Patsy Cline museum opens in Nashville
(25 Apr 2017) PATSY CLINE GETS OVERDUE HONOR IN NASHVILLE
One of country music's iconic vocalists Patsy Cline got a long overdue honor with the opening of a new museum.
The singer helped to define modern country music, with a style that crossed genres into pop, rock and country. Famous for songs like Crazy, Walkin' After Midnight and I Fall to Pieces, she died in a plane crash that cut her blossoming career short.
The new museum opened this month in April just above the Johnny Cash Museum in Nashville and features many items that have been in storage for decades, including many of her homemade dresses.
You have some like this where they store bought them and embellished them themselves with the rhinestones and various things, explained her daughter Julie Fudge. And then you have the ones that they made, that Patsy designed and then she and her mother would work together to make these.
Bill Miller, the museum's founder who also founded the Johnny Cash Museum, said her short career and the fact that her fame continued to grow after her death made it difficult to find all the pieces for a museum.
When you do a museum, your biggest fear is content, Miller said. And with an artist that passed away in 1963 that was a big fear, because at the time of her passing, Patsy wasn't a huge star. There weren't the legions of fans that were saving posters and memorabilia.
And I must say, had we not gotten this set up and you put this museum together, I am not sure where we would have these things today, Fudge said.
Her daughter said that her mother still has an impact on contemporary country music.
I guess you would attribute that to with the classic music, Fudge said of her reputation. It has a lot to do with Owen Bradley with the sound with the undated music.
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Loretta Lynn's Ranch, Hurricane Mills, Tennessee
In this video Salvatore Vinciguerra gives you a tour of Loretta Lynn's Ranch in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee. First, he shows you buildings used in making the motion picture A Coal Miner's Daughter. They are replicas of Loretta's house and the coal mine in Butcher Hollow, Kentucky. He then gives you a tour inside Loretta's Mansion and Museum. Later, he gives you a surprise peak at a wedding taking place in the front of Loretta's house.
Please note that Salvatore did not know at the time he visited and filmed this video that Loretta's Mansion was haunted. Parts of Loretta's property was used as a battlefield in the American Civil War and three soldiers are buried on her property. The Mansion has a slave pit located underneath the house. Loretta, her family, property caretakers, and visitors have had interactions with ghosts in her home.
Loretta does have her own campground. However, I visited during Loretta Lynn's Motocross race and had to stay in Nashville located an hour away from Hurricane Mills.
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Patsy Cline
Virginia Patterson Hensley (September 8, 1932 – March 5, 1963), known professionally as Patsy Cline, was an American country music singer. Part of the early 1960s Nashville sound, Cline successfully crossed over to pop music. She died in a multiple fatality crash of her private plane at the age of 30. She was one of the most influential, successful and acclaimed female vocalists of the 20th century.
Cline was best known for her rich tone, emotionally expressive and bold contralto voice and her role as a country music industry pioneer. Along with Kitty Wells, she helped pave the way for women as headline performers in the genre. Cline was cited as an inspiration by singers in several genres. Books, movies, documentaries, articles and stage plays document her life and career.
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Living in Virginia: Winchester - Pen In Hand
Here's a heartfelt look at Winchester, Virginia's residents during the Civil War from the perspective of their letters, diaries and journals.It explores the reality of war as the community changed hands between the North and South more than 70 times. This special travels back in time to record the perseverance, the passion, and the pain of those who watched and lived during this turbulent time period.
Patsy Cline Plane Crash Site Memorial
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Woodruff Opry House,Tyra sings Tennessee Waltz
Jimmy Gilstrap video..
Road to Butcher Holler, Kentucky (Van Lear) Loretta Lynn's Home Place
For any of ya'll who might like Country Music or Loretta Lynn like my mom does. We took a side trip up to the bluegrass state of Kentucy as it is not too far away from Huntington, WV. Very pretty drive which we show a bit of it here in the video. Herman's (whose Loretta Lynn's brother) grandson gives us the tour of the home place which he said was OK for us to film so hope you all enjoy this piece of what they call a country music landmark. :) Check out my Facebook Page for photos of this country landmark at
Patsy Cline Someday You'll Want Me To Want You
2000–present
In 2002, CMT named Cline first on its 40 Greatest Women of Country Music, voted by members of the music industry. I Fall to Pieces was listed at No. 107 on RIAA's list of Songs of the Century in 2001. Lynn released a sequel to her autobiography, Coal Miner's Daughter, called Still Woman Enough and again dedicated a chapter to her friendship with Cline (called Still Thinking of Patsy).
Early in 2005, Patsy Cline's Greatest Hits was certified by the RIAA as Diamond, recognizing the sale of 10 million copies. The album was listed as Longest-Charting Title by a Female Artist in the 2005 edition of the Guinness Book of World Records. For its 40th anniversary reissue in 2007, Bob Ludwig remastered the album and featured the original 1967 cover art.
Later in 2007, Cline's childhood home in Winchester, Virginia, was awarded a prominent on-site marker cast in bronze for a place on The National Register of Historic Places. The house was placed on the Virginia Landmarks Register and features a State of Virginia Historical Marker on the street in front. Each year, on Labor Day weekend, thousands of fans celebrate Cline's birthday at Shenandoah Memorial Gardens. Husband Charlie, daughter Julie and all of the grandchildren and great-grandchildren, as well as other family members, attended the 20th annual gathering on September 8, 2007. After a multi-million dollar renovation at her former school, built in 1923, authorities dedicated The Patsy Cline Theatre there in 2009.
Tennessee Waltz - Old Woman (cover)
A Max2b Production. This is a video I entered into a sing as an old person contest!
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Tennessee Waltz
Buck Billo and Maxis sing the Tennessee Waltz by Redd Stewart.
The Tennessee Waltz is a popular/country music song written by Redd Stewart and Pee Wee King in 1947. Originally recorded by Roy Acuff, it was later popularized by Patti Page and by Les Paul and Mary Ford in 1950. The popularity of this song also made it the fourth official song of the state of Tennessee in 1965. It was adopted by Senate Joint Resolution 9 of the 84th General Assembly. Like Ignition (Remix), and Crocodile Rock, The Tennessee Waltz is a self-referential song, i.e. a song about the song itself.
The 1949 Roy Acuff & The Smoky Mountain Boys recording was issued by Columbia as catalog number 20551. Patti Page was familiar with Tennessee Waltz as it was a favorite song of her father's. She made her recording of the song to be the B-side of a seasonal single Boogie Woogie Santa Claus issued by Mercury Records as catalog number 5534; it was radio disc jockeys who chose to play Tennessee Waltz boosting the track into the Billboard pop music chart on November 10, 1950 for a 30 week chart run with a #1 peak. [1] [2] A #2 C&W hit, Tennessee Waltz became Page's career record.
The success of the Patti Page version led to covers by Les Paul with Mary Ford (Capitol 1316) and Jo Stafford (Columbia 39065) both of which reached the Top Ten (Stafford's at #7). Other recordings were made by Guy Lombardo and his Royal Canadians (Decca 27336) and, for the UK market, by Petula Clark.
On the Cash Box charts, Tennessee Waltz reached #1 on December 30, 1950 with the Patti Page, Jo Stafford, Guy Lombardo and LesPaul/Mary Ford versions being given a tandem ranking; as such Tennessee Waltz remained #1 in Cash Box through the February 3, 1951 chart. Tennessee Waltz returned to the charts in the fall of 1959 via a rockabilly version recorded by both Bobby Comstock & the Counts and Jerry Fuller: on the Billboard Hot 100 the versions respectively reached #52 and #63 while Cash Box assigned both versions a joint ranking on its Top 100 Singles chart with a peak position of #42.
In 1964 Tennessee Waltz was recorded in a rock and roll ballad style by Alma Cogan; this version hit the German Top Ten and spent five weeks at #1 in Sweden. The success of Cogan's version has inspired remakes by Swedish singers Kikki Danielsson and Lotta Engberg and by German singer Heidi Brühl. Sam Cooke included an upbeat version of Tennessee Waltz on the final album he recorded: the 1 March 1964 release Ain't That Good News: originally the B-side of the track Good Times, Tennessee Waltz became popular enough in itself to reach #35. The Good Times/ Tennessee Waltz double A-side single would be the last Sam Cooke single released during the singer's lifetime.
In 1966, Otis Redding recorded a version of Tennessee Waltz featuring Booker T & the MGs on his classic R&B album The Otis Redding Dictionary of Soul. Johnny Jones - a native of Atlanta who had briefly replaced Sam Cooke in the Soul Stirrers before Johnnie Taylor joined the group - reached #49 R&B in 1968 with his deep soul rendition of Tennessee Waltz cut for producer Bobby Robinson's Fury Records.
In 1980 Lacy J. Dalton hit #18 on the C&W chart in Billboard with her gritty reworking of Tennessee Waltz. In 1983 the song was featured on James Brown's Bring It On album that was released on the Churchill record label. [3] Norah Jones performed Tennessee Waltz as an encore during a live show at the House of Blues in New Orleans on August 24th 2002. It is featured as extra material on the following DVD-release of the show.
Leonard Cohen recorded Tennessee Waltz - one of the few covers he's ever cut - for his 2004 album Dear Heather; this version featured an additional verse written by Cohen himself.
TENNESSEE WALTZ - SOLO CHARLES SIMS
2005 MISSISSIPPI HIGHSCHOOL BAND CONTEST
Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain Woodruff Opry House Chris Vita
Blue Eyes Crying In The Rain
Chris Vita
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Midnight Special Woodruff Opry House Tyra Bailey-vocals Mike Gibson-Lead guitar
Midnight Special
Woodruff Opry House
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Mike Gibson - lead guitar
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Randy Seay - keyboards
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