Vince Gill and Lainey Wilson Deliver Heartfelt Performance of “Go Rest High on That Mountain” During 2025 Emmys In Memoriam
The 2025 Emmy Awards were filled with glitter, glamour, and the celebration of television’s brightest talents. But the night’s most unforgettable moment came not from the trophies or the speeches, but from a stage bathed in shadows and reverence.
As the ceremony turned to the In Memoriam tribute, the lights dimmed and a hush fell over the Dolby Theatre. Stepping forward together were two voices from the heart of country music — Vince Gill and Lainey Wilson. There were no elaborate sets, no dazzling special effects. Just Vince’s acoustic guitar, a microphone, and a silence waiting to be broken.
The first gentle strum set the tone. Vince Gill, the song’s writer and original performer, began with a voice that carried the weight of both history and heartbreak. “Go Rest High on That Mountain,” written nearly thirty years ago after the death of his brother and fellow artist Keith Whitley, has become an anthem of farewell, sung at funerals, vigils, and moments of national grief. On this night, it became a bridge between television’s past and present, honoring those who had gone.
When Lainey Wilson joined him on the second verse, her voice — smoky, heartfelt, and unshakably tender — wrapped around Vince’s tenor like a prayer. Her harmonies brought freshness and fire to a song already etched into American memory. Together, their voices blended into something greater than music: a plea, a comfort, a reminder that loss is universal, yet so too is love.
As the faces of beloved actors, writers, directors, and creators appeared on the screen behind them, the words carried deeper resonance. The audience inside the theatre bowed their heads, tears shimmering in the glow of candlelit stage lighting. Some stars clasped hands. Others simply closed their eyes. At home, families watching leaned closer to their screens, moved by a song that has helped countless Americans through grief for decades.
By the final chorus, the theatre was utterly still. Lainey’s voice rose with angelic clarity, Vince’s guitar anchored the moment, and the lyrics — “Go rest high on that mountain, son your work on earth is done” — felt less like a performance and more like a collective prayer.
When the last note faded, there was no immediate applause. Only silence — reverent, heavy, sacred — as if the entire room had agreed that some moments are too holy for noise.
For Vince Gill, it was a return to the song that has defined so many of his tributes across the years. For Lainey Wilson, it was a step into a legacy, carrying the torch of country’s ability to speak to life, death, and the spaces in between.
And for everyone watching, it was proof that in the midst of celebration, the most powerful Emmy moment was not scripted, not glamorous, but profoundly human: two voices, one guitar, and a song that continues to lift hearts higher even in the face of loss.