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Eric Church, Luke Combs honored with Artist Humanitarian Award for raising $24 million for Helene recovery and rebuilding

Eric Church, Luke Combs honored with Artist Humanitarian Award for raising $24 million for Helene recovery and rebuilding

Yahoo26-02-2025

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (QUEEN CITY NEWS) — Country stars Eric Church and Luke Combs were co-recipients last week of the Country Radio Seminar 2025 Artist Humanitarian Award for their efforts to raise money for those affected by Hurricane Helene in western north Carolina and Tennessee.
The honor was presented on Friday, Feb. 21, during the annual Country Radio Seminar (CRS) in Nashville.
Another $500M for Hurricane Helene relief in North Carolina passes key hurdle
The Country Radio Broadcasters say that this year's award recognizes the unparalleled efforts of Church and Combs, who raised over $24 million in under a month, driven by the Concert for Carolina concert Oct. 26 at Bank of America Stadium. This event drew a record-breaking 82,000 fans and was mobilized by their collective teams in just 28 days.
The concert's lineup included other North Carolinians James Taylor, The Avett Brothers and Parmalee, plus Billy Strings, Keith Urban and Sheryl Crow and others.
Church, through his nonprofit organization Chief Cares, announced plans to build 100 homes for Helene victims, starting in Avery County. This effort provides critical shelter to families affected by the storm while also committing to helping address longer-term needs like creating jobs, rebuilding schools, and supporting local businesses. In addition, the Caldwell County native signed over all publishing royalties from his latest release, 'Darkest Hour,' to the people of North Carolina.
Meanwhile, Combs and his team are working directly with North Carolina-based relief efforts to ensure funds are distributed where they are needed most. Their contributions support Samaritan's Purse, Manna Food Bank, and Second Harvest Food Bank of Northwest North Carolina. Combs was born in Huntersville and grew up in Asheville.
'Eric Church and Luke Combs' love for their home state has been nothing short of inspiring,' CRB Awards Committee Chair Beverlee Brannigan said in a statement: Their dedication to helping North Carolina recover after Hurricane Helene and their ongoing efforts show just how much they care. This award is a heartfelt recognition of their commitment, hard work, and genuine compassion for the people of North Carolina. Eric and Luke, we're proud to honor you.'
The CRB Artist Humanitarian Award was established in 1990 to recognize country artists whose philanthropic efforts have significantly improved the effectiveness and impact of the causes they support. Past recipients include Kane Brown, Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Kenny Chesney, Carrie Underwood, and more.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Eric Church: ‘I Enjoy the Antagonistic'

Eric Church has a story he wants to tell me. It's mid-May, a month since the country superstar first sat down for what will become his Rolling Stone Interview, and a lot has happened in that time. For one thing: Bruce Springsteen heard Church's new album, Evangeline vs. the Machine, an adventurous project that introduces orchestral and choral sounds to Church's rebellious brand of country music. Calling from London, where he's about to headline Royal Albert Hall, Church recounts a recent backstage visit with Springsteen in Manchester, England, just before he and the E Street Band kicked off their 2025 overseas tour. 'He held out his hand, and goes, 'I just finished listening to your record again, and it's wonderful. It's really creative, but the biggest thing is, it's brave,'' says Church, whose 2011 hit 'Springsteen' paid homage to the New Jersey legend. 'He said, 'The arrangements are great and your producer did a great job, but that bravery only works if the songs are great. 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At Stagecoach in 2024, you played a one-man show with a gospel choir and did primarily covers. A lot of fans left. One guy next to me was shouting, 'Play your own fucking songs!'The hardest thing I've ever done is that Stagecoach show, because there's one guitar for about 70 minutes, and I ended up having to even play the kick drum. I had to be my own drummer, and I couldn't change guitars. So, the level of difficulty was high, but what I found was it was [the choir] that really saved my ass. What was the goal with the performance?I knew I wanted to do a one-of-a-kind show, and I knew maybe the worst place for the presentation would have been Stagecoach. But I also knew that it would have been the biggest megaphone, that there were going to be 30,000 TikTokers who were there to be seen. The show wasn't for them. If we did that [performance] as a one-off at [one of Church's usual] shows, people would have tore their clothes. It would have been a revival. 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[Laughs.] You didn't change course for Instead, you brought in not only the choir, but horns and I knew it was right. After Stagecoach, I said, 'This is perfect. That's what it needs to be.' I want passion, that's all I want. I don't care if it's negative passion, because the negative passion in my career has always been matched on the other side by the positive passion. It's the middle where things dry. What do you think about the idea of fan ownership of an artist? In 2022, some fans criticized you for canceling a concert so you could go to an NCAA Final Four game with your a good question. We always try to give fans an experience that they spend their hard-earned money for. We work really hard to make sure that we feel like we earn that. But specifically about the Final Four, that was a unique thing, because of the way the tournament works, this wasn't something that I could plan for. 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Like, we talked about the Sinéad O'Connor thing. If that had been the other way, and it had been a far-right-wing person, Kris would have done the same thing. He was about the freedom of your thought and who you were. If he didn't agree with you, that didn't bother him. Toby was way more nuanced [than you might think]. He had these songs, and a lot of it was 'Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue,' and he was absolutely pro-military. But he wasn't an ideologue, and I'm not an ideologue. I have a problem with the political system where I believe things on both sides, but if I have to pick a party, it means that I can't believe some of those things. If I'm a Republican or I'm a Democrat, I have to be all Republican or all Democrat, and there's no way those guys and girls believe that. There's no fucking way. So, the problem I have there is you have to pick a side and have to say the other side's wrong because you're under that flag. That's total bullshit. 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I mean you're probably asking the wrong guy. Culturally, yes. I think it's pretty clear the country has moved to the right. Now, how that ends up translating musically is what I love. What are people gonna write about? Go back to the best music ever made, and one of the tips of the spear was the Vietnam War. That may be the greatest era of rock and country and folk. We've talked about this before — this shit [politics] bores me to death. It's mind-numbing, because we're just going to flip it back, and it's going to go the other way, and then it's going to come back. Like a ping-pong ball. But what does interest me is what happens musically. In country music, it's going to be very interesting. I'm actually excited about that part of it — what music will come out, either in protest or in support. Let's talk about something you'd like to see change in country music. 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Here's a look at some of the most explosive and jarring moments from the trial. 'There was a line of questioning where your client was nodding vigorously and looking at the jury,' Judge Arun Subramanian told Combs' attorneys on June 5, according to NBC News. 'There should be no efforts to have any interactions with this jury.' The nodding the judge referred to came while Bongolan was on the stand. The judge said that Combs would be removed from the courtroom if he continued. Combs' lead attorney Marc Agnifilo told the judge that the interaction is 'not going to happen again.' 'This cannot happen again,' Subramanian reiterated. A pregnant Ventura took the stand for about a week at the beginning of the trial. At one point, she described what Combs called 'freak-offs.' 'It basically entails the hiring of an escort and setting up this experience so that I could perform for Sean,' Ventura said. The freak-offs allowed for Combs to 'watch me with the other person and actually direct us on what we were doing,' she added. 'Eventually it became a job for me, pretty much,' she claimed, adding that she had to personally reach out to the male escorts and had to participate in the freak-offs even if she was menstruating. She also claimed that he recorded the performances and used them as blackmail against her. Ventura described Combs during sexual encounters: 'His eyes go black. The version of him I was in love with was no longer there,' she said, according to The New York Times. Ventura also discussed being physically abused by Combs. Prosecutors showed the jury images of Ventura's injuries. Some of those images included bruises on her face, back and thigh, and a gash on her eyebrow, USA Today reported. Within two weeks of testifying, Ventura gave birth to her third child with her husband, Alex Fine. Kid Cudi, born Scott Mescudi, briefly dated Ventura in 2011. Mescudi testified on May 22 that Combs broke into his home when he was with Ventura and that he believes he set his luxury vehicle on fire with a Molotov cocktail. 'I'm going to be very candid,' Mescudi said while describing the break-in, according to Rolling Stone. 'I was like, 'Motherfucker, are you in my house?' And he said, 'I just want to talk to you.' I was like, 'I'm on my way over right now.' He was like, 'I'm here.'' But Mescudi did not find Combs when he arrived. He did, however, find that his dog was locked in a bathroom and that Christmas presents had been opened. He said Combs wanted to talk to him, but Mescudi said he responded by telling him, 'You broke into my house. You messed with my dog... Like, I don't want to talk to you.' Mescudi and Ventura stopped seeing each other in late December of 2011. 'The drama, it was just getting out of hand,' Mescudi testified. 'I kind of wanted to give her some space … for my safety, for her safety…' He also told the courtroom that he believed Ventura was 'playing' both him and Combs. Combs' former personal assistant from 2007 to 2009, David James, testified on May 19 that he personally acquired drugs for Combs before. James claimed that Combs used to take opiates during the day and ecstasy at night, according to CNN. Some of the ecstasy pills were shaped like former President Barack Obama, according to James. James also described Combs' drug use in more depth, including informing the jury of a 'medicine bag' that Combs brought around with him, according to Business Insider. 'There were probably 25 to 30 different pillboxes or pill bottles,' James said, according to BI. 'Some were like Advil, Tylenol. He had water pills to help him lose weight. He had Viagra in there. He had some pills that helped increase his sperm count, for example.' 'He did have ecstasy and Percocets in there, as well,' James added. Former member of the music groups Danity Kane and Diddy—Dirty Money, Dawn Richard, testified on May 16 that Combs compelled people in his orbit to stay quiet because 'where he comes from, people who say something can end up missing.' Richard described watching Combs beat Ventura when she took too long to cook his dinner, Business Insider reported. 'He took the skillet with the eggs in it and tried to hit her in the head, and she fell to the ground,' Richard testified. The next day, Combs told Richard and Ventura that 'what we saw was passion, and it was what lovers in a relationship do.' He also told them 'he was trying to take us to the top, and that, where he comes from, people go missing if they say things like that, like, if people talk. And then he gave us flowers,' according to Business Insider's report. Richard filed her own lawsuit against Combs in September 2024. She accused him of sexual assault, retaliation, threatening to end her life and refusing to pay her. Capricorn Clark had an on-and-off working relationship with Combs between 2004 and 2018, at one point working as his former assistant and as the marketing head for Sean Jean at another. She testified on May 27 that Combs kidnapped her at gunpoint in 2011 to kill Mescudi when he learned that Ventura was dating him. According to Clark, Combs came to her home in the early morning with a gun out, told her to get dressed, and said, 'We're going to go kill [Mescudi],' according to NPR. They went inside of Mescudi's house while he was not home, which Mescudi described in his own testimony. Clark claimed that Combs threatened to kill her if she informed the authorities. In a separate instance, Clark said Combs locked her in a building in Manhattan and subjected her to numerous lie detector tests when some of his jewelry went missing, NPR also reported. She said the man testing her told her that she would be 'thrown into the East River' if she failed. 'I was petrified,' Clark said. Mia, the pseudonym for a former assistant for Combs who he tasked with keeping an eye on Ventura, while taking the stand on May 29, described an instance in which Combs attacked Ventura at Prince's house in 2011 or 2012, according to The New York Times. 'Cass and I debated like little kids if we should sneak out of the house,' Mia reportedly said. But Combs showed up at the party. 'Oh, crap,' Mia recalled thinking when she saw her then-boss. 'Me and Cass just booked it.' When Combs caught them, he beat Cassie until a security guard for Prince interfered, according to USA Today. Mia claimed she was fired the next day for 'being insubordinate.' While on the stand, she also testified that Combs sexually assaulted her on more than one occasion. 'I couldn't tell him no about a sandwich — I couldn't tell him no about anything,' she said, according to the Times. 'There was no way I could tell him no, because then he would know that I thought what he was doing was wrong and then I would be a target.' Need help? Visit RAINN's National Sexual Assault Online Hotline or the National Sexual Violence Resource Center's website. Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) for the National Domestic Violence Hotline. Trump Weighs In On Possible Sean 'Diddy' Combs Pardon: 'He Used To Really Like Me' Cassie's Lawsuit Against Diddy Started A Movement Many Didn't See Coming 'Marvel Supervillain': Kid Cudi Describes Meeting With Diddy After Molotov Cocktail Hit His Porsche

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