THE CROWD EXPECTED A MEDLEY. CARRIE UNDERWOOD TURNED IT INTO A LINEAGE. At the ACM Awards, Carrie Underwood stepped into the Grand Ole Opry’s 95th-anniversary tribute carrying more than a set list. She moved through songs tied to Patsy Cline, Loretta Lynn, Barbara Mandrell, Dolly Parton, Reba McEntire, and Martina McBride, not like someone showing off range, but like someone walking carefully through sacred ground. The room seemed to understand that almost immediately. The applause softened. Faces lifted. By the time Carrie reached “A Broken Wing,” the performance no longer felt like a medley at all. It felt like a line of women stretching across decades — Patsy’s ache, Loretta’s plain-spoken strength, Reba’s fire, Martina’s steel — all of it passing through one voice for a few quiet minutes. Nobody in that room needed to be told what it meant. Carrie was not replacing them. She was singing as if she knew they had built the stage beneath her feet.
Carrie Underwood Did Not Sing An ACM Medley — She Sang Her Way Through The Women Who Built The Room At the ACM Awards, Carrie Underwood walked into the Grand…