Showing posts with label hall of fame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hall of fame. Show all posts

Thursday, June 18, 2015

#CMAFEST2015 - *EXCLUSIVE PHOTOS* - THE COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME AND MUSEUM: HISTORY IN THE MAKING

The Rotunda
Photo credit: Jason Evans Photography / Lovin Lyrics Music Promotions

The week of the CMA Music Festival is always a busy week for the city of Nashville as well as the Country Music Hall of Fame. This year's inductees included The Oak Ridge Boys, the late Jim Ed Brown and The Browns and guitarist Grady Martin. Jim Ed Brown was scheduled to appear at this year's festival, however a relapse of  lung cancer would claim the life of this revered and much loved larger than life artist and instead, the Hall of Fame would mourn his passing and celebrate his life and esteemed career.

On Friday, June 12,  I had the pleasure to be able to photograph and view the many different exhibits and events the Hall of Fame had offer during this amazing week of country music. This country music history would be viewed by thousands of fans coming from every corner of the world during the week. Much to my surprise, I unexpectly began the day by being a part of a  private Luke Bryan fan club party, which was held in the CMA Theater, an 800 seat capacity venue for live performances and special events. As the lights dimmed, the stage lights came on and Luke's band took their places to cheers from the crowd as Luke peeked his head out toward the crowd as a teaser before he taking his place on stage. The set list for this special private fan club party which was also being filmed, included: "I See You", a new song entitled "Fast", "Play It Again", "Kick the Dust Up", and "I Don't Want This Night To End". The fans were ecstatic to see their favorite artist in such an up close and intimate setting in which only the Country Music Hall of Fame can provide.

The Country Music Hall of Fame provided fans with the opportunity to meet many of their favorite Hall of Fame members and country music superstars as part of CMA Fest. This year's artists included newcomer Jason Michael Carroll,  the band Lonestar, Hall of Fame members Charley Pride and Brenda Lee and the newest Hall inductees The Oak Ridge Boys. All fans had to do to be able to meet their favorite artist was to purchase their latest book or CD and they received a voucher for the autograph signing as well.

The Hall of Fame also expanded their activities onto the Fan Fair X Exhibit Hall's CMA Closeup stage, located in Music City Center. On this stage, The Oak Ridge Boys participated in an hour long interview with emcee Keith Bilbrey. The Oaks spoke of the new trends in country music in which artists are drinking on stage and would mention that they got their fame on the music and not by drinking and swearing onstage. The Oak Ridge Boys are some of the classiest guys in the business and it comes out in their interviews, performances and meet and greets. They are open about their faith and can belt out a gospel tune like no other. William Lee Golden spoke of himself and his family and went into great depth on the musical endeavors of his children. Richard Sterban, who is best known for his rafter rattling bass vocals talked with Bilbrey about his experiences with the group through the years. Joe Bonsall discussed many things, including his love for his cats and his newly penned book entitled "On the Road with The Oak Ridge Boys: 40 Years of Untold Stories & Adventure" and Duane Allen spoke of his fondest memories as a member of the legendary group and also brought focus to the legacy of Jim Ed Brown while being joined in by the rest of the Oak Ridge Boys on their memories of the great Country Music Hall of Famer. Jim Ed Brown sadly lost his long fight with cancer and passed away the day before the interview.

When touring the hall of fame, fans will encounter various exhibits that run at different times of the year. Some of the exhibits that I encountered while touring the hall of fame included Luke Bryan's "Dirt Road Diary" exhibit, Kenny Rogers' "Through The Years" exhibit, "Dylan, Cash and The Nashville Cats: A New Music City" exhibit, Alan Jackson's "25 Years of Keepin' It Country" exhibit, "Sing Me Back Home: Folk Roots to the Present" exhibit, Ronnie Milsap's "A Legend in My Time" exhibit and many displays of country music historical artifacts. Other items of interest on display included an automobile which was owned by Webb Pierce, the Hee Haw television show's cornfield set with Hee Haw memorabilia and outfits, many star owned and personally played instruments and worn outfits and even the black Trans Am driven by Burt Reynolds in "Smokey and the Bandit".
To view what exhibits you would be able to experience on your tour of the Hall of Fame, please visit http://countrymusichalloffame.org/Exhibits/exhibits-list-page .

If you are an avid country music/history fan, you will want to reserve a minimum  of 3-4 hours to enjoy everything the Hall of Fame has to offer. One can easily spend an entire day to take in all of the sights, sounds and history of the business. The Hall of Fame is country music history from the beginning and it will continue to provide a look into the future of the business through out the years to come.
































Contributor / Photographer: Jason Evans
Follow Jason on Twitter at @J_EvansPhotos

Monday, May 13, 2013

APA NASHVILLE HONORS LEE GREENWOOD

Greenwood celebrates Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum spotlight exhibit,
30th Anniversary of "God Bless The USA" and 2013 CMA Music Festival performance
 
Pictured (from L-R):
APA Nashville's Steve Lassiter, Lee Greenwood's manager Jerry Bentley, Lee Greenwood, Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum Director Kyle Young, APA Nashville's Bonnie Sugarman and Ray Shelide

Nashville, Tenn. (May 13, 2013) -- APA Nashville salutes Lee Greenwood upon the opening of the country music legend’s spotlight exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum, the 30th anniversary of his iconic heartfelt anthem, "God Bless The USA," and his return to CMA Music Festival with a performance in June. The Lee Greenwood: American Patriot spotlight exhibit, which opened last Friday at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum and will run through April 25, 2014, is housed within the museum's permanent third floor exhibit and will feature Greenwood’s personal costumes and memorabilia spanning the 50 years of his extraordinary career.


Greenwood's work with the armed forces includes more than 30 USO tours, which resulted in his being honored with the prestigious National Patriot’s Award presented by the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. In November 2008, President George W. Bush appointed Lee to a six-year term as a council member on the National Endowment for the Arts.

"Lee is an American musical icon," commented APA Nashville’s Steve Lassiter. "His talents, integrity and unwavering commitment to our military, both active and retired, is nothing less than stellar."

Greenwood is also celebrating the 30th anniversary of his signature song, "God Bless The USA," which became a Top 10 Country hit in 1984, earning him the CMA Song of the Year Award in 1985. Produced by Jerry Crutchfield, this American tribute to patriotism remains one of our country's most popular and recognizable anthems.

As he continues to tour on a regular basis, Greenwood will return to the CMA Music Festival next month with a performance on Sunday evening, June 9, at LP Field.

Saturday, November 24, 2012

EXAMINER.COM ARTICLE - Museum Launches Holiday Programs With Tree Lighting, Craig Morgan Performance


Craigh Morgan will help the Country Music Hall of Fame ignite its 2012 holiday programming on Nov. 23, 2012, with a performance.

Black Friday is the official kick off to Christmas for the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, whose reps have a full slate of "Deck the Hall" activities and programming in store for visitors.

On Friday, Nov. 23, the museum will launch its holiday festivities, with the lighting of the museum’s Christmas tree. Plus, country star and award-winning TV-host Craig Morgan will also be on hand to lead the merriment and perform.

The museum will also feature Christmas-themed performances from Brazilbilly (Dec. 1), Rosie Flores (Dec. 15) and David Ball (Dec. 22). Moreover, family activities will be plentiful in the weeks ahead, including photos with Santa Claus on Nov. 24, Dec. 1, Dec. 8 and Dec. 15; and holiday cookie decorating, presented by Two Twenty-Two Grill & Catering staff, on Dec. 1. 

On Dec. 15, Hatch Show Print staff will offer one of the museum’s most popular family programs, "Make Letterpress Art with Hatch Show Print." Young people aged five to 18 will be able to design their own holiday cards using wood blocks from the Hatch archive.

According to information from museum officials, many programs are free; others are included with museum admission and free to museum members. More details and a comprehensive list of all museum holiday-themed programs and events are below.

Friday, November 23

Tree Lighting, performance and CD signing with Craig Morgan at 4 p.m. Join Morgan for the museum’s tree lighting festivities and a free performance, followed by a signing of his CD, "This Ole Boy."

Saturday, November 24

Photos with Santa Claus at 11 a.m.–2 p.m.
Children are invited to share their Christmas lists with Santa and pose for a photo. Free.
(Note: Timed passes are available in 15-minute increments. Pass pick-up begins at 9 a.m. that morning.Museum members may reserve their passes in advance.For more information about this and other benefits of museum membership, please access this link.

Sunday, Nov. 25

Film Screening: "Purina Grand Ole Opry: Christmas Show" (1955) at 2 p.m.

Grand Ole Opry friends and family gather to sing and laugh around the Christmas tree in this television show shot at the Ryman Auditorium. Eddy Arnold, Little Jimmy Dickens, Anita Kerr, Minnie Pearl, Carl Smith and many others make appearances. Free.

Saturday, Dec. 1

Holiday Cookie Decorating with Two Twenty-Two Grill & Catering at 10 a.m.
Children and adults of all ages are invited to decorate holiday cookies with guidance from Two Twenty-Two Grill & Catering staff. Free.

Photos with Santa Claus at 11 a.m.–2 p.m.
Children are invited to share their Christmas lists with Santa and pose for a photo. Free.

Concert: "Honky-Tonk Holiday with Brazilbilly" at 2 p.m.

Brazilbilly has been the house band at Robert’s Western World on Lower Broadway for more than a decade. Fronted by Jesse Lee Jones, the band continues the tradition of performing the raucous, danceable country music made popular in honky-tonk bars in the 1950s and 1960s.

In this family-friendly concert, the band will perform classic country Christmas songs as well as favorites from their extensive barroom repertoire. Included with museum admission and free to museum members. Limited seating. Program pass required.

Sunday, Dec. 2

Film Screening: "National Life Grand Ole Opry" (1968) and "Bill Anderson’s Country Christmas" (1968) at 2 p.m.

This full-color, televised episode of the "National Life Grand Ole Opry" features lots of sparkle and twang with performances by Archie Campbell, Grandpa Jones, Dolly Parton, Porter Wagoner, Dottie West and others. 29 minutes. Then join Bill Anderson in a musical Christmas party with his friends Lynn Anderson, Don Bowman, Jim Ed Brown, Jan Howard and others. Fifty-two minutes; free.

Friday, Dec. 7

WSM-AM’s "Coffee, Country, Cody and Christmas" at 7-10 a.m.
Visitors are invited to attend a special breakfast and live performances for just $6.50, as Bill Cody broadcasts live from the museum’s Curb Conservatory. Guest artists include David Ball, Donna Ulisse & the Poor Mountain Boys and others. Tickets are available at countrymusichalloffame.org or at the door that morning.

Saturday, Dec. 8

Photos with Santa Claus at 11 a.m.–2 p.m.
Children are invited to share their Christmas lists with Santa and pose for a photo. Free.

Family Program: Embellished Instruments at 12:30 p.m.
Create your own custom miniature instrument inspired by the artifacts in the museum. Choose a wooden cutout of a banjo, guitar, mandolin or upright bass; decorate it with color, rhinestones and glitter; then turn it into a magnet, key chain or holiday ornament. Free.

Sunday, Dec. 9

Film Screening: "A Country Christmas" (1978) at 2 p.m.
This made-for-TV Christmas special is hosted by Minnie Pearl and features performances by Lynn Anderson, Roy Clark, Loretta Lynn, the Oak Ridge Boys, Roy Rogers and Dale Evans and others. Sixty minutes; free.

Saturday, Dec.15

Photos with Santa Claus at 11 a.m.–2 p.m. 
Children are invited to share their Christmas lists with Santa and pose for a photo. Free..

Family Program: "Make Letterpress Art with Hatch Show Print" at 11 a.m.
Learn about letterpress printing from the staff of Hatch Show Print, one of the oldest working letterpress print shops in the U.S. Use block images to make your own holiday card or T-shirt. Paper provided. Participants should bring their own T-shirts. For ages 5 to 18. Free.

Concert: "Rosie Flores in Christmasville" at 2 p.m.
Singer, songwriter and guitarist Rosie Flores will play songs from her catalog as well as holiday tunes from her "Christmasville" album. This program is included with museum admission and free for museum members. Limited seating; program pass required.

Sunday, Dec. 16

Film Screening: "A Statler Christmas Present" (1985) at 2 p.m.
The Statler Brothers host a Christmas special full of music, humor and stories of their Christmas memories. Special guests include Gene Autry, Crystal Gayle, Merle Haggard and Roger Miller. Fifty minutes; free.

Saturday, Dec. 22

Songwriter Session: David Ball at 11:30 a.m.
David Ball has recorded seven studio albums, including his platinum debut, "Thinkin’ Problem." Artists who have recorded Ball’s songs include Diamond Rio, Lyle Lovett, Ronnie Milsap and others.

Ball will perform songs from his catalog as well as a selection of holiday tunes.This program is included with museum admission and free for museum members. Limited seating; program pass required.

Sunday, Dec. 23

Film Screening: "Marty’s Christmas Party" (1996) at 2 p.m.
Marty Stuart hosted several specials on TNN in the 1990s. His Christmas edition of the Marty Party includes performances by Stuart, as well as BR5-49, Little Jimmy Dickens, Joe Diffie, Willie Nelson and Connie Smith. Forty-five minutes; free.

Sunday, Dec. 30

Film Screening: "The Heaven and Earth Show: Dolly Parton New Year Special" (2001) at 2 p.m. This is an episode of the BBC television series focusing on spiritual and moral issues. Host Ross Kelly shows British viewers around Nashville and interviews Parton about the influence of religion and spirituality in her life.

The film includes vintage musical performances spanning Parton’s career. Several scenes are filmed in and around the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Chely Wright also performs. Sixty minutes; free.

Admission info: Visitors who present a Tennessee driver’s license or Tennessee college ID Nov. 23–Dec. 31 will receive $5 off of the purchase of an adult general admission ticket.

All holiday-themed programs are included with museum admission and free to museum members except as noted. A complete schedule of "Deck the Hall" activities can be found here.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

KENNY ROGERS SELECTED AS 2012 ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE AT THE COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME® AND MUSEUM

Intimate Ford Theater Performances on May 9 and 10 Will Mark the 10th Anniversary of the Museum’s Annual Residency Program


NASHVILLE, Tenn., March 29, 2012 – Legendary entertainer Kenny Rogers will bring his signature soulful voice, his catalog of hits and the stories behind the music when he takes the Ford Theater stage as the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum’s 2012 Artist-in-Residence. Rogers will present two intimate evening performances on May 9 and 10 at 7:00 p.m.

Established in 2003, the museum’s residency program annually honors a musical master who can be credited with contributing a large and significant body of work to the canon of American popular music. Honorees are given a blank canvas—the museum’s acoustically pristine, 213-seat Ford Theater—and are encouraged to lend their own creative brushstrokes to an up-close-and-personal musical experience. Previous honorees include Cowboy Jack Clement, Earl Scruggs, Tom T. Hall, Guy Clark, Kris Kristofferson, Jerry Douglas, Vince Gill, Buddy Miller and Connie Smith.

“Kenny Rogers is the consummate entertainer,” said Museum Director Kyle Young. “As a member of a band or duo or as a solo artist, he has conquered the jazz, folk, pop and country worlds—not to mention his success as an actor and photographer. Kenny has the gift of telling stories and making you believe he lived them. We are thrilled that he will help us celebrate the 10th anniversary of our Artist-in-Residence program by bringing his stories and songs to the Ford Theater for two unique shows.”

Known for instantly identifiable, sweetly raspy vocals and an ability to vividly inhabit each song he performs, Kenny Rogers has sold more than 120 million records worldwide and recorded more than 65 albums during his storied career. He has charted a record in each of the last seven decades, including 12 #1 albums. His long list of hits includes 21 #1 songs, among them “The Gambler,” “Lady,” “Lucille,” “Coward of the County,” “She Believes in Me,” “Islands in the Stream” (with Dolly Parton) and “Every Time Two Fools Collide” (with Dottie West). Two of Rogers’ albums, The Gamblerand Kenny, are featured in the About.com poll of “The 200 Most Influential Country Albums Ever,” and his Greatest Hitsalbum has sold over 24 million copies worldwide. He is the RIAA’s eighth best-selling male artist of all time with one diamond album, 19 platinum albums and 31 gold albums. He has earned three Grammy awards, five Country Music Association awards and eight Academy of Country Music awards including Entertainer of the Year in 1978. Rogers still tours and records new music.

Born in Houston,Kenny Rogers formed his first band while in high school in 1956. The rockabilly group, the Scholars, got a record deal and released two singles. “That Crazy Feeling,” a solo record by Kenny released as Kenneth Rogers on Kix Records in 1957(and picked up by Carlton Records in 1958) led to a performance onAmerican Bandstand. Soon afterward, Rogers joined the Bobby Doyle Three, playing stand-up bass in the jazz band, and appearing on their Columbia Records album.
In 1966 he became a member of popular folk group theNew Christy Minstrels, leaving a year later to form the First Edition with New Christy Minstrels bandmateMike Settle and Thelma Camacho, Mickey Jones and Terry Williams. The group signed with Reprise Records. Their first hit, Mickey Newbury’s psychedelic “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In),” went to #5 on the BillboardHot 100 chart. After a few more tries at chart success, the band billed themselves as Kenny Rogers and the First Edition. They released “Ruby (Don’t Take Your Love to Town),” written by future Country Music Hall of Fame member Mel Tillis. “Ruby” was a pop and country crossover hit and broke the Top 10 in 1969. They enjoyeddouble-genre popularityagain with “Ruben James.”
For the next couple of years, Kenny Rogers and the First Edition enjoyed mild Top 40 success. From 1971–73, the band hosted their own TV series, Rollin’ on the River. The rock, blues and folk-oriented variety show included musical guests such as Jim Croce, Bo Diddley, Ronnie Hawkins and Ike and Tina Turner. By the mid-1970s, the First Edition had run its course, and its members, ready to pursue solo careers, parted ways.

Rogers began his solo career at United Artists Records. After a string of modest hits, he struck country gold with the heartbreaking single “Lucille” from his self-titled album. The 1977 Grammy-winning song topped the country charts, reached the Top Five on the pop charts, and was named the CMA Single of the Year. “Lucille” was followed by “Daytime Friends,” “Sweet Music Man” and “Love or Something Like It.”

Rogers’ next album, named for a song about a down-and-out drifter with advice for a weary traveler, was released in 1978. “The Gambler,” written by a then-unknown songwriter named Don Schlitz, would become Rogers’ career song and spawn five TV movies starring Rogers as ‘The Gambler.’ The song spurred him to a 1979 Best Male Country Vocal Performance Grammy award and to 1979 CMA Album of the Year (The Gambler) and Male Vocalist of the Year honors.The five Gamblermini-series, which attracted over 100 million viewers nationwide, also started Rogers on a second career as an actor on television andinmovies, including aTV movie based on anotherof his #1 hit songs, “Coward of the County.”
Rogers’ run of chart smashes continued with “She Believes in Me” (1979), “Coward of the County” (1979) and the Lionel Richie ballad “Lady” (1980). “Lady” was a #1 country hit and a pop crossover sensation, spending six weeks atop the pop charts. His 1980 hit “Love the World Away” appeared on the Urban Cowboy soundtrack.

Known almost as well for his duets as his solo works, Rogers continually topped the charts in the 1970s and ’80s with his collaborations. He recorded a string of hits with frequent partner Dottie West, including “Every Time Two Fools Collide” (1978), “All I Ever Need Is You” (1979)and “What Are We Doin’ in Love” (1981). The pair won Vocal Duo of the Year at the 1978 and 1979 CMA Awards. Rogers recorded “Don’t Fall in Love with a Dreamer” with his fellow New Christy Minstrels alum Kim Carnes in 1980. In 1983, he partnered with Dolly Parton for one of the most popular duets in music history: “Islands in the Stream” earned them ACM Single and Top Vocal Duo awards that year.

In 1985, Rogers participated in the historic recording of “We Are the World,” the multi-celebrity performance which raised millions of dollars for famine relief in Africa. A year later, he co-chaired the “Hands Across America” fund-raiser for America’s hungry.

By the end of the 1980s, pop and country music had begun to change, and Rogers’ chart success began to ebb. “Tomb of the Unknown Love” (1986) and “Make No Mistake, She’s Mine” (1987), a duet with Ronnie Milsap, were Rogers’ last chart toppers for more than a decade.

Through the late 1980s and early ’90s, Rogers revealed himself to be a man of many interests. He proved to be a gifted photographer with the publication of several photography books, andwas even invited to the White House to shoot a portrait of First Lady Hillary Clinton. He also authored several short stories, and appeared off-Broadway in his Christmas musical, The Toy Shoppe,which he subsequently toured.

After forming his own record company, Dreamcatcher Entertainment, in the late 1990s, Rogers returned to the country charts with “The Greatest,” another Schlitz-penned tune. The follow-up, “Buy Me a Rose,” went to #1 in 2000. Rogers proved he was still relevant to 21st century country music with his critically acclaimed Water & Bridges (Capitol Nashville, 2006), which included the single “I Can’t Unlove You.” Produced by Dann Huff (Keith Urban, Faith Hill), the album put Rogers back on the charts and further solidifiedhis significance and long-term viability in the music world. In 2010, Rogers celebrated his 50th anniversary in music by taping the star-studded television special Kenny Rogers: The First 50 Years,which aired on the Great American CountryTelevision Network(GAC).
In March 2011, Rogers released his first gospel album, The Love of God. The acclaimed release became his 21st Top 10 country album. He is beginning work on a new album and finishing his autobiography, scheduled for release later this year.

A limited number of Kenny Rogers residency event tickets can be purchased by museum members at a discounted rate of $40 per show beginning Tuesday, April 3, at 10:00 a.m. by visiting www.countrymusichalloffame.org. (A one-year museum membership is $40.) Tickets will go on sale for $50 per show to the general public at 10:00 a.m. on Thursday, April 5, and can be purchased at www.countrymusichalloffame.org. Tickets sales, limited to four tickets per show, are available on a first come, first served basis and are non-refundable. Additionally, the Pinnacle at Symphony Place garage is offering attendees an $8 parking option on each of the performance evenings.

Museum doors open at 5:30 p.m. for the 7:00 p.m. shows. In addition, the museum’s galleries will be open to all ticket holders prior to each performance, beginning at 5:30 p.m., as will the museum’s Two Twenty-Two 2Go bar, serving a variety of food and beverages.

The 2012 Artist-in-Residence program is made possible, in part, by RJ Young. Additional support is provided by grants from the Metropolitan Nashville Arts Commission and by an agreement between the Tennessee Arts Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Accredited by the American Association of Museums, the Country Music Hall of Fame®and Museum is operated by the Country Music Foundation, a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) educational organization chartered by the state of Tennessee in 1964. The museum’s mission is the preservation of the history of country and related vernacular music rooted in southern culture. With the same educational mission, the foundation also operates CMF Records, the museum’s Frist Library and Archive, CMF Press, Historic RCA Studio B and Hatch Show Print®.

More information about the Country Music Hall of Fame®and Museum is available at www.countrymusichalloffame.org or by calling (615) 416-2001.

Monday, February 27, 2012

"The Bakersfield Sound" Exhibit Opens at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum Next Month



"The Bakersfield Sound: Buck Owens, Merle Haggard And California Country" exhibit is opening to the public at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville starting March 23 and will continue it's run through Dec. 31, 2013. Dwight Yoakam is the voice of this wonderful exhibit that covers over 5,000 square feet and includes a collection of more than 100 artifacts.

Wednesday, December 7, 2011

HANK JR. SAID HE'D NEVER BE A SELL OUT ...

SOLD-OUT CONCERT BY LEGENDARY HANK WILLIAMS JR.
RAISES $75,000 FOR THE COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME® 
AND MUSEUM

Hank Williams Jr.

Legendary artist Hank Williams Jr. capped the four-year run of the exhibition Family Tradition: The Williams Family Legacy just as he opened it: with a powerful solo acoustic performance spiked with personal memories. The sold-out December 6 concert, a benefit for the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum, raised $75,000.

Williams also announced that many of the artifacts he loaned to the exhibit would stay in the museum and its archives. “I’m going to work with them and leave quite a few of these items here—where they should be,” he said.

Highlights of the 90-minute show included Williams’ hits “A Country Boy Can Survive,” “Whiskey Bent and Hell Bound” and “The Blues Man” (upon which he was joined by his youngest son, Sam), as well as several tunes from a forthcoming new CD, scheduled for a March 2012 release. The concert also included a generous helping of classic material by his father and his heroes, most notably Johnny Cash and Waylon Jennings.

Special guests in the audience included Jessi Colter, her son Shooter Jennings and Jamey Johnson. The event also became a family celebration, with Williams’ wife, Mary Jane, his daughters Hilary and Holly and son Sam in the audience.

After the concert, Williams greeted audience members and posed for pictures in the Ford Theater. A reception followed in the Hall of Fame Rotunda, and fans received a signed poster commemorating the exhibit as they left the building.

Family Tradition opened on March 28, 2008. Originally scheduled to close on December 31, 2009, the exhibit—which offers an intimate, behind-the-scenes portrait of a great American musical dynasty—became the most popular and acclaimed exhibition in the museum’s history and was extended through December 31, 2011.

More information about the Country Music Hall of Fame®and Museum is available at www.countrymusichalloffame.org or by calling (615) 416-2001.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

ZAC BROWN, KEVIN CRONIN, SHERYL CROW, VINCE GILL AND EMMYLOU HARRIS SHARE STORIES AND SONGS AT THE COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME® AND MUSEUM’S ALL FOR THE HALL LOS ANGELES BENEFIT


                     
 

Museum Hosted 3rd Annual Guitar-Pull at Los Angeles Club Nokia at L.A. Live

LOS ANGELES, California, September 15, 2011 – Zac Brown looked across at the two Country Music Hall of Famers and two veteran rock stars who shared the Club Nokia stage with him as part of the September 13 All for the Hall Los Angeles fundraising concert. He then modestly suggested that he didn’t belong in such esteemed company.

More than two hours later, however, Brown’s powerful performances proved him wrong, as his songs fit nicely alongside those of Kevin Cronin of REO Speedwagon, Sheryl Crow, Vince Gill, and Emmylou Harris. When Brown finished a solo acoustic version of his song “Free,” in which he broke into Van Morrison’s “Into the Mystic “ in the middle of the song, the other four stars smiled and applauded.

“Zac, you’re the man,” screamed a fan from the balcony. Harris, from three stools away, looked at Brown admiringly and simply stated a reverent, “Thank you.” Cronin, who was next in line as the five singer-songwriters took turns performing songs with just acoustic guitar accompaniment, added, “ I remember buying Zac’s first record and thinking, ‘Here’s a young man playing songs that Vince, Sheryl, and I can relate to, because it’s similar chord structure and similar storytelling.’ But then, man, you take the songs, and you just take it to a whole new level.”

Brown, his quiet humility showing, stammered a bit and said, “Me, being kind of the new guy, it’s just an honor being up here with all you people.”

That exchange typifies what makes the annual All for the Hall concerts such one-of-a-kind experiences. The five songwriters come from different generations, different genres, and different backgrounds from across the United States. Yet this intimate concert—done as a Nashville-style guitar pull, with all the performers lined up across the stage at once, playing a song at a time, then moving to the next—also demonstrated a spirit of creative unity. Most of the time they joined in with each other, singing harmony, or adding their guitars. Gill, in particular, offered lead guitar licks to nearly every performance.

The All for the Hall concerts don’t feature a set list, and the performers often decide what to do on the spur of the moment, depending on what others have just performed, or to fit the mood they’re in when their turn comes around. “You’ll hear some great songs, possibly some new songs, because we don’t really know which songs they’ll do, but then neither do the songwriters,” explained Kyle Young, director of the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum, in his opening remarks.

That foreshadowing proved true when Zac Brown told a story about growing up hiding behind his guitar, which became his constant companion. After Brown performed “Martin,” about his favorite instrument, each of the others told stories about their guitars and chose appropriate songs.

Cronin told of getting beat up by young hooligans simply for walking down the street carrying a guitar case, until the Beatles came along. “Then the same guys who beat me up wanted to form a band with me,” he said with a laugh. He played “Music Man,” a song he wrote after being roughed up, about how he wouldn’t let others dissuade him from his devotion to becoming a singer and songwriter. The song appeared on REO’s second album, the band’s first featuring Cronin as lead singer.

Harris told of the early Gibson guitars she owned, including the one in her hands at that moment, which was the same guitar she took to California when she first went out there in the early 1970s at the invitation of Gram Parsons. The guitar got kicked in during transport, but Harris later had it repaired, although it still shows signs of the damage nearly forty years later. She then performed “The Road,” an autobiographical song she wrote about Parsons that opens Harris’s most recent album, 2011’s Hard Bargain. (Harris and Crow earlier had performed Parsons’s “Juanita,” a song the two recorded as a duet on the album Return of the Grievous Angel: A Tribute to Gram Parsons.)

Gill explained how, from an early age, he invested in guitars rather than buying homes or fancy cars. He revealed that he lost 50 guitars, 60 guitar cases, and 30 amplifiers in the May 2010 floods in Nashville, then he performed “This Old Guitar and Me,” from his 2003 album Next Big Thing.

Crow continued the theme of broken or ruined guitars, relating how thieves broke into a rehearsal space in Missouri right before she and her band left for their first national tour in 1993 as opening act for the BoDeans. The vandals took all the electric guitars and keyboards, but left her acoustic Gibson on the floor, its headstock broken. She too had it repaired and still owns it. She then played her 1996 hit, “If It Makes You Happy,” which she said she wrote on the repaired guitar.

The concert opened with Gill performing “Bartender’s Blues,” a George Jones hit, written by James Taylor, which Gill dedicated to Jones, who turned 80 years old the previous day. Setting a tone for the show, all four other writers joined in on harmony on the choruses.

Diversity has become a hallmark of the All for the Hall concerts, which have always mixed generations and genres, showing the connection between country music and other popular music styles, while also making the point that, when stripped to bare essentials, a good song is universally powerful no matter what label is put on it.

Cronin underlined that fact in his spoken comments. Initially invited to perform one song as a guest of the evening, he joined the guitar pull lineup instead. Cronin recognized, though, that his appearance might surprise some people. “When I got wind of the fact that I was being considered to be invited to this event, I was thinking to myself, ‘The Country Music Hall of Fame and iconic figures like Emmylou and Vince, and of course Sheryl who I’m a huge fan of,’ so I thought, ‘These guys must think I’m the singer from Diamond Rio. What the hell am I doing here?’”

But Cronin, when starting out in the 1960s, came to Nashville to write songs before joining REO Speedwagon. The Illinois-based band recorded their second album, R.E.O. / T.W.O.,  in 1972 at Columbia Records’ studio on Music Row.  He performed one of the band’s biggest hits, “Keep on Loving You,” as well as lesser-known album cuts, such as “In My Dreams,”one of the favorite songs of his wife, who was in the audience.

Museum director Young used the occasion to speak of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s current expansion plans, which will take the museum to 350,000 square feet from its current 138,000 square feet. He explained how the expansion would add exhibit and archival space, a new 800-seat theater, new education classrooms and facilities and much more, and he encouraged attendees to participate in the museum’s ongoing “Working on a Building” fundraising campaign to finance the new construction.

Young also commented on the museum’s plans to open a special exhibit, spotlighting California’s contribution to country music, in March 2012. The exhibit, The Bakersfield Sound: Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, and California Country, was first announced publicly at the 2010 All for the Hall Los Angeles concert. Young expounded on how the plans have taken shape since that announcement.

Gibson Guitars also made a special announcement at this year’s concert. The instrument manufacturing company has created a replica of a famous guitar, the Gibson J-200, played by the late California country musician Ray Whitley. Gibson has created a new replica of the special guitar and will donate proceeds from its sale to the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum’s Working on a Building capital campaign.

Fittingly, the concert ended with the five artists performing the Carter Family’s “Wildwood Flower,” a tune revered among guitarists because of Mother Maybelle Carter’s famous part in the song—played on a Gibson guitar, as it turns out.

All for the Hall Los Angeles was chaired by AEG Live Chairman Tim Leiweke and produced by Creative Artists Agency’s Rod EssigVector Management’s Ken Levitan andBMI’s Jody Williams. The event was made possible by the generosity of AEG Live, Club Nokia at L.A. LIVE and travel sponsor Southwest Airlines

The 2011 host committee for All for the Hall Los Angeles included Orly Adelson (Dick Clark Productions), Justyn Amstutz and Lori Armistead, Mark Bloom (UBS Financial Services), Thomas Carroll (SunTrust Bank), Essig, John Frankenheimer (Loeb & Loeb), Gary Haber (Haber Corporation), Levitan, Bob Romeo (Academy of Country Music) and Gary Veloric (Red Stripe Plane Group).  

About the Country Music Hall of Fame® and MuseumAccredited by the American Association of Museums, the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum is operated by the Country Music Foundation, a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) educational organization chartered by the state of Tennessee in 1964. The Museum’s mission is the preservation of the history of country and related vernacular music rooted in southern culture. With the same educational mission, the Foundation also operates CMF Records, the Museum’s Frist Library and Archive, CMF Press, Historic RCA Studio B, and Hatch Show Print®.


More information about the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is available at www.countrymusichalloffame.org or by calling (615) 416-2001.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

THE COUNTRY MUSIC HALL OF FAME® AND MUSEUM’S ALL FOR THE HALL FUNDRAISER RETURNS TO LOS ANGELES ON SEPTEMBER 13

Vince Gill, Emmylou Harris, Sheryl Crow and Zac Brown Set to Perform at Club Nokia


LOS ANGELES, August 9, 2011 -- The Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum’s All for the Hall fundraiser will return to Los Angeles for a third consecutive year.  The event, which will take place on Tuesday, September 13, at Club Nokia, will again follow a “guitar pull” format featuring performances by Country Music Hall of Fame members Vince Gill and Emmylou Harris, and Sheryl Crow and Zac Brown.


The evening offers a unique opportunity to see these acclaimed singer-songwriters interact with one another as they take turns swapping songs, stories and personal recollections.  The “guitar pull” is a Nashville specialty; it originated in the homes of Nashville songwriters who gathered to try out new compositions for their peers.  Nashville’s most storied guitar pulls were hosted by Johnny and June Carter Cash.  The hallmarks of a great guitar pull are spontaneity and camaraderie.


The Museum launched All for the Hall, its first-ever non-bricks-and-mortar fundraising campaign, in 2005.  The campaign addresses the Museum’s need for long-term financial security and will provide a safety net for the institution and its work.  This is the fifth year the Museum has taken its “annual giving” event on the road, hosting previous All for the Hall events in New York in 2007 and 2008 and in Los Angeles in 2009 and 2010.


“California, with its rich country music history, has proven to be a supremely appropriate and welcoming location for this event,” said Museum Director Kyle Young.  “Our 2009 All for the Hall Los Angeles debut gave us an opportunity to focus on West Coast country music history and remind our guests that these artists and executives and their songs are a part of the story we both preserve and teach at the Museum.  We built on that with last year’s event, during which we announced that the Museum’s next major exhibition will focus on Buck Owens, Merle Haggard and the Bakersfield Sound.  We are very grateful for our warm welcome the past two years and look forward to seeing old friends and making new ones in September.”


Last year’s event, also held at Club Nokia, featured performances by Gill, Harris, Kris Kristofferson, Lionel Richie and Taylor Swift.  Describing last year’s show, Randy Lewis of the Los Angeles Times wrote, “[It was] an intimate, living-room-like atmosphere…the mood felt less about competitiveness than mutual admiration, as 74-year-old Kristofferson and 61-year-old Richie grinned broadly while Swift delivered solo acoustic versions of her latest single ‘Mine’ and one of her biggest hits, ‘Love Story.’  The life experience that Kristofferson, Harris, Gill and Richie brought made for a fascinating juxtaposition with Swift’s songs of starry-eyed love.” (9/25/10).


All for the Hall Los Angeles patrons are offered their choice of seating for 10 for $10,000, or seating for five for $5,000.  Individual tickets are available at $1,000 per seat. A cocktail reception and dinner will precede the guitar pull.  To purchase tickets, patrons may contact Rachel Shapiro at rshapiro@countrymusichalloffame.org or telephone (615) 416-2069 or(800) 852-6437.


All for the Hall Los Angeles is chaired by AEG Live Chairman Tim Leiweke and produced by CAA’s Rod EssigVector Management’s Ken Levitan and BMI’s Jody Williams. The event is made possible by the generosity of AEG Live and Club Nokia LA Live.  The 2011 host committee for All for the Hall Los Angeles includes Mark Bloom (UBS Financial Services), John Frankenheimer (Loeb & Loeb), Gary Haber (Haber Corporation), Neil Portnow (The Recording Academy) and Bob Romeo (Academy of Country Music).  

About the Performers:
Georgia native Zac Brown is the leader of the Grammy-award winning Zac Brown Band.  The band’s debut major label release, The Foundation, was one of Billboard’s Top 20 albums of 2009, and yielded five #1 hits, including “Chicken Fried” and “Free.”  The band’s follow-up album, You Get What You Give, which was released in September 2010, debuted at #1 on theBillboard 200 chart and was recently certified platinum by the RIAA.  The band’s honors and accolades include “Best New Artist” wins at both the 2010 Grammy Awards and the 2010 CMA Awards, and a 2009 “Top New Vocal Group” nod from the Academy of Country Music.  

Free-spirited, fearless and fierce, Sheryl Crow has garnered nine Grammys, released seven studio albums, which sold more than 35 million records worldwide, is a cancer survivor and passionate humanitarian, and has performed for President Obama.  This year Crow unveiled her soul stylings on her seventh studio set, 100 Miles from Memphis. Raised in Kennett, Missouri, 100 miles from Memphis, Crow grew up listening to the irresistible soul sounds on the radio coming out of Memphis in the late ’60s and early ’70s, all of which shaped the artist she is today.  Crow is a passionate supporter of a variety of environmental and health-related charities, including the NRDC, the Breast Cancer Research Foundation and the World Food Program. This year saw the opening of the Sheryl Crow Imaging Center in the Pink Lotus Breast Center in Los Angeles.

Country Music Hall of Fame member Vince Gill possesses an achingly beautiful tenor, award-winning songwriting skills and virtuoso guitar chops. Together, they’ve earned him millions of record sales, 20 Grammys and 18 CMA Awards.  He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2007. Gill is also regarded as one of country music’s most generous humanitarians, participating in hundreds of charitable events throughout his career, including All for the Hall, the campaign to support the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.  Gill, president of the Museum’s Board of Officers and Trustees, was also the Museum’s 2009 Artist in Residence.  His new CD, Guitar Slinger, will be released on October 25 on MCA Records.

Emmylou Harris
 introduced country music to a broader audience by building bridges to folk, gospel, rock and alternative music. She has sold millions of albums worldwide and claimed 12 Grammys in a career that now stretches over four decades. Elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2008, she remains an inspiration to new generations of artists. Harris is a champion of many humanitarian causes, including landmine removal and animal rescue.  Her latest album, 2011’s Hard Bargain, features 11 songs written or co-written by Harris.

About the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum
Accredited by the American Association of Museums, the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum is operated by the Country Music Foundation, a not-for-profit 501(c)(3) educational organization chartered by the state of Tennessee in 1964. The Museum’s mission is the preservation of the history of country and related vernacular music rooted in southern culture. With the same educational mission, the Foundation also operates CMF Records, the Museum’s Frist Library and Archive, CMF Press, Historic RCA Studio B, and Hatch Show Print®.


More information about the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is available at www.countrymusichalloffame.org or by calling (615) 416-2001.



Thursday, January 20, 2011

CMA Fest Packages, Restaurant Week, Brad Paisley, Carrie Underwood and Hot Winter Deals - all in Music City!


CMA Fest Packages, Restaurant Week, Brad Paisley, Carrie Underwood and Hot Winter Deals - all in Music City!

RESTAURANT WEEK
Welcome to Music City's Restaurant Week! You have 5 more days to eat at more than 40 original Nashville restaurants. We hope you're hungry to have an incredible meal
for an amazing deal. See the Menu.

HOSTS WITH THE MOST
A new exhibit opens today at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum.
Hosts with the Most: Brad Paisley and Carrie Underwood features stage costumes worn by Paisley and Underwood from their memorable hosting of the 2010 CMA Awards show last November. Get the Info.

WINTER ROCKS WITH DEALS
The air is cold but the deals are hot! Visit Nashville now through Mar. 15 and take advantage of incredible limited-time offers from your favorite Music City hotels, attractions, tours and events. Get the Deals.

CMA FEST PACKAGES ON SALE
CMA Music Festival's Fan Fair celebrates 40 years in 2011. All the best in country music along
with thousands of fans will converge upon Music City June 9-12. Ticket & room packages will be available starting Jan. 24. So, click the link below, bookmark it and come back on Monday to book your trip for The Ultimate Country Music Fan Experience.
Call 800-657-6910 for personal assistance.
Book a CMA Music Festival Package.

Nashville Convention & Visitors Bureau
150 Fourth Avenue North, Suite G-250
Nashville, TN 37219
www.visitmusiccity.com
800-657-6910