Paul Franklin Was Nominated 33 Times for a CMA Award. #33 Was The Charm

Never say never.
71 year old Paul Franklin is well-recognized as the one of the most important steel guitar players and musicians in all of country music. Having credits on over 500 recordings, he was inducted into the Steel Guitar Hall of Fame in 2000, the Musicians Hall of Fame in 2019, and his name is brought up as a potential Country Music Hall of Fame musician inductee when the category comes around every three years. Along with guitarist Brent Mason, Paul Franklin has defined the sound of country music for a generation.
But Paul Franklin had never won a CMA Award. He’d been nominated for the CMA’s Musician of the Year many times. In fact, he’d been nominated more than anyone else without winning. He’d been nominated so many times, he’d amassed more CMA nominations than many major country music stars. Franklin is the most nominated person in the 59-year history of the CMA Awards in any specific category.
How many times had Paul Franklin been nominated? 33 times. But he’d never won.
Susan Lucci is the name people love to cite when it comes to someone who’s accrued a long string of nominations for a certain award without ever actually winning it. The iconic actress on the ABC soap opera All My Children was nominated a whopping 19 consecutive times by the Daytime Emmys for Outstanding Lead Actress before she finally won in 1999. In total, Lucci was nominated for the award 21 times. Paul Franklin actually had Susan Lucci beat, and by a dozen years.
Only four times since 1989 had Franklin not been nominated in the Musician of the Year category. One of the reasons Paul Franklin has been locked out over the last many years is due to the runs other musicians have enjoyed in the winners circle. From 1991 to 1996, fiddle player Mark O’Connor won it every year. Between 2008 and 2018, guitar player Mac McAnally won every year except for 2016.
Fiddle player Jenee Fleenor had won the award five consecutive years starting in 2019. As the first woman to ever win the award, she was easy to root for. Banjo/guitar player, and solo performer Charlie Worsham surprisingly won the award in 2024.
Then on Wednesday, November 19th at the 49th Annual, 2025 CMA Awards, Paul Franklin finally won the CMA’s Musician of the Year. The award is usually announced before the telecast. In this instance, it was mentioned as an image of Franklin appeared on a screen. Franklin then played during the tribute to his good friend and frequent collaborator Vince Gill who was receiving the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award. Franklin came in with a killer steel guitar solo during Brandi Carlile and Patti Loveless singing “When I Call Your Name.”
Born in Detroit, Michigan, Paul Franklin started his career as a touring musician playing in the band of Barbara Mandrell. Those who know their country music history know that Mandrell was a skilled steel guitarist herself, and recognized the unique talent Paul Franklin brought to the table. He later toured with Mel Tillis, Jerry Reed, even British rock band Dire Straits, and also Vince Gill, where a lifelong friendship was forged.
One of Franklin’s first bits of steel guitar work in the studio came on the pop rock hit “Nice to Be with You” from the Detroit-based band Gallery in 1972. As time went on, Franklin became country music’s go-to steel guitar session musician, playing on albums from Alan Jackson, George Strait, Clint Black, Reba McEntire, Lee Ann Womack, Patty Loveless, Kathy Mattea, and obviously Vince Gill.
Paul Franklin has also been an innovator of the instrument. His father was also a musician and developed an instrument called the Pedabro, which is basically a dobro with pedals. That’s how Franklin got into the steel guitar at such an early age. The unique sound of the dobro found on the iconic hit “Forever and Ever, Amen” by Randy Travis, that is Paul Franklin playing a Pedabro.
But Paul Franklin also has played on the recordings of many contemporary artists as well like Luke Bryan, Kane Brown, and Lauren Alaina. He’s also the go-to guy for those who want steel guitar who reside outside of the country music genre. Toni Braxton, Peter Frampton, and even Megadeth have all solicited his services.
And perhaps most importantly, Paul Franklin is not just a creature of the recording studio. He was a long time member of Nashville’s resident Western swing band The Time Jumpers before leaving in 2024. He was one of the guys who helped convince Vince Gill to join in. The two also released a collaborative record in 2013 called Bakersfield, and then Sweet Memories: The Music of Ray Price and the Cherokee Cowboys in 2023.
What do these silly awards mean? Should we devalue music into a competition? These are fair questions. But for Paul Franklin, the win has to be especially sweet, perhaps more sweeter than anyone who’s ever been nominated for anything ever, in music or otherwise.
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November 20, 2025 @ 9:05 am
I know that steel guitar isn’t for everyone, but I was so happy to see Paul finally win!
November 20, 2025 @ 9:07 am
Trigger, Thanks for such a well informed piece on such a brilliant musician who most people don’t know by name, but by so many things they have hear on the tons of music he was such a crucial part of.
This is why this site is the best place to get current info, reviews and news for the music we love!
November 20, 2025 @ 9:35 am
An absolute prince of a player. Hooray!
November 20, 2025 @ 9:42 am
My video game brainrot thought this was an expedition 33 reference
November 20, 2025 @ 11:26 am
1. I played pedal steel for a while and if I took off two weeks of practicing, I would be a month back in my progress. That instrument is so wickedly mathematical and challenging to play.
2. I am so happy that any pedal steel player gets recognition because they are the wizards in country.
3. I love it that Trigger and I both really enjoyed All My Children and of course believe it was the best soap opera ever. Trig will probably deny this, but he watched it and had a crush on Erica.
November 20, 2025 @ 12:17 pm
D Oh man,
I love this! Every bit of it. This is hilarious.
And, now, you have my attention.
Pedal steel is so wickedly, mathematically, challenging to play? I Totally Believe It.
Now, you have my juices flowing. Let me at it …
Hate to be bested by anything …
Hmmm – wonder if Tom Pickett’s still has a direct line to any worthy pedal steel pickers?
(One’s with an abundant supply of patience, who wouldn’t kill a high energy gemini, on the spot)
‘Course, that thing would probably be full of holes, around the second lesson.
: D CONGRATULATIONS, MR. PAUL FRANKLIN!
‘BOUT DAM* TIME.
November 20, 2025 @ 3:25 pm
Ha! Can’t say I’ve ever seen an episode of All My Children. I would watch a little Young and the Restless while on Christmas break during grade school years as a guilty pleasure when nothing else was on.
November 20, 2025 @ 11:27 am
So I had to do a little digging on this Megadeth song… when i googled “megadeth Paul Franklin” one of the first things that comes up is a classic Trig rant piece about the Megadeth song The Blackest Crow.
First; damn Trig, pretty harsh on Dave. You’ve got no love for Megadeth, huh? I’d love to hear your follow up on Dave’s music vs. Dave’s perm. LOL
Second, I don’t really hear the steel. There is prominent banjo and fiddle on the intro, and what sounds like a sitar? Possibly that’s a backmasked steel guitar? That’s pretty \m/ *METAL* \m/ (wink, wink)
I looked at the album credits (on Wikipedia) and Franklin is not mentioned. Anyone else care to jump in?
https://savingcountrymusic.com/megadeths-bluegrass-song-the-blackest-crow/
November 20, 2025 @ 12:18 pm
Funny – I missed that one. Obviously Dave had no business mixing this stuff together, but it reminds me of Waylon’s comments about Garth and then we see what happened since. As such, this Megadeth is freaking Mozart compared to 32BigThuggaPunchX or whatever the crap we are hearing now.
I imagine Trig feels slightly like Shooter
November 20, 2025 @ 3:40 pm
I’m definitely a metal fan, but go have a listen to the song and you might like it. I think the acoustic elements work pretty well in the world of “metal intros.” Granted, Super Collider isn’t the band best work on record (See Rust in Peace) and i can see how it gets less cool when they tout it as ” bluegrass metal” per Trig’s original reporting.
November 20, 2025 @ 12:09 pm
I hadn’t realised he had never won the award. Wow! Long overdue and well deserved.
November 20, 2025 @ 12:47 pm
I thought they were holding off until his 40th nomination but were going to give him the trophy and a barnburner celebration.then.
November 20, 2025 @ 1:53 pm
Congrats,Paul !!! Good things come to those who wait!!!!
November 20, 2025 @ 2:46 pm
It’s been a guitar and fiddle player award.
Chet, Mac McAnally, Johnny Gimble, Mark O’Connor and Jenee Fleenor have combined for 36 awards. Roy Clark, Dann Huff, Brent Mason, Jerry Reed and Randy Scruggs combined for 12 more. Jerry Douglas won twice on dobro.
Cheers to Paul for breaking through. It’s appropriate for him to be on stage for the tribute to Vince Gill. The CMA got that part right…
November 21, 2025 @ 12:26 am
Any piano players ever win it?
November 21, 2025 @ 9:45 am
I’ll guess (without verifying it) that Hargus “Pig” Robbins won it.
He’s one of the most famous Nashville recording musicians of all time (probably in part because of his nickname) but he played with seemingly every major star and is in the Country Music H-o-F.
November 23, 2025 @ 1:50 pm
He won it twice. He’s the only keyboardist to win. Floyd Cramer was nominated 12 times Matt Rollings, seven times. and Jahn Barlow Jarvis, once.
November 20, 2025 @ 4:19 pm
Congrats to Paul so richly deserved and SO overdue!
Funny to think one of my first lp purchases was the K-tel Pop song compilation “I Believe In Music” with Gallery’s Nice To Be With You on it- who knew Paul was playing on that way back when….
And I’ve been blessed to see him play a couple times with The Time Jumpers and also with Vince.
Class act and boy staying power to wait that long for the award!
November 20, 2025 @ 4:50 pm
I started playing pedal steel in the eighties. I can’t tell you how many licks I lifted from Paul, it was hard not to since it seemed he was playing on every hit! I have met Paul and he is a gentleman and always makes time to talk with you. This couldn’t have been awarded to a more deserving musician. Too bad it took 33 tries.
November 20, 2025 @ 6:04 pm
Even though one’s worth most certainly isn’t measured by accolades: I am glad he nonetheless got acknowledged in a big way last night. He’s a genuinely great guy who has beyond paid his dues and deserves every bit of the glow here. =)
November 21, 2025 @ 12:06 am
Even not talked about Dire Straits time with Paul?
November 21, 2025 @ 2:36 pm
Paul Franklin’s time in Dire Straits was mentioned in the article. A lot to cover in his long career.
November 24, 2025 @ 7:27 am
Normally, a stint in a legacy band would be a defining period for a musician. Dire Straits was a legacy band. However, with Franklin’s career, that’s more a footnote, an asterisk as it were. Paul Franklin is the most important and prolific steel player in Country music since Buddy Emmons. Most of the entirety of his career was spent in the service of Country music. Thats why he’s a legend.
Every article written mentioning him, never fails to bring a few rock fans out to say ” what about Dire Straits? Hmmm.?”
November 21, 2025 @ 9:03 am
Congratulations, PF! The pedal steel gets so overlooked when some bands go on tour. It’ll will be all over an album,yet, nothing live. About time, CMAs!