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Samara Joy, Cam and MJ Lenderman announced for Season 51 Tapings

Austin City Limits (ACL) is thrilled to announce summer tapings featuring a trio of American originals in their ACL debuts for our Season 51: on May 25 we welcome five-time Grammy-winning jazz vocalist Samara Joy, making her debut with songs from her celebrated 2025 album Portrait; previously announced modern soul act Thee Sacred Souls comes to our stage on May 28, straight from their buzzed-about Coachella performances; country artist Cam joins us on June 2; riding a high after a 2025 Grammy win for her songwriting on the landmark Cowboy Carter, Cam makes her headlining ACL debut with songs from her upcoming new collection; and ascendant singer-songwriter MJ Lenderman takes the ACL stage on July 1 with highlights from his acclaimed Manning Fireworks.

Photo by Gus Black

Samara Joy is having a banner year, earning a remarkable fourth and fifth Grammy at this year’s Awards, taking home gold for both Best Jazz Performance and Best Jazz Vocal Album. The 25-year-old jazz vocalist’s latest studio album Portrait won the Outstanding Jazz Album Award at the NAACP Image Awards in February. Joy co-produced the acclaimed Verve release with veteran trumpeter/bandleader and multi-Grammy winner Brian Lynch. Portrait showcases the intimate, soulful chemistry she’s developed with her touring band and spotlights her burgeoning gifts as a lyricist in ingenious arrangements that meld her thoughtful words with music by Charles Mingus, Sun Ra and her late mentor Barry Harris. Joy continues to secure her status as perhaps the first Gen Z jazz vocal star: The New York Times praised the “silky-voiced rising star” for “helping jazz take a youthful turn,” while NPR named her a “classic jazz singer from a new generation.” Joy’s meteoric rise launched in 2022 with the release of her breakout Verve debut, Linger Awhile, which garnered critical raves and signaled the arrival of a once-in-a-generation vocalist. The album earned her a Grammy for Best Jazz Vocal Album in addition to a headline-making win for Best New Artist. A native of the Bronx, Joy became entranced by classic R&B as a child and cut her teeth as a singer in her church’s gospel choir. And while her family history is deeply musical, Joy didn’t delve into the jazz tradition until college. During her studies she won the 2019 Sarah Vaughan International Jazz Vocal Competition, which introduced her to the larger jazz scene as a rising star to watch. She was heard, by audiences and critics alike, as a masterful interpreter of jazz standards and a rightful heiress of the sound, technique and charisma that defined her jazz heroines — including Vaughan, Betty Carter, Abbey Lincoln and Carmen McRae. Joy will tour across the globe throughout 2025, including a career high: her highly-anticipated Carnegie Hall debut this spring.

Multi-platinum country artist Cam turned heads when she performed on our 50th Anniversary special in 2024; she was featured in the program’s songwriter circle, trading songs and verses with Indigo Girls and Brandy Clark in what became a broadcast highlight.  The singer and songwriter kicked off 2025 with a career highlight: she picked up her first Grammy win as a songwriter on Beyoncé’s genre-shattering Album of the Year Cowboy Carter. A sought-after collaborator, Cam penned five songs for the landmark album (“Ameriican Requiem,” “Protector,” “Daughter,” “Tyrant,” and “Amen”) and contributed production and backing vocals. On the heels of her big year so far with Beyoncé, Cam is now gearing up for the 2025 release of her highly anticipated new album with RCA Records. Prolific and adored, Cam stepped into the spotlight in a big way with her critically acclaimed debut, Untamed. The chart-topping, triple-platinum release featured the breakthrough smash “Burning House,” and notched Grammy, ACM, and CMA award nominations. She followed with her critically acclaimed sophomore release, The Otherside, which featured the international Jolene-in-reverse hit “Diane,” plus songwriting from Avicii, Harry Styles, Jack Antonoff, and Sam Smith. A captivating live performer with a soaring voice, Cam has consistently sold out shows across the globe, cementing her status as an international powerhouse. From the coveted sunset slot at Stagecoach to top venues across five continents, in recent years, she has been one of the few country acts to play Lollapalooza, ACL Fest, and Outside Lands while also supporting acts like Harry Styles, George Strait, Sam Smith, Loretta Lynn, the Indigo Girls, Eric Church, Tim McGraw, and Faith Hill. A vivid storyteller, clever wordsmith, and committed visionary, fans have only just begun to scratch the surface of Cam’s many facets. As she bravely steps into her next era, she’s welcoming everyone into a space that’s inclusive, invigorating, and inspiring.

Photo by Shervin Lainez

26-year-old singer-songwriter-guitarist MJ Lenderman makes his ACL debut after a busy couple of years. A rock-and-roll and basketball obsessed kid growing up in the mountain town of Asheville, NC, he put out the breakthrough solo set Boat Songs in 2022; the sleeper hit piled offhanded, Southern-inflected rock on wry, laconic bangers like “Hangover Game,” “Six Flags” and “Tastes Just Like It Costs.” With its barbed little jokes, canny sports references, and gloriously ragged guitar solos, the album became one of that year’s standouts, a ramshackle set of charms and chuckles. He followed with a stellar 2024, bookended by a memorable feature on Waxahatchee’s “Right Back To It,” a magnetic duet about romantic doubt that became one of the year’s biggest indie-rock anthems, and the release of his own highly anticipated solo album, Manning Fireworks. A laser-sharp study of misfits and the mistakes they make, where sympathy and sardonicism share the same ragged rock song, the acclaimed release features thumbnail character studies: “She’s Leaving You,” a half-sneering portrait of a dad cheating his way through a midlife crisis, at least until he gets caught and blasts Clapton in a rented Ferrari en route to Vegas; “On My Knees” finds Lenderman wondering what it means to have fun in a world where so many people seem full of shit; and muses on edgelords and alpha males on the standout “Wristwatch.” Manning Fireworks topped many critics’ year-end best lists, with Rolling Stone raving, “MJ Lenderman delivers a sad-guy indie-rock gem” and named him “a budding guitar great and ace storyteller”; The New York Times calls Lenderman “A young artist with an old soul and a keen eye for observational detail that makes his canted portraits of small-town life come alive”; NPR raves, “He’s a homespun magical realist, always throwing in something off-kilter to elevate his tales of lovable losers”; and the Guardian concurs, “Far from being dude-centric, Manning Fireworks’ sad sack anthems tap into something devastatingly, purely human.” 

We’re thrilled to welcome these stellar acts to the ACL stage. The broadcast episodes will air on PBS this fall as part of our upcoming Season 51, stream previous seasons online or on your connected TV with the PBS App. Follow @acltv on socials for a chance to attend these tapings in person. Learn more about how to attend a taping here.