's second and third singles "Let's Do Something" and "Everybody's Sweetheart" were both top-20 hits, but the final single "The Radio" stopped at number 39 on the country charts.[1] After this album, Gill ended his contract with RCA as label executive Joe Galante wanted Gill to record only songs by other writers. Despite this disagreement, Gill stated that he left RCA amicably and still considered Galante a friend.[28] During Gill's departure from RCA, Dire Straits guitarist Mark Knopfler invited Gill to join the band on their then-upcoming world tour, but Gill declined as he wanted to stay within country music.[29]

1989–1993: Early years with MCA Nashville

Gill had remained in contact with Tony Brown, who by 1988 was president of MCA Nashville Records and helped him sign a contract with that label in 1989.[30][31] Brown would also go on to serve as Gill's producer for most of his tenure on MCA. Of their relationship, Brown stated that he considered himself more of a "coach" due to his perception of Gill's artistic identity.[32] Brown also chose to put more emphasis on Gill's vocals than previous producers had, by placing greater emphasis on the vocal track than the instrumentation in the audio mix.[33] His first single release for MCA was "Never Alone",[1] previously recorded by Cash on Rhythm & Romance.[34] This was the first of four singles off his MCA debut When I Call Your Name, considered by the editors of The Encyclopedia of Country Music to be Gill's breakthrough album.[7] The project included guest vocals from Kathie Baillie (of Baillie & the Boys), Patty Loveless, Emmylou Harris, Reba McEntire, and Herb Pedersen.[31] The second single from the album was "Oklahoma Swing", a duet with McEntire. This charted within the top 20 in early 1990, with Sgammato noting that some stations refused to play the song due to its Western swing sound.[35] It was followed by the number two title track and number three "Never Knew Lonely" by year's end.[1] "When I Call Your Name" also received a music video.[36] AllMusic writer Thom Jurek thought that the songs written by Gill were "filler" but praised the singles in particular, stating that the album "serves as the testament to Gill's arrival as a star and an enduring part of the country music legacy."[37] When I Call Your Name went on to become certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) in 1996.[38] The title track accounted for Gill's first win at the Grammy Awards in 1991, for Best Male Vocal Country Performance; it was also nominated for Best Country Song.[39] Additionally, the song won Single of the Year from the Country Music Association (CMA), his first award from that institution, in 1990; it would win Song of the Year in 1991, where Gill was also awarded Male Vocalist of the Year and Vocal Event of the Year. He would win the former again in 1993, 1994, and 1995.[40] The success of When I Call Your Name led to Gill touring in support of the album, which included a concert at SeaWorld San Antonio and one opening for McEntire at Caesars Palace; he was also inducted into the Grand Ole Opry in 1991.[41]

A head shot of singer Reba McEntire.
Singer Patty Loveless singing into a microphone.
Gill has collaborated with Reba McEntire (left) and Patty Loveless (right) on a number of occasions.

Next on MCA was 1991's Pocket Full of Gold.[2] The title track charted at number seven on Hot Country Songs that same year, a peak matched by its follow-up single "Liza Jane".[42] "Look at Us" and "Take Your Memory with You" also charted within top five between then and 1992.[42] Gill told Bob Paxman of the blog Sounds Like Nashville that he allowed Brown to select songs for the album, as he "trusted [Brown's] song sense".[43] Gill wrote "Look at Us" with Max D. Barnes. "Pocket Full of Gold" was inspired by an idea given to him written by Brian Allsmiller, a friend of Gill's who at the time was playing basketball for Vanderbilt University's college team. Although Gill wrote the song by himself, he credited Allsmiller as a co-writer.[43] Once again, Loveless and Pedersen were among the backing vocalists.[44] Another contributor to the album was pedal steel guitar player John Hughey, whose intro on "Look at Us" Gill later described as "iconic".[43] Like its predecessor, Pocket Full of Gold was also certified double-platinum.[38] The album accounted for Gill's second consecutive Grammy nomination in the category of Best Male Vocal Country Performance,[39] as well as CMA Award for Song of the Year.[19] In October 1991, Gill hosted the CMA awards telecast with Clint Black.[45] Gill went on to host the awards ceremony every subsequent year through 2003.[46]

1993–1995: I Still Believe in You and When Love Finds You

1993's I Still Believe in You was Gill's third release on MCA.[2] It also became his best-selling album, receiving a quintuple-platinum RIAA certification.[38] The title track became Gill's first number-one on Hot Country Songs, a peak also achieved by its follow-up "Don't Let Our Love Start Slippin' Away". After these, "No Future in the Past" went to number three, followed by "One More Last Chance" and "Tryin' to Get Over You" which both topped Hot Country Songs between late 1993 and early 1994.[42] The latter was also Gill's first solo entry on the Billboard Hot 100.[42] In between "Don't Let Our Love Start Slippin' Away" and "No Future in the Past", Gill also provided duet vocals to Reba McEntire's number-one single "The Heart Won't Lie",[2] on which Tony Brown was also a producer. She had originally intended to record the song as a duet with Kenny Rogers, but after proving unable to find a key in which both of them could sing the song comfortably, she instead chose Gill.[47] Alanna Nash of Entertainment Weekly contrasted I Still Believe in You favorably against then-labelmate Trisha Yearwood's Hearts in Armor in a dual review, considering both singers to have emotive vocals and an affinity for mature lyrics. She praised the lyrics of "I Still Believe in You" and "No Future in the Past" in particular.[48] AllMusic writer Johnny Loftus considered Gill to have a "smooth" voice, while finding influences of soul music on the title track and of bluegrass music on "No Future in the Past".[49] During promotion for I Still Believe in You in 1993, Gill also released his first Christmas album, Let There Be Peace on Earth.[2] The album included a number of traditional Christmas songs as well as a cover of the song "Let There Be Peace on Earth", a 1955 gospel song written by Harlene Wood and Sy Miller. Gill's rendition featured vocals from his daughter Jenny. Other vocalists on the album included Gene Merlino, Sally Stevens, and Chris Rodriguez.[50] "I Still Believe in You" won both Best Country Song and Best Male Country Vocal Performance at the 35th Annual Grammy Awards in 1993, while "The Heart Won't Lie" was nominated for Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals a year later.[39] Gill won five CMA Awards in 1993,[46] including Album of the Year, Entertainer of the Year, Male Vocalist of the Year, and Song of the Year, the last of which went to "I Still Believe in You".[40]

His next release on MCA was 1994's When Love Finds You, which would chart a total of six singles between then and 1995. First among these were "Whenever You Come Around" and "What the Cowgirls Do", both of which peaked at number two.[42] Next were the title track, "Which Bridge to Cross (Which Bridge to Burn)", and "You Better Think Twice". All peaked within the top five throughout 1995.[42] The sixth and final single was "Go Rest High on That Mountain" at number 14.[42] Gill had originally written the song in 1989 as a tribute to Keith Whitley following his death that same year, but did not finish it until four years later when the death of Gill's half-brother Bob Cohen inspired him.[7] Patty Loveless and Ricky Skaggs provided backing vocals on the track.[51] Despite its lower chart showing, "Go Rest High on That Mountain" remained popular among fans and critics. Dayton Duncan's Country Music: An Illustrated History (adapted from the Ken Burns documentary Country Music) described it as a popular song for fans to commemorate the deaths of family members and friends.[52] Rolling Stone ranked it number 17 in a list of the 40 Saddest Country Songs,[53] In addition, the song received a platinum certification.[38] Jurek thought that When Love Finds You was more reliant on ballads than the preceding albums, but praised the lyrical qualities of each, as well as the country rock influence of "You Better Think Twice".[54] Gill ended 1995 with the compilation Souvenirs, a greatest hits album featuring most of his MCA singles to that point as well as selected collaborations. In a review for The Orange County Register reprinted in The Orlando Sentinel, Gene Harbrecht thought the compilation showed Gill's artistic growth in the intervening years, while also noting its mix of ballads and up-tempo material.[55] At the 37th Annual Grammy Awards, "When Love Finds You" won Best Male Country Vocal Performance and was nominated for Best Country Song; a year later, "Go Rest High on That Mountain" would receive both awards. When Love Finds You was nominated for Best Country Album during the former ceremony as well.[39]

1996–1999: High Lonesome Sound and The Key

Singer Vince Gill, playing an electric guitar.
Gill in 2007.

In 1996, MCA released Gill's next studio album High Lonesome Sound,[42] with its title track also serving as the lead single. Although this song only reached number 12 on the United States country music charts,[42] it went to number one on the Canadian country music charts then published by RPM.[56] The album featured two versions of the song: one accompanied by studio musicians, and one accompanied by Alison Krauss & Union Station.[57] Next was the top five hit "Worlds Apart", followed by "Pretty Little Adriana" and "A Little More Love", which both peaked at number two. Last was "You and You Alone", a top-ten country hit for him in 1997.[42] Gill was inspired to write "Pretty Little Adriana" after reading a news story about a girl named Adriana Dickerson, who was shot to death outside a Nashville supermarket in 1995.[58] Michael McCall of AllMusic thought individual tracks off High Lonesome Sound showed influence of bluegrass, Chicago blues, and Cajun music, but thought the ballads such as "Pretty Little Adriana" were overall the strongest and were "more progressively atmospheric" than his previous ballads.[59] Writing for Country Standard Time, Brian Wahlert praised Gill's vocals and guitar work, but thought that some songs including "Pretty Little Adriana" and the title track were "trite" and "cliché".[57] The version of "High Lonesome Sound" featuring Alison Krauss & Union Station won Best Country Collaboration with Vocals, and "Worlds Apart" won Best Male Country Vocal Performance, at the 39th Annual Grammy Awards in 1997; one year later, "Pretty Little Adriana" won the latter award as well.[39]

Gill released two albums in 1998. First was the studio release The Key was led off by the song "If You Ever Have Forever in Mind", a top-five country hit.[42] The song won the 1999 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance.[38] Also released as singles were "Kindly Keep It Country", "Don't Come Cryin' to Me", and "My Kind of Woman/My Kind of Man". The last of these, a duet with Patty Loveless, also appeared on her 1999 compilation Classics.[60] The Key featured a number of backing vocalists, including Dawn Sears on "Don't Come Cryin' to Me", as well as Sara Evans, Lee Ann Womack, Alison Krauss, Shelby Lynne, Sonya Isaacs, and Faith Hill.[61] AllMusic writer Jana Pendragon summarized her review of the album by writing, "For emotional depth, honesty, and the kind of musical depth and artistry listeners have come to expect from Gill, The Key stands among his very finest recordings."[62] No Depression writer Grant Alden also reviewed the album with favor, noting that Gill wrote most of the songs by himself; he also described the album's sound and lyrics as containing "emotion and elegance".[63] Later in the year was Gill's second Christmas project, Breath of Heaven: A Christmas Collection, on which Gill was accompanied by Patrick Williams and his orchestra. AllMusic reviewer Jana Pendragon praised the album for the orchestral accompaniment, as well as its inclusion of both secular and Christian material.[64] Nine years after its release, Breath of Heaven: A Christmas Collection was certified platinum.[38]

21st century

2000–2003: Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye and Next Big Thing

In 2000, Gill released the studio album Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye. The album accounted for three singles in its title track, "Feels Like Love", and "Shoot Straight from Your Heart". Of these, "Feels Like Love" was the most successful with a peak of number six on Hot Country Songs.[42] Amy Grant, to whom Gill would become married during recording of the album, co-wrote and provided duet vocals on the track "When I Look into Your Heart". Many critics considered the album's themes to have been influenced by the then-recent marriage. Jurek noted that the project was dominated by songs about falling in love, but praised Gill's lyrics and vocals, as well as Brown's production.[65] Nash criticized the sound of the album as "goop" and "tepid" outside the title track.[66] Similarly, in a review for Knight Ridder republished in the Ventura County Star, Howard Cohen panned the project for "stock sentiments and imagery" of love and "overly slick balladry".[67] Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye was certified gold after release.[38]

Gill did not issue another studio album until 2003's Next Big Thing. He wrote its lead single and title track "Next Big Thing" with John Hobbs and former NRBQ member Al Anderson; the song would become Gill's last solo top-20 country chart entry upon release.[42] Also released from the album were the less successful singles "Someday" and "Young Man's Town".[42] In a 2003 telephone interview with Country Standard Time, Gill said that many of the lyrics on Next Big Thing were inspired by his increasing age and the rise of younger artists who had surpassed him commercially in the intervening years. He also wanted the album to include more humorous material than his previous works. As Brown had stopped working for MCA at the time, this left him unavailable as a producer, so Gill produced the project by himself.[5] Jurek praised the album for including more songs than normal for a country album and having strong production. His review highlighted the singles in particular, additionally noting the contributions of Grant and Michael McDonald.[68] The track "Real Mean Bottle" (inspired by a comment session guitarist Harold Bradley made about Merle Haggard's "The Bottle Let Me Down"[5]) was later covered by Bob Seger on his 2006 album Face the Promise.[69] "Next Big Thing" won the 2004 Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance.[39]

2004–2007: The Notorious Cherry Bombs and These Days

In 2004, Gill and Rodney Crowell decided to re-establish Crowell's former backing band, the Cherry Bombs, after said members had reunited at an awards banquet for the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP). This lineup included all the former members except for bassist Emory Gordy Jr., who declined to participate, and Larrie Londin, who died of a heart attack in 1992. Their respective roles were taken over by Michael Rhodes and Eddie Bayers. Crediting themselves as the Notorious Cherry Bombs, this group of musicians recorded one self-titled album for Universal South Records (now Show Dog-Universal Music) in 2004, which featured Gill and Crowell alternating as vocalists.[70] The project also charted one single on Hot Country Songs with "It's Hard to Kiss the Lips at Night That Chew Your Ass Out All Day Long".[71]

Gill's next project for MCA was 2006's These Days, a box set comprising four albums each recorded in a different style. These individual albums each focused on a different style: Workin' on a Big Chill for country rock, The Reason Why for soul music, Some Things Never Get Old for neotraditional country, and Little Brother for bluegrass music. Among the guest vocalists on the album were Grant, McDonald, Loveless, Crowell, Del McCoury, LeAnn Rimes, Sheryl Crow, Diana Krall, and Trisha Yearwood. Gill co-produced with Justin Niebank and John Hobbs, and wrote most of the songs by himself. Jurek reviewed the project favorably on AllMusic, highlighting the stylistic and lyrical diversity; he concluded his review by stating that the project was "an exhaustive, profound, fun and fulfilling set that not only gives fans something to delight in, but goes wide and if given half a chance could and would attract many new ones."[72] Scott Jordan of the Austin Chronicle panned the songs on The Reason Why but compared the tracks on Workin' on a Big Chill favorably to Delbert McClinton and praised the introspective lyrics in some of the tracks on Little Brother.[73] The album charted two singles: "The Reason Why" (featuring Alison Krauss) and "What You Give Away" (featuring Sheryl Crow).[42] At the end of 2006, These Days was certified platinum.[38] "The Reason Why" won Gill a Grammy Award for Best Male Country Vocal Performance at the 49th Annual Grammy Awards in 2007; one year later, the album won Best Country Album and was nominated for Album of the Year.[39]

2008–2015: Guitar Slinger and Bakersfield

A black-and-white photo of the band The Time Jumpers.
Gill (center, seated and playing guitar) with the Time Jumpers in 2011.

Despite recording fewer albums throughout the first two decades of the 21st century, Gill remained active as a touring artist. He and Amy Grant also accompanied actor, comedian, and musician Steve Martin in May 2009 for his debut on the Grand Ole Opry, which also served as promotion for Martin's album The Crow: New Songs for the 5-String Banjo.[74] In 2010, Gill joined the Time Jumpers, an informal collection of musicians who played a number of bluegrass music and Western swing concerts at various venues around Nashville. The ensemble recorded their self-titled second studio album at Gill's home studio in 2012.[75] During his tenure in the band, Gill and the Time Jumpers won Grammy Award for Best American Roots Song for the track "Kid Sister" from their 2016 album of the same name.[39] Gill would continue to perform with the Time Jumpers until 2020.[76] His next solo release was 2011's Guitar Slinger.[2] The album once again featured songs written or co-written by Gill, along with vocal contributions from Bekka Bramlett, Chris Stapleton, then-former McBride & the Ride member Billy Thomas, and Gill's daughter Jenny. Hobbs and Niebank also co-produced with Gill. Grant also provided a duet vocal on the track "True Love".[77] The project charted one single in "Threaten Me with Heaven".[42] Jurek thought this track and others on the album had themes of "mortality", which he considered unusual for Gill's work. Additionally, Jurek found influences of rhythm and blues and gospel music among individual tracks.[77]

Next was 2013's Bakersfield, a compilation of various country songs from the Bakersfield sound from artists such as Merle Haggard and Buck Owens. The album was credited as a collaboration with session steel guitar player Paul Franklin.[2] Gill and J.T. Corenflos alternated as lead guitarists on the sessions, with other musical contributors including bassist Willie Weeks, drummer Greg Morrow, and backing vocalist Dawn Sears.[78] Among the tracks covered were Owens's "Together Again" and Haggard's "The Bottle Let Me Down" and "The Fightin' Side of Me".[79] Jurek thought that the album's song choices highlighted the "edgier" nature of the Bakersfield sound, while also speaking favorably of Gill's vocals and Franklin's playing.[79] Roughstock writer Matt Bjorke also praised the musicianship and song selection, stating that "Mainstream channels may not care much for this kind of music anymore but it's still as vibrant and fantastic as it has always been and in the loving hands of Vince Gill and Paul Franklin it shines once again."[78]

2016–2019: Down to My Last Bad Habit, membership in Eagles, and Okie

Gill released Down to My Last Bad Habit through MCA in 2016. The lead single to the project was "Take Me Down", featuring guest vocals from Little Big Town. He wrote the song with Richard Marx and Jillian Jacqueline. Cam also contributed vocals to the track "I'll Be Waiting for You".[80] The former was issued as the project's lead single.[42] Stephen Thomas Erlewine wrote that Gill "maintains an elegant, soulful air throughout the record", while highlighting the number of guest artists and considering the sound to be influenced by Memphis soul.[81]

Following the death of Eagles member Glenn Frey in 2017, Gill was asked by the remaining band members to replace him. He accepted the offer, as he considered himself a fan of not only the Eagles, but also of Frey's solo material. Gill debuted as a member of the band at a concert held in Dodger Stadium in 2017.[82] Both Gill and Frey's son Deacon have continued to tour as members of the band throughout the 2010s and 2020s, and plan to continue doing so until the end of the band's farewell tour in 2025.[83] Of his membership with the Eagles, Gill stated in an interview with Taste of Country in 2018 that he had a sense of "gratitude" for the other band members choosing him as Frey's replacement, but also added, "in my heart of hearts I wish I wasn’t doing it. That would mean Glenn would still be around, but life is what it is and you just go do what you can do because of what happens. Those songs deserve to live on as long as they can."[84]

His next release on MCA was 2019's Okie. Once again, Gill produced with Niebank, in addition to playing guitar alongside Jedd Hughes and Tom Bukovac.[85] According to Taste of Country, Gill conceived the album as more autobiographical than his previous works. The track "Letter to My Mama" was promoted as the first single.[86] Jurek considered the album "a laid-back collection of original songs that are more poignant and more nakedly autobiographical and topical than anything he's previously issued."[85] The album included a song about Amy Grant titled "When My Amy Prays",[87] a song which won Gill the Grammy Award for Best Country Solo Performance after release.[39] With 22 wins from this association, Gill has the most wins of any male country music artist.[88]

Musician Paul Franklin, seated while playing a pedal steel guitar.
Steel guitarist Paul Franklin collaborated with Gill on the albums Bakersfield and Sweet Memories.

A second collaborative album with Paul Franklin followed in 2023. Titled Sweet Memories: The Music of Ray Price & the Cherokee Cowboys, it features the two covering songs by Ray Price. In an interview with Variety, both musicians stated that they wanted to do a second album following Bakersfield, and chose Ray Price because both had contributed to some of his later albums.[89]

Musical style

Gill's music is defined by his tenor voice, guitar playing, and breadth of influences. The editors of The Encyclopedia of Country Music wrote of Gill, "With an aching tenor, award-winning songwriting skills, and virtuoso guitar chops that rivals those of any ace Nashville session player, Vince Gill is one of today's biggest country superstars."[7] His vocal style has also been noted for its bluegrass music phrasing.[90] Steve Huey of AllMusic describes Gill as "one of the most respected musicians in the history of country music".[2] He characterizes Gill's early work as influential in the neotraditional country movements of the late 1980s to early 1990s, but thought his membership in both Pure Prairie League and the Eagles showed an interest in his music outside of country music as well.[2] Sarah Rodman of Entertainment Weekly referred to Gill as "the Oklahoma native with the tenor kissed by angels and the guitar prowess of a man who made a deal with the devil" and stated that he "rose to become one of the most respected names in country music, often serving as a link between the classic artists that preceded him and the generation of stars that have followed in his footsteps."[91] Jeffrey B. Remz, writing for Country Standard Time, stated that Gill "was a fine singer with his sturdy tenor, and his guitar playing has always been considered top notch. A heavy touring schedule resulted from his success with concerts sometimes going on for three hours. He was not a paint-by-the-numbers kind of country performer."[5] Joe Bosso of Guitar World describes Gill as having "virtuosic and sweetly expressive solos" in both flatpicking and fingerstyle guitar; in the same article, Gill himself stayed that he "play[s] what's necessary".[92] Erlewine called Gill's songwriting style "tasteful and assured".[81]

Gill cites Merle Haggard as one of his main influences. In 2003, he stated in an interview with Country Standard Time, "he's the greatest singer, the greatest phraser, and then on top of that, his songs are really poetic."[5] He has also named female artists he grew up on, such as Patsy Cline and Kitty Wells, as influences.[93] Gill said that he characterized his own songwriting by "simplicity", a characteristic he also thought was present in the works of Hank Williams.[94]

Work for other artists

Gill is known for a large number of collaborative works. In 1987, Emmylou Harris chose Gill to appear on her album Angel Band, a compilation of gospel music standards. Gill played mandolin and sang backing vocals on the project, which also included Gordy and bluegrass musician Carl Jackson.[95] Also that year, Alabama recorded one of Gill's compositions, "Here We Are", on their album Pass It On Down.[96] Their version went to number two on the country music charts in 1991.[97] In 1991, Mark O'Connor recorded a cover version of Carl Perkins' "Restless" for his album The New Nashville Cats. This rendition featured O'Connor on fiddle, with Gill, Steve Wariner, and Ricky Skaggs alternating on lead vocals and guitar. Credited to Mark O'Connor & the New Nashville Cats, this rendition went to number 25 on the country charts.[98] All four artists won Grammy Award for Best Country Collaboration with Vocals in 1992 for this song,[39] as well as CMA Vocal Event of the Year.[40] Gill covered the Eagles' "I Can't Tell You Why" for the late-1993 tribute album Common Thread: The Songs of the Eagles,[99] with then-former Eagles member Timothy B. Schmit on backing vocals and Jim Horn on soprano saxophone.[100] While not officially promoted as a single, this cover reached number 42 on Hot Country Songs due to unsoliciated airplay.[42] On two occasions, Gill collaborated with Asleep at the Wheel on a cover of a Bob Wills song. The first was "Red Wing" on the 1993 album Tribute to the Music of Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys;[101] the second was "Bob's Breakdowns" from Ride with Bob: A Tribute to Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys six years later. Both collaborations won Grammy Award for Best Country Instrumental Performance in their respective years of release.[39] Gill's third instrumental Grammy Award win came in 2001 on a rendition of Earl Scruggs's "Foggy Mountain Breakdown", done for the collaboration album Earl Scruggs and Friends.[39][102]

Throughout the 1980s and 1990s, Gill was a frequent collaborator of Patty Loveless. starting with backing vocals on her 1987 self-titled debut album,[22] and also on her 1989 hit "Timber, I'm Falling in Love".[103] Conversely, she sang on his "When I Call Your Name",[5] "Pocket Full of Gold",[104] and "Go Rest High on That Mountain".[105] In 1994, Gill contributed to two collaborations. First was "House of Love", a duet with Amy Grant from her album of the same name. The song was a top-40 hit on the Hot 100 after its release.[106] Gill's other collaboration in 1994 was on Kermit Unpigged, an album released by Jim Henson performing in-character as Kermit the Frog alongside a number of musical guests. On this album, the two recorded a cover of the Lovin Spoonful's "Daydream";[107] this cover reached number 65 on the Canadian country music charts then published by RPM.[108] A year later, Gill sang a duet with Dolly Parton on a re-recording of her hit "I Will Always Love You" on her album Something Special.[109] This rendition charted simultaneously with "Go Rest High on That Mountain".[42] Gill co-wrote and provided backing vocals on the track "You Just Get One", recorded in 1995 by Ty Herndon on his debut album What Mattered Most.[110] Jeff Wood later released a version of the song in 1997,[111] which featured Gill on both lead guitar and mandolin.[112] Also in 1997, both Gill and Alison Krauss were credited for their backing vocals on Mark Chesnutt's "It's Not Over"; the three had originally recorded it in 1992 for Chesnutt's album Longnecks & Short Stories, but Chesnutt chose to include it on his 1997 album Thank God for Believers and release it as a single as he thought the song still had potential as a single.[113] Gill's second Grammy win for Best Country Instrumental Performance came in 1998, as a featured performer on Randy Scruggs's "A Soldier's Joy" from his album Crown of Jewels.[39]

Gill and Sheryl Crow were both credited for their backing vocals on Brooks & Dunn's "Building Bridges", a top-five country hit in 2006.[114] He was featured on Kelly Clarkson's 2012 single "Don't Rush" as well.[115] Brad Paisley's 2008 instrumental album Play: The Guitar Album featured Gill as one of several instrumentalists on the track "Cluster Pluck",[116] which accounted for Gill's fourth Grammy win in the category of Best Country Instrumental Performance.[39] Gill co-produced Ashley Monroe's 2013 album Like a Rose and co-wrote two songs on it.[117] The two toured with Charlie Worsham in 2015.[93] Between late 2016 and early 2017, Gill was credited for his backing vocals and lead guitar on Chris Young's "Sober Saturday Night",[118] which also went to number one on the country charts.[119] Gill also charted in 2017 as a guest vocalist on Maren Morris's promotional single "Dear Hate".[42] Overall, Gill holds a very high number of credits as a backing vocalist on other musicians' works; of his prolificacy in this capacity, Brown stated in 1998 that Gill often sang harmony for other artists because he enjoyed doing so.[90]

Three notable multi-artist collaborations have featured Gill as a performer. First was "Tomorrow's World", a charity single written by Kix Brooks and Pam Tillis featuring over 20 country music singers, and released by Warner Records to honor the 20th anniversary of Earth Day.[120] In 1996, he participated in "Hope: Country Music's Quest for a Cure", a charity single by the T.J. Martell Foundation to honor cancer and leukemia research.[121] He also participated in the 2016 collaboration "Forever Country", a medley of "I Will Always Love You", "On the Road Again", and "Country Roads, Take Me Home" recorded by 30 country artists to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Country Music Association.[122] This collaboration went to number one on the Billboard country charts under the credit "Artists of Then, Now, and Forever".[123]

Personal life

Singers Vince Gill and Amy Grant, seated next to each other in a recording studio.
Gill (right) and Amy Grant (left) in 2004.

In April 1980, Gill married singer Janis Oliver,[7] who would also become a country singer in the 1980s alongside her sister Kristine in the duo Sweethearts of the Rodeo. Gill wrote both "Everybody's Sweetheart" and "The Radio" about his relationship to her.[124] The two divorced in 1997, citing irreconcilable differences as the reason behind their divorce. The couple had one daughter, Jenifer "Jenny" Gill, of whom Janis assumed custody following their divorce.[125][7] Jenny has contributed to her father's albums on a number of occasions, including Let There Be Peace on Earth.[50] Steve Huey, writing for AllMusic, noted that many critics thought songs from The Key were influenced by the divorce from Oliver.[2] Gill began dating contemporary Christian music singer Amy Grant in 1999 following her divorce from singer Gary Chapman. The two had collaborated on a number of occasions prior, and they became married on March 10, 2000.[126] AllMusic writer Thom Jurek thought that certain tracks on Let's Make Sure We Kiss Goodbye were inspired by his marriage to Grant, which occurred during the recording of that album.[65] Shortly after their marriage, the couple had a daughter named Corrinna. In 2023, Corrinna Gill began releasing her own music online.[127]

Gill is known for his pleasant and laid-back demeanor and frequent contributions to charity,[7] leading many publications to refer to him as the "nicest guy in Nashville".[94][90] In an article for The Washington Post republished in The Palm Beach Post, journalist Richard Harrington described Gill as "perpetually affable, easily approachable, [and] ego-deficient."[90] Gill enjoys golf and in 1993 started a golf charity known as the Vinny Pro-Celebrity Golf Invitational,[4] which raises money for children's golf in the state of Tennessee. Gill received a 2003 Distinguished Service Award from Professional Golfers' Association of America to honor this charity.[128] In 1995, Gill held a concert to benefit the American Red Cross following the Oklahoma City bombing.[3] Overall, Gill is credited with contributing to over 60 charities,[129] including All for the Hall, an annual benefit concert for the Country Music Hall of Fame.[4]

Gill and Grant both live in Nashville, Tennessee, where he also owns a recording studio.[130]

Discography

Studio albums

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Whitburn 2017, pp. 140–141.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Steve Huey. "Vince Gill biography". AllMusic. Retrieved March 25, 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Vince Gill". The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Retrieved March 25, 2024.
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Works cited