Today in 1965, the Statler Brothers recorded “Flowers On The Wall” at the Columbia Recording Studios in Nashville, a session originally for Johnny Cash who never appeared.
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First Performers Set For ACM Awards, Show Will Go On Despite Coronavirus
The ACM Awards are happening next month and the first round of performers have now been announced.
Keith Urban will do double duty as both host and performer, while Miranda Lambert is confirmed to perform her Music Event of the Year nominated song “Fooled Around and Fell In Love” with Lindsay Ell, Caylee Hammack, Elle King, Ashley McBryde and Tenille Townes.
The 55th Annual ACM Awards will air April 5th on CBS, live from the MGM Garden Arena in Las Vegas.
ONE MORE THING! With so many concerts and events being canceled due to the coronavirus, ACM has assured folks they plan to go on with the show. “We are closely monitoring the situation along with the MGM team, who are in continuous contact with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Southern Nevada Health District, and other agencies and experts for guidance,” reads a statement from the ACM. “We will take every precaution to ensure the safety of our artists, staff, crew, guests and attendees.”
Source: ACM
This day in 1975: George Jones and Tammy Wynette part ways
On this day in 1975, George Jones and Tammy Wynette’s divorce was finalized. Wynette took custody of their only child, Tamala and kept their home on Franklin Road in Nashville.
Zac Brown Band Postpone Spring Tour Due To Coronavirus Outbreak
Zac Brown Band is joining the growing list of artists canceling shows due to the coronavirus outbreak. The band just announced they are pressing pause on their “Owl Tour,” which kicked off on February 28th.
“Out of caution and due to increasing public health concerns, Zac Brown Band is postponing the spring 2020 leg of “The Owl Tour,” they share on Instagram. “This was an extremely difficult decision, but the well-being of our fans is always our top priority.”
The band added that rescheduled dates will be announced soon and that currently their summer “Roar With The Lions” Tour is scheduled to go on as planned.
In total, 13 dates of the tour have been affected. Their next show was supposed to happen tomorrow in Missouri.
Today in 1994, Neal McCoy scores his first number one
Today in 1994, Neal McCoy scored his first number one single with “No Doubt About It.”
Written by John Scott Sherrill and Steve Seskin, it was released in December 1993 as the first single and title track from his album No Doubt About It. McCoy’s rendition was his breakthrough single release, becoming his first Number One country hit in early 1994.
Reba McEntire To Kick Off Her First Headlining Tour Since 2011
Reba McEntire is set to kick off her first headlining tour since 2011 on March 20th, and she’s excited to get back out on the road. The tour, which features opener and fellow redhead Caylee Hammack, should be a fun time, with Reba promising, “new costumes, new staging, new lighting, video.”
She adds, “we’ve been having a blast,” noting, “I hope everybody comes out and enjoys it as much as we are.”
Reba’s tour kicks off March 20th in Evansville, Indiana.
This day in 1979: James Brown plays the Grand Ole Opry
Today in 1979, invited by Porter Wagoner, legendary R&B star James Brown played the Grand Ole Opry. His 17-minute set consisted of “Your Cheatin’ Heart” and “Tennessee Waltz.” Some Opry members complained, but Barbara Mandrell said he should’ve been invited to perform five years earlier.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eeteB7EPlJE
Garth Brooks To Help Say Goodbye To “Austin City Limits” Studio
Garth Brooks is set to perform help say goodbye to “Austin City Limits'” famed Studio 6A. The show has filmed at the iconic studio on the University of Texas, Austin campus for 50 years, but is now moving to a new Austin Community College Highland Campus in Fall of 2020
Austin PBS’s “Farewell to Studio 6A: An Evening with Garth Brooks” will take place May 24th. The event will be a benefit for Austin PBS’s Moving Forward capital campaign for the new location.
Austin City Limits is an American public television music program recorded live in Austin, Texas, by PBS member television station KLRU, and broadcast on many PBS stations around the United States. The show helped Austin to become widely known as the “Live Music Capital of the World”, and is the only television show to receive the National Medal of Arts, which it was awarded in 2003. It also won a rare institutional Peabody Award in 2011 “for its more than three decades of presenting and preserving eclectic American musical genres.”
Source: Wikipedia
This day in 1974: The Ryman Auditorium hosts the Grand Ole Opry for the last time
Today in 1974, the last Saturday night performance of the Grand Ole Opry at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium was held as the show moved the new Opryland. The Ryman had been home to the show since 1941.
Ryman Auditorium was included in the National Register of Historic Places in 1971 and was later designated a National Historic Landmark on June 25, 2001, for its pivotal role in the popularization of country music.
The auditorium opened as the Union Gospel Tabernacle in 1892. Its construction was spearheaded by Thomas Ryman (1843–1904), a Nashville businessman who owned several saloons and a fleet of riverboats. Ryman conceived the idea of the auditorium as a tabernacle for the influential revivalist Samuel Porter Jones. He had attended one of Jones’ 1885 tent revivals with the intent to heckle, but was instead converted into a devout Christian who pledged to build the tabernacle so the people of Nashville could attend large-scale revivals indoors. It took seven years to complete and cost $100,000 (equivalent to $2,845,556 in 2019).
After debuting in 1925, the local country music radio program known as the Grand Ole Opry (originally called the WSM Barn Dance) became a Nashville institution. Broadcast over AM radio station WSM, it could be heard in 30 states across the eastern part of the nation. Although not originally a stage show, the Opry began to attract listeners from around the region who would go to the WSM studio to see it live. When crowds got too large for the studio, WSM began broadcasting the show from the Hillsboro Theatre (now Belcourt Theatre) in 1934. The Opry moved to East Nashville’s Dixie Tabernacle in 1936 and then to War Memorial Auditorium in 1939.
After four years – and several reports of upholstery damage caused by its rowdy crowds – the Opry was asked to leave War Memorial and sought a new home yet again. Thanks to its wooden pews and central location, Ryman leaders thought the auditorium would be a perfect venue for such an audience and began renting the venue to WSM for its shows. The Grand Ole Opry was first broadcast from the Ryman on June 5, 1943, and originated there every week for nearly 31 years thereafter. Every show sold out, and hundreds of fans were often turned away.
During its tenure at Ryman Auditorium, the Opry hosted the biggest country music stars of the day and became a show known around the world. In addition to its home on WSM, portions of the show (at various times throughout its history) were also broadcast on network radio and television to a wider audience. Melding its then-current usage with the building’s origins as a house of worship, the Ryman got the nickname “The Mother Church of Country Music”, which it still holds to this day.
WSM financed minor upgrades to the Opry House in 1966 to maintain its functionality, but soon began making plans to move the Opry to a new location altogether. Despite the building’s deteriorating condition, the lack of air conditioning, and the abundance of unsavory surroundings in its urban neighborhood, the show’s increasing popularity often resulted in crowds too large to fit inside the venue. Plans announced in 1969 centered around a larger, custom-built auditorium that would provide a more controlled and comfortable atmosphere for audiences and performers alike, as well as better radio and television production facilities. The company purchased a large tract of land in a then-rural area a few miles away, and the new Opry theater served as the anchor of a grand entertainment complex. The development became known as Opryland USA and eventually included the Opryland theme park and the Opryland Hotel.
The amusement park opened on May 27, 1972, and the new venue (also called the Grand Ole Opry House) debuted on Saturday, March 16, 1974. The final shows at the Ryman were emotional. Sarah Cannon, performing as Minnie Pearl, broke character and cried on stage. In an effort to maintain continuity with the Opry’s storied past, a large circle was cut from the floor of the Ryman stage and inlaid into the center of the new Opry stage. In another traditional holdover, the new Opry House was also designed to feature pew seating, although (unlike the Ryman) they are cushioned.
Eventually and without fanfare, the building resumed using the Ryman Auditorium name to differentiate it from the new Grand Ole Opry House.
Source: Wikipedia
Country Artists Continue To Help With Tornado Relief Efforts
The country community continues to do their part to help out those affected by the tornados that hit Nashville and other parts of Tennessee earlier this week.
Yesterday, CMT teamed with the American Red Cross to host a telethon with artist like Charles Kelly, Dave Haywood, Kid Rock, Travis Denning Blanco Brown, Cassadee Pope and Gavin DeGraw, among others lending their support, with all proceeds going to relief efforts.
Taylor Swift donated $1 million to the the Middle Tennessee Emergency Response Fund.
Dan + Shay also opened their wallets to help the tornado relief efforts, donating $100,000 to The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee. “We are heartbroken by the devastation the tornadoes left upon Tennessee earlier this week,” they share. “We are so proud to call Nashville our home, and have seen first hand that this community is strong, resilient, and compassionate.”
They add, “What this town does best in times of need, is come together.” The duo’s tour starts tonight at Bridgestone Arena and they share, “through the power of music, we will all unite to celebrate the spirit of our incredible city.”
LeeAnn Womack shared on Twitter that she was dropping off supplies, like blankets, noting other things that were needed include Flashlights, batteries, hygiene items and more.
Nashville is obviously a big music town, and Gibson is pitching in to help out those who may have lost instruments in the devastation. They have pledged to donate guitars to any musician that lost theirs. They need to apply to the Gibson Gives Guitar Recovery Plan via email, to donation.request@gibson.com, with details of their situation.
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