Location
450 Mulberry Street
Memphis, Tennessee 38103
United States
Date & Time
6:00pm CDT - 8:00pm CDT
About This Event
The Dowd Awards are more than just a ceremony—they are a celebration of Memphis' enduring legacy of Black excellence in music, service, and storytelling. Named after the trailblazing DJ, journalist, and educator Nat D. Williams, the Dowd Awards honor individuals whose artistry and leadership continue to shape the soul of the city.
Hosted at the National Civil Rights Museum during Black Music Month, the 2026 Dowd Awards uplift a new class of honorees—musicians, creatives, and community leaders who inspire through legacy, mentorship, and movement-building.
2026 Honorees:
Carla Thomas
Memphis soul icon whose debut single helped launch Stax Records. Co-founder of Artists in the Schools and longtime mentor at the Stax Music Academy.
Art Gilliam
Yale-educated pioneer who became Memphis’s first Black TV reporter, first Black columnist, and in 1977 the first Black owner of WLOK. Still on air at 83.
Talibah Safiya
Memphis-born soul artist whose 2024 album Black Magic — created as Artist in Residence at the University of Memphis School of Music Business — was named one of NPR's favorite albums of the year. A former board member of Historic Clayborn Temple, she now serves as Narrative and Storytelling Manager at The BIG We, leading arts and cultural programming rooted in community healing.
Earl Randle
Delta-born pianist who spent a decade writing at Willie Mitchell's Hi Records, crafting songs for Al Green, Ann Peebles, Syl Johnson, and Etta James — including the global hit "I'm Gonna Tear Your Playhouse Down." Decades later, he brought that same musicianship to seniors across Memphis through Creative Aging, performing the music of their lives in nursing homes and community centers.
Stan Bell
Began at WDIA at 16 and spent 30+ years as Memphis’s “Bell Ringer” at V101 before returning to the WDIA Morning Show. Simultaneously taught in Shelby County Schools, carrying Nat D.’s tradition forward.
Christie Taylor
Award-winning radio personality whose 30-year career spanned stations from Detroit to Memphis to St. Louis, and who co-wrote the 2010 feature film N-Secure, distributed by 20th Century Fox. Founder of Christie Taylor Consulting and RadioGyrl Media & Film, where she coaches creatives in communication, media, and storytelling.
Deanie Parker
Stax’s first publicist and co-writer of 180 songs, who spent 25 years preserving its legacy as the founding president & CEO of the Soulsville Foundation. Two Grammy Awards in 2024.
Josephine Bridges
Memphis schoolteacher turned co-founder of We Produce Records, leveraging relationships with Don Cornelius, Quincy Jones, and Jet Magazine to champion her artists.
Larry Clark
Founder of UGTV on public access — the only TV outlet for Memphis rap in the early ’90s. Producer of 200+ music videos, 6 feature films, and official production company of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame.
Thomas Bingham
Memphis guitarist and composer whose session work spans four decades of recording, including playing guitar on Otis Rush's Grammy-winning 1998 album Any Place I'm Going — for which he also composed the track "You Fired Yourself." A Booker T. Washington High alumnus, he has remained a fixture in Memphis studios and a mentor to younger musicians throughout his career.
About This Event
The Dowd Awards are more than just a ceremony—they are a celebration of Memphis' enduring legacy of Black excellence in music, service, and storytelling. Named after the trailblazing DJ, journalist, and educator Nat D. Williams, the Dowd Awards honor individuals whose artistry and leadership continue to shape the soul of the city.
Hosted at the National Civil Rights Museum during Black Music Month, the 2026 Dowd Awards uplift a new class of honorees—musicians, creatives, and community leaders who inspire through legacy, mentorship, and movement-building.
2026 Honorees:
Carla Thomas
Memphis soul icon whose debut single helped launch Stax Records. Co-founder of Artists in the Schools and longtime mentor at the Stax Music Academy.
Art Gilliam
Yale-educated pioneer who became Memphis’s first Black TV reporter, first Black columnist, and in 1977 the first Black owner of WLOK. Still on air at 83.
Talibah Safiya
Memphis-born soul artist whose 2024 album Black Magic — created as Artist in Residence at the University of Memphis School of Music Business — was named one of NPR's favorite albums of the year. A former board member of Historic Clayborn Temple, she now serves as Narrative and Storytelling Manager at The BIG We, leading arts and cultural programming rooted in community healing.
Earl Randle
Delta-born pianist who spent a decade writing at Willie Mitchell's Hi Records, crafting songs for Al Green, Ann Peebles, Syl Johnson, and Etta James — including the global hit "I'm Gonna Tear Your Playhouse Down." Decades later, he brought that same musicianship to seniors across Memphis through Creative Aging, performing the music of their lives in nursing homes and community centers.
Stan Bell
Began at WDIA at 16 and spent 30+ years as Memphis’s “Bell Ringer” at V101 before returning to the WDIA Morning Show. Simultaneously taught in Shelby County Schools, carrying Nat D.’s tradition forward.
Christie Taylor
Award-winning radio personality whose 30-year career spanned stations from Detroit to Memphis to St. Louis, and who co-wrote the 2010 feature film N-Secure, distributed by 20th Century Fox. Founder of Christie Taylor Consulting and RadioGyrl Media & Film, where she coaches creatives in communication, media, and storytelling.
Deanie Parker
Stax’s first publicist and co-writer of 180 songs, who spent 25 years preserving its legacy as the founding president & CEO of the Soulsville Foundation. Two Grammy Awards in 2024.
Josephine Bridges
Memphis schoolteacher turned co-founder of We Produce Records, leveraging relationships with Don Cornelius, Quincy Jones, and Jet Magazine to champion her artists.
Larry Clark
Founder of UGTV on public access — the only TV outlet for Memphis rap in the early ’90s. Producer of 200+ music videos, 6 feature films, and official production company of the Memphis Music Hall of Fame.
Thomas Bingham
Memphis guitarist and composer whose session work spans four decades of recording, including playing guitar on Otis Rush's Grammy-winning 1998 album Any Place I'm Going — for which he also composed the track "You Fired Yourself." A Booker T. Washington High alumnus, he has remained a fixture in Memphis studios and a mentor to younger musicians throughout his career.
Location
450 Mulberry Street
Memphis, Tennessee 38103
United States
Date & Time
6:00pm CDT - 8:00pm CDT