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It's a big night for country singer Trisha Yearwood. At the CMT Music Awards on April 7, the 59-year-old is set to receive the inaugural June Carter Cash Humanitarian Award in honor of her “kind heart and good deeds.” The award “recognizes an artist, duo/group or industry veteran who demonstrates an exceptional dedication to the community and their fellow artists as Cash did,” states the CMT in an announcement.

Speaking to the Austin American-Statesman , Yearwood said she was “so happy” to be awarded an honor named after Cash, but opened up about the reality of accepting the accolade. “It almost feels awkward to accept an award like this because it feels like, I don’t know if you ever would feel like you deserve it,” she said before noting it was “a call to me to step up my game.” The “She’s In Love With the Boy” singer’s philanthropic work has stretched a variety of organizations, but has been primarily focused in volunteering for Habitat for Humanity.



In 2016, Yearwood and her husband, Garth Brooks, were named Habitat Humanitarians . “It’s wonderful to write a check for charity, which we do, everybody does that and it’s wonderful,” she told the Austin American-Statesman. “But to actually go work alongside somebody that’s going to live in a house and get dirty.

I almost feel guilty sometimes when we leave, because I know they’re thanking us, but we got a lot more out of it than they probably did.” According to CMT, Yearwood has a.

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