Notes: Tompall, Jim and Chuck Glaser were musical and business visionaries in the '60s and '70s. Best Country Singer From Nevada: Julianne Hough Rick Diamond, Getty Images Best Country Singer From Nevada: Julianne Hough Nevada Roots: Raised in Las Vegas after 1999. ...
The songwriter kicked off his Rough and Rowdy Ways trek at Milwaukee's Riverside Theater, playing eight of that album's songs (all but “Crossing the Rubicon” and the 17-minute “Murder Most Foul") and dedicating the performance to late guitar icon Les Paul. "We know he was from here,...
with performances from Joe Diffie on 1994’s “Pickup Man” and Diamond Rio’s career breakthrough from 1991, “Meet In The Middle.” Longtime Opry member Del Reeves introduces Vince Gill to a packed house for a performance of his 1992 hit “I Still Believe In You.” Two of ...
part of the routine included sitting around a campfire, singing children's favorites like SHE'LL BE COMING 'ROUND THE MOUNTAIN and YOU ARE MY SUNSHINE ... and
You Know What It Is: The eternally bright, sunshine-y hit from Texas singer-songwriter Johnny Nash, who decamped to Jamaica in the late ’60s and eventually helped bring the sounds of rocksteady and reggae to U.S. top 40. This Magic Moment: There’s nothing quite like that bridge, wh...
A reflection of the mid-’70s cynicism, “The Pretender” delves into survival instincts marked by lies, cheating, and moral ambiguity. It captures the era’s shift from ’60s idealism to a more disillusioned perspective, revealing Browne’s unmatched lyrical prowess. 3. “Somebody’s Baby” ...
"We might not realize the benefit of the education we've been given for free until we're in our 60s and 70s," Cousins said, "[when we] retire and look back at where the education was able to take us in life." He is merely voicing the NCAA conundrum. Sure, there is a case to...
Founded in 1986 and based in Seattle, Sub Pop quickly became the destination label for all emerging grunge artists. Put simply, what Motown did for R&B and Detroit in the '60s, Sub Pop did years later for the grunge music emerging from Seattle. The company’s first release, a compilation...
You Know What It Is: The eternally bright, sunshine-y hit from Texas singer-songwriter Johnny Nash, who decamped to Jamaica in the late ’60s and eventually helped bring the sounds of rocksteady and reggae to U.S. top 40. This Magic Moment: There’s nothing quite like that bridge, wh...
By 1970, Schmitt had been off the engineering beat for long enough that he wasn’t sure he could still do it. Fortunately, LiPuma, who as a song-plugger in the early ’60s had pitched material to Schmitt, convinced his old friend to give engineering another try. ...