- Today in 1964, Connie Smith signed with RCA Records.
- Today in 1974, “Back Home Again” album by John Denver was certified gold.
- Today in 1989, Garth Brooks made his Grand Ole Opry debut.
- Today in 1991, the “What Do I Do With Me” album by Tanya Tucker was released.
- Today in 1993, three of Alabama’s albums, “American Pride,” “Pass It On Down” and “Southern Star,” were certified platinum simultaneously.
- Today in 1994, Collin Raye topped the country charts with the single, “Little Rock.“
- Today in 1996, George Strait’s “Greatest Hits” album was certified triple platinum.
- Today in 1998, Johnny Cash returned to a Nashville stage and performed for the first time since he was stricken with Shy-Drager Syndrome the preceding October. He joined a surprised Kris Kristofferson, who was singing at a tribute to Johnny and Waylon Jennings at the Ryman Auditorium.
- Today in 1999, the “Evolution” album by Martina McBride was certified double platinum.
- Today in 2000, Dixie Chick Natalie Maines married actor Adrian Pasdar at A Little White Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas following a Chicks concert. To celebrate, the couple hit the casinos and won $740!
- Today in 2007, Reba McEntire and Kelly Clarkson teamed up on “Because Of You,” “Fancy” and “Why Haven’t I Heard From You” as a new edition of “CMT Crossroads” makes its cable debut
- Today in 2008, Tim McGraw pulled a fan on stage while performing “Indian Outlaw” at the White River Amphitheater in Auburn, Washington, kicking him out of the concert for allegedly attacking a female fan. Camera-phone footage is spread across the Internet
- Today in 2009, Jason Aldean picked up a gold album for “Wide Open”
- Today in 2011, Luke Bryan and The Doobie Brothers were paired as a new edition of “CMT Crossroads” debuted. Among the songs in the telecast: “Rain Is A Good Thing,” “Black Water,” “Do I” and “China Grove.”
- Today in 2012, Glen Campbell played the historic Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles during his final tour, threading the set with “Wichita Lineman” and “Galveston.” The date included a tribute from opening acts Kris Kristofferson, Lucinda Williams and Jackson Browne.
- Today in 2016, Thomas Rhett and Nick Jonas were paired as a new installment of “CMT Crossroads” premiered. Danielle Bradbery guested on the episode, which includes versions of Rhett’s hits “Crash And Burn,” “T-Shirt,” “‘Make Me Wanna” and “Die A Happy Man.” They also cover “Rich Girl,” backed by Hall & Oates’ member John Oates.
- Today in 2016, the Dustin Lynch single “Seein’ Red” hit the airwaves.
- Today in 2017, Rascal Flatts crashes a wedding in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, playing “Bless The Broken Road” for the surprised couple’s first dance.
- Today in 2017, Luke Combs debuts at #1 on the Billboard country albums chart with his first album, “This One’s For You.”
- Today in 2017, Kristian Bush performed a free show for military personnel at Fort Benning, Georgia.
- Today in 2019, Lexington Habitat For Humanity revealed it had received a surprise $10,000 donation from Chris and Morgane Stapleton.
- Today in 2020, Travis Denning’s “After A Few” scored a gold single from the RIAA.
- Today in 2020, Vince Gill performed “Go Rest High On That Mountain” and Lee Brice sings “I Drive Your Truck” during a memorial for police officer Destin Legieza at Clearview Baptist Church in Franklin, Tennessee. Legieza died in a two-car crash in the line of duty.
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Alan Jackson Launches New Whiskey
Alan Jackson is getting in the whiskey business. The singer has just launched the new Silverbelly Whiskey, distilled exclusively for, and hand selected by, Jackson himself.
The whiskey, named after his signature cowboy hat, was made in partnership with Silver Screen Bottling Co. & DSP-KY-10. Alan insists it’s made “for the Good Times.”
Those who drink Silverbelly will be met with smells of brown sugar, sweet apple, cherry and honey, with a sweet smooth and spicy taste, featuring fall fruits, and soft caramelized oak tones.
It’s currently available in Tennessee and online here.
Source: Alan Jackson
This day in Country Music History
- Today in 1952, Kitty Wells’ “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels” was released.
- Today in 1956, Ray Price spent the first of 20 weeks at #1 in Billboard magazine with “Crazy Arms.”
- Today in 1979, the Charlie Daniels Band released the single, “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.”
- Today in 1986, Hank Williams Jr.’s “Montana Café” album was released.
- Today in 1988, George Strait’s “Greatest Hits Volume III” album was certified platinum.
- Today in 1992, the album, “Holding My Own,” by George Strait was certified gold.
- Today in 1993, Brooks & Dunn’s “Brand New Man” album was certified triple platinum.
- Today in 1995, Garth Brooks’ album, “The Hits,” was certified for sales of six-million copies.
- Today in 2000, Garth Brooks became one of the first inductees into the newly created Hollywood Bowl Hall of Fame. He was joined by the previously announced honoree, composer John Williams. The pair was celebrated at the Bowl’s Opening Night Gala, as conductor John Mauceri lead the Hollywood Bowl Orchestra in tributes to the inductees. Garth performed with the orchestra in 1994 at a benefit concert and also performed that night.
- Today in 2001, other than celebrating his very first Father’s Day as a daddy, Clint Black also reveled in receiving the Celebrity of the Year award from ALSAC/St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. The honor was in recognition of his many years of devoted support for the organization.
- Today in 2005, Sara Evans’ “A Real Fine Place To Start” video debuted on CMT.
- Today in 2007, Tracy Lawrence collected a #1 single in Billboard for the first time in 11 years with “Find Out Who Your Friends Are”
- Today in 2009, Montgomery Gentry joined the Grand Ole Opry and was officially inducted by Little Jimmy Dickens and Marty Stuart. After the big moment, Stuart and his Fabulous Superlatives backed the duo on “Hillbilly Shoes.”
- Today in 2010, Brad Paisley headlined a concert in the United Kingdom for the first time, playing Shepherds Bush Empire in London.
- Today in 2012, a new edition of “CMT Crossroads” features Joe Walsh and friends: Brad Paisley, Hunter Hayes, Sara Evans, Kenny Chesney, Luke Bryan and ZZ Top’s Billy Gibbons.
- Today in 2015, Kacey Musgraves’ “Pageant Material” album was released.
- Today in 2017, Earth, Wind & Fire performed with Lady Antebellum, Darius Rucker, Sara Evans, Rascal Flatts, Dan + Shay, Drake White and Martina McBride, who joins the band on “Singasong” as the latest installment of “CMT Crossroads” premieres.
- Today in 2018, Dierks Bentley was at #1 on the Billboard country albums chart with “The Mountain.”
- Today in 2018, Craig Morgan received the Outstanding Civilian Service Medal from the U.S. Army during the Army Ball at the Hyatt Regency Hotel in Huntington Beach, California.
- Today in 2018, Big & Rich joined Flo Rida and 3 Doors Down at an early Independence Day celebration for military personnel at Fort Benning, Georgia.
- Today in 2018, Chris Stapleton played a stadium date as an opening act for The Eagles at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. Stapleton’s night includes performances of “Broken Halos,” “Parachute” and “Tennessee Whiskey.” Vince Gill, working with The Eagles, turned in “Don’t Let Our Love Start Slippin’ Away.”
- Today in 2019, Granger Smith performed at Chicago’s Country LakeShake in his first concert since the drowning death of his son 18 days earlier. He performed “Backroad Song,” covered Alabama’s “I’m In A Hurry (And Don’t Know Why)” and brings out Mitchell Tenpenny for a duet on “If The Boot Fits.”
Top Texas cop: Uvalde police response was ‘abject failure’
By JIM VERTUNO and JAKE BLEIBERG
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — The head of the Texas state police pronounced the law enforcement response to the Uvalde school shooting an “abject failure,” telling lawmakers that there were enough officers and firepower on the scene to have stopped the gunman three minutes after he entered the building.
Col. Steve McCraw also said officers would have found the door to the classroom where the assailant was holed up unlocked if they had bothered to check it.
Instead, police with rifles stood in a hallway for over an hour, waiting in part for more weapons and gear, before they finally stormed the classroom and killed the gunman, putting an end to the May 24 attack that left 19 children and two teachers dead.
“I don’t care if you have on flip-flops and Bermuda shorts, you go in,” McCraw, director of the Texas Department of Public Safety, said Tuesday in blistering testimony at a state Senate hearing.
The classroom door, it turned out, could not be locked from the inside by design, according to McCraw, who also said a teacher reported before the shooting that the lock was broken. Yet there is no indication officers tried to open it during the standoff, McCraw said. He said police instead waited for keys.
“I have great reasons to believe it was never secured,” McCraw said of the door. ”How about trying the door and seeing if it’s locked?”
Delays in the law enforcement response at Robb Elementary School have become the focus of federal, state and local investigations. Testimony was scheduled to resume Wednesday.
McCraw lit into Pete Arredondo, the Uvalde school district police chief who McCraw said was in charge, saying: “The only thing stopping a hallway of dedicated officers from entering Room 111 and 112 was the on-scene commander who decided to place the lives of officers before the lives of children.”
Arredondo made “terrible decisions,” said McCraw, who lamented that the police response “set our profession back a decade.”
Arredondo has said he didn’t consider himself the person in charge and assumed someone else had taken control of the law enforcement response. He has declined repeated requests for comment from The Associated Press.
The police chief testified for about five hours Tuesday at a closed-door hearing of a Texas House committee also investigating the tragedy, according to the panel chair.
Senate members hearing the latest details reacted with fury, some decrying Arredondo as incompetent and saying the delay cost lives. Others pressed McCraw on why state troopers on the scene didn’t take charge. McCraw said the troopers did not have legal authority to do so.
The public safety chief presented a timeline that said three officers with two rifles entered the building less than three minutes behind the gunman, an 18-year-old with an AR-15-style semi-automatic rifle. Several more officers entered minutes after that. Two of the officers who went into the hallway early on were grazed by gunfire.
The decision by police to hold back went against much of what law enforcement has learned in the two decades since the Columbine High School shooting in Colorado in which 13 people were killed in 1999, McCraw said.
“You don’t wait for a SWAT team. You have one officer, that’s enough,” he said. He also said officers did not need to wait for shields to enter the classroom. The first shield arrived less than 20 minutes after the shooter entered, according to McCraw.
Eight minutes after the shooter entered, an officer reported that police had a heavy-duty crowbar that they could use to break down the classroom door, McCraw said.
The public safety chief spent nearly five hours offering the clearest picture yet of the massacre, outlining a series of other missed opportunities, communication breakdowns and errors based on an investigation that has included roughly 700 interviews. Among the missteps:
— Arredondo did not have a radio with him.
— Police and sheriff’s radios did not work inside the school. Only the radios of Border Patrol agents on the scene did, and they did not work perfectly.
— Some school diagrams that police used to coordinate their response were wrong.
State police initially said the gunman, Salvador Ramos, entered the school through an exterior door that had been propped open by a teacher. However, McCraw said the teacher had closed the door, but unbeknownst to her, it could be locked only from the outside. The gunman “walked straight through,” McCraw said.
The gunman knew the building well, having attended the fourth grade in the same classrooms where he carried out the attack, McCraw said. Ramos never communicated with police that day, the public safety chief said.
Sen. Paul Bettencourt said the entire premise of lockdown and shooter training is worthless if school doors can’t be locked. “We have a culture where we think we’ve trained an entire school for lockdown … but we set up a condition to failure,” he said.
Bettencourt challenged Arredondo to testify in public and said he should have removed himself from the job immediately. He angrily pointed out that shots were heard while police waited.
“There are at least six shots fired during this time,” he said. “Why is this person shooting? He’s killing somebody. Yet this incident commander finds every reason to do nothing.”
Uvalde Mayor Don McLaughlin said Tuesday that the city has “specific legal reasons” that it’s not answering questions publicly or releasing records. “There is no cover-up,” he said in a statement.
Later in the day, the Uvalde City Council voted unanimously against giving Arredondo, who is a council member, a leave of absence from appearing at public meetings. Relatives of the shooting victims had pleaded with city leaders to instead fire him.
“Please, please, we’re begging you, get this man out of our lives,” said Berlinda Arreola, the grandmother of Amerie Jo Garza.
After the meeting, the mayor pushed back on McCraw’s testimony casting blame on Arredondo, saying that the Department of Public Safety has repeatedly put out false information about the shooting and glossed over the role of its own officers.
He called the Senate hearing a “clown show” and said he heard nothing from McCraw about state troopers’ involvement, even though McLaughlin said their number in the school hallway at points during the slaughter surpassed that of any other law enforcement agency.
Questions about the law enforcement response began days after the massacre. McCraw said three days afterward that Arredondo made “the wrong decision” when he chose not to storm the classroom for more than 70 minutes, even as trapped fourth graders inside two classrooms were desperately calling 911 for help and anguished parents outside the school begged officers to go inside.
An hour after the shooter first crashed his truck outside the school, Arredondo said, according to McCraw’s timeline: “People are going to ask why we’re taking so long. We’re trying to preserve the rest of the life.”
But McCraw said Tuesday that the amount of time that elapsed before officers entered the classroom was “intolerable.”
Police haven’t found any red flags in Ramos’ school disciplinary files but learned through interviews that he engaged in cruelty to animals. “He walked around with a bag of dead cats,” McCraw said.
In the days and weeks after the shooting, authorities gave conflicting and incorrect accounts of what happened. But McCraw assured lawmakers: “Everything I’ve testified today is corroborated.”
McCraw said if he could make just one recommendation, it would be for more training. He also said every state patrol car in Texas should have shields and door-breaching tools.
“I want every trooper to know how to breach and have the tools to do it,” he said.
___
Associated Press writers Jamie Stengle and Terry Wallace in Dallas, John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, and photographer Eric Gay in Austin contributed to this report.
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Find more AP coverage of the Uvalde school shooting: https://apnews.com/hub/uvalde-school-shooting
Iowa man pleads not guilty in deaths of 3,000 feeder hogs
RANDALIA, Iowa (AP) — A northeast Iowa farmer has pleaded not guilty to neglect charges after more than 3,000 feeder hogs died on his property.
Derek David Smith, 41, of Randalia, waived an arraignment and filed a written not guilty plea to one count of livestock neglect on Monday, the Waterloo Cedar Falls Courier reported.
Court records indicate Smith was hired by Valley Farms to care for the hogs. Authorities found more than 3,000 hogs dead at Smith’s confinement operation on June 2, according to court records.
The animals died from lack of feed and another 200 hogs had to be euthanized for health reasons, according to the records.
Smith’s trial is tentatively set for August in Fayette County District Court in West Union.
The charge is a serious misdemeanor punishable by up to a year in jail and a $2,560 fine.
Ottumwa seeks applicants for human rights commission
The City of Ottumwa is now accepting applications for its Human Rights Commission. The Commission will consist of nine members serving three year terms beginning July 1. The Mayor and City Council will have the final say on who is approved for the Commission. You can ask for an application from the Mayor’s office or on the first floor at Ottumwa City Hall. Or you can get an online application at www.ottumwa.us.
Small plane makes emergency landing near Sully
A small plane had to make an emergency landing Tuesday (6/21) north of Sully. The Jasper County Sheriff’s Office tells the No Coast Network it received a call at 11am about a pilot and his passenger reporting an emergency landing of their aircraft. The plane landed in a bean field west of County Road T-38 and south of South 48th Avenue East. The plane’s pilot, James Meyer of Illinois, said he was flying from Illinois to Ankeny when his plane ran out of gas. No one was injured and the plane wasn’t damaged. After going through emergency protocols with the Sheriff’s Office and FAA, Meyer was allowed to refuel his plane and continue his trip. The FAA is investigating.
Kacey Musgraves Covers ‘Can’t Help Falling In Love With You’ For ‘Elvis’ Soundtrack
Kacey Musgraves is one of the many artists on the soundtrack to Baz Luhrmann’s “Elvis” biopic. The singer covers the Elvis Presley classic, “Can’t Help Falling In Love With You.”
The soundtrack of the Baz Luhrmann’s highly anticipated film includes “original songs and recordings by Elvis Aaron Presley,” along with music from Chris Isaak, Eminem and CeeLo Green, Stevie Nicks, Gary Clark, Jr., Jack White, Maneskin, Jazmine Sullivan, Pnau, Tame Impala, Swae Lee and Diplo, and Yola, as well as the film’s star Austin Butler, actor Kodi Smit-McPhee and more.
Baz Luhrmann’s “Elvis,” starring Butler and Tom Hanks, hits theaters June 24th. The soundtrack drops the same day.
This day in Country Music History
- Today in 1951, MGM releases Hank Williams’ “Hey, Good Lookin'”
- Today in 1977, Kenny Rogers’ single, “Lucille,” was certified gold.
- Today in 1995, “The Woman in Me” album by Shania Twain was certified platinum.
- Today in 1998, the Dixie Chicks’ album, “Wide Open Spaces” was certified gold.
- Today in 1999, George Jones’ “Cold Hard Truth” album was released.
- Today in 2000, Wynonna was officially divorced from her first husband, Arch Kelley.
- Today in 2001, Lonestar’s single, “I’m Already There” was at #1 on “Radio & Records’” Country Top 50 chart.
- Today in 2001, New York City’s Mayor Rudy Guiliani declared June 22nd as “Reba McEntire Day” as Reba ended her triumphant run as Annie Oakley in the Broadway revival of “Annie Get Your Gun.”
- Today in 2002, Joe Diffie, Mark Chesnutt and Tracy Lawrence kicked off their “Rockin’ Roadhouse Tour” in Fargo, North Dakota.
- Today in 2005, Toby Keith’s I Love This Bar & Grill opens in Oklahoma City. The singer was on hand for an opening-day ribbon-cutting ceremony.
- Today in 2006, Josh Turner’s “Would You Go With Me” video premiered on CMT along with Brooks & Dunn’s “Building Bridges” featuring Vince Gill and Sheryl Crow
- Today in 2011, Glen Campbell revealed in “People” magazine that he had been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease. Despite the issues it posed in remembering lyrics, he launched and completed a farewell concert tour that was documented in the film, “I’ll Be Me.”
- Today in 2014, Justin Moore performed “Lettin’ The Night Roll” in a surprise appearance during Blake Shelton’s concert at Little Rock’s Verizon Arena.
- Today in 2017, Sam Hunt’s “Montevallo” album went triple-platinum.
- Today in 2018, Dan + Shay’s self-titled album was released.
- Today in 2019, Lady A played a free show for soldiers stationed at Fort Polk, Louisiana.
- Today in 2019, Luke Combs’ EP “The Prequel” debuted at #1 on the “Billboard” country albums chart.
- Today in 2019, Easton Corbin performs the first of six free concerts for enlisted men and women, launching the tour at Lauglin Air Force Base in Del Rio, Texas.
- Today in 2019, the mayor of Shreveport extended a formal apology to singer Carla Cooke for the city’s treatment of her father, Sam Cooke, who was jailed in 1963 when he protested a motel refusing to accommodate him because he was Black. Cooke wrote the country hits “Good Times” and “Bring It On Home To Me.”
- Today in 2021, Reba McEntire’s Grand Ole Opry performance of “Is There Life Out There” is shot by NBC for “Macy’s Fourth Of July Fireworks Spectacular.”
- Today in 2021, Brad Paisley and wife Kimberly Williams-Paisley joined First Lady Jill Biden as she conducts a vaccine promotion event in downtown Nashville.
Chris Stapleton Launches Charity Sweepstakes For Pilgrimage Festival
Chris Stapleton is set to headline the Pilgrimage Festival, and now he’s giving one fan a chance to win a VIP experience at the fest, and it’s all for a good cause.
Chris has launched a sweepstakes through Fandiem, where one lucky fan and a guest will win an all-expense paid VIP trip to the fest, which goes down September 24th and 25th in Franklin, Tennessee. The package includes VIP passes and express entry, as well as stage front viewing, access to the VIP pavilion, roundtrip travel and a three-night hotel stay, a ground transportation stipend and more. The winner will also get a signed Stapleton Gibson ES-335 vintage burst guitar.
Fans can donate as little as $10 to enter for a chance to win the grand prize, with proceeds going to Chris’ Outlaw State of Kind charity. Click here to enter.
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