Vince Gill & Lainey Wilson’s Tearful Tribute at the 2025 Emmy Awards
On Sunday, September 14, two of country music’s most beloved voices came together to honor the lives the television world lost over the past year. Vince Gill and Lainey Wilson stood side by side to perform a moving duet of Gill’s timeless classic, “Go Rest High on That Mountain”, during the Emmy Awards’ annual In Memoriam segment. In a night often filled with glamour and celebration, this moment shifted the atmosphere to one of reverence and stillness.
A Tribute That Hit Home
With Gill’s guitar guiding the melody, the two traded verses and blended harmonies on the chorus, their voices carrying both weight and warmth. Written nearly three decades ago, the song has always been tied to themes of loss and remembrance — but in this setting, it became a collective prayer for the television legends who passed away this year.
Among those remembered were Ozzy Osbourne, Maggie Smith, David Lynch, Valerie Mahaffey, Julian McMahon, John Amos, Loni Anderson, Michelle Trachtenberg, George Wendt, Malcolm-Jamal Warner, and many more. As their faces appeared on screen, the performance became one of the night’s most poignant moments — a solemn reminder of the lives and legacies that shaped the small screen for generations.
The Song’s New Chapter
Originally released in 1995, “Go Rest High on That Mountain” earned Vince Gill two Grammy Awards and has since become a country staple at funerals and memorial services. Gill first began writing the song after the death of his close friend, Keith Whitley, in 1989, and later completed it following the loss of his brother, Bob Gill, in 1993.
Sunday’s performance carried added significance, as it featured a third verse — one Gill never recorded on the original release. First unveiled during a live performance in 2019, this verse was officially released only this week on a new extended version of the song. Its inclusion deepened the meaning of the Emmy tribute, giving the performance a sense of both history and renewal.
Together, Vince Gill and Lainey Wilson transformed the Emmy stage into something more than a showcase. For a few moments, it became a sanctuary — a place where music carried grief, honored memory, and reminded millions watching that the legacies of those we lose never truly fade.