Chris Stapleton Made Garth Brooks Cry With One Note — And Country Music Felt It Too
It only took one note from Chris Stapleton to turn Garth Brooks into a puddle of tears — and the entire country music world understood why.
Back in 2020, at the Library of Congress Gershwin Prize ceremony honoring Garth Brooks, the stage was packed with heavy hitters: Keith Urban, Lee Brice, Ricky Skaggs, Trisha Yearwood, and more. But the moment belonged to Chris Stapleton, who stepped up to perform a scorching, soul-deep rendition of “Shameless.”
The song may have started as a Billy Joel original, but that night, Stapleton claimed it. And it hit Garth so hard that he couldn’t hold back the tears.
A Tribute From One Heavyweight to Another
Garth Brooks has never been shy about his emotions — the man wears his heart like a badge. But this time, the tears weren’t just sentimental. They were earned.
As Stapleton opened the performance, Garth sat still, gripping Trisha Yearwood’s hand. She didn’t move an inch — maybe because she knew exactly what was coming.
Stapleton’s voice cracked the room open. A few lines in, Garth’s eyes started to glaze. By the final chorus, the tears weren’t subtle anymore. They were rolling.
And then came the moment people still talk about:
Garth stood up and saluted.
Not a polite clap. Not a showbiz wave. A real, heartfelt salute — the only gesture worthy of what he had just witnessed.
Why “Shameless” Means So Much to Garth Brooks
Garth’s connection to the song goes way deeper than chart success.
“Shameless” was one of the biggest risks he ever took.
It appeared on Ropin’ the Wind in 1991 and was unlike anything he’d cut before.
He didn’t find it in Nashville — it literally showed up in his mailbox thanks to those old “CD clubs” from the ’90s.
He heard the Billy Joel track on Storm Front, felt a bolt of lightning run through him, and knew he had to record it. Billy Joel said yes, and the rest became history: the song hit #1 and became a Garth Brooks classic.
For Stapleton — a modern titan with a voice like weathered oak — to perform that song that way was a full-circle moment of rare magnitude.

Stapleton Didn’t Sing the Song — He Became the Song
Chris didn’t perform “Shameless” like a cover.
He performed it like a confession.
Eyes closed.
Voice burning.
Every word felt lived-in, like he was pulling it from the bottom of his soul.
That’s why it wrecked Garth.
He wasn’t watching someone sing one of his hits.
He was watching someone feel it.
Fans Felt the Earth Shake Too
Social media melted:
“Stapleton could sing Baby Shark and make you cry.”
“This is the kind of performance that stops time.”
And the classic: “If you can’t feel Stapleton’s music, maybe you just don’t have a heart.”
Some fans just begged Garth to finally put his catalog on Spotify so they could scream-sing “Shameless” legally again.
Fair request.
Country Music Isn’t Just Sound — It’s Truth
That night proved what country fans already know:
It’s not about hats, boots, or neon beer signs.
It’s about truth and emotion and tipping your hat to the legends who paved the way.
Chris Stapleton didn’t just make Garth Brooks cry.
He reminded everyone why country music hits different.