Monday, November 29, 2021

Tuesday Night Opry November 30

The Grand Ole Opry closes out the month of November with the Tuesday Night Opry, featuring one of the Opry's newest members, Carly Pearce. Also appearing will be Matthew West, so I am going to assume that Matthew and Carly will be doing their duet together. 

7:00: Connie Smith; Riders In The Sky; Skip Ewing; Home Free
Intermission
8:15: Aaron Weber; Matthew West; Carly Pearce

Also listed on the schedule is Dallas Wayne with no specific time slot

I will admit that I was one of those who saw Skip Ewing's name on the line-up and wondered what ever happened to him as that was a name that I had not seen in years. 

For Skip Ewing, there’s a mystique about the West, a land populated by fascinating characters and shaped by unforgettable legends. Ewing’s new album, Wyoming, is as expansive as the majestic landscape of his current home and as deep as his roots in Tennessee, where he evolved from early days as an Opryland performer to one of Nashville’s most successful singer/ songwriters. A native of Redlands, CA, Ewing also spent some of his formative years in South Carolina and Colorado before moving to Nashville in 1984.

Ewing has had songs recorded by Keith Urban, Zach Brown Band, George Strait, Keb Mo, Willie Nelson, and numerous others. His #1 hits include Collin Raye’s “Love, Me,” Diamond Rio’s “I Believe,” Kenny Chesney’s “You Had Me From Hello,” Clint Black’s “Something That We Do,” Brian White’s “Rebecca Lynn,” “Someone Else’s Star,” and “I’m Not Supposed to Love You Anymore.” 

After a detour that took him to new territory geographically, professionally, and spiritually, he’s crafted his first new album in more than a decade. “I started writing the album in 2018. At the time, I didn’t know if I’d ever do another music project,” Ewing admits. “I had sold everything in Nashville, my furniture, my house. I sold everything except my instruments and some art. In the meantime, I’d been coming to Wyoming every year since the early 2000s.”

Though music would remain his first love, Ewing developed a passion for horses and discovered he had a gift for working with them. “I rode thousands of miles horseback,” Ewing says, “I devoted myself to horsemanship. I learn so much from them about who I am and how I can better myself.”

Soon, Ewing found himself in a particularly creative season of his life. “I started writing again,” Ewing says. “My wife came home one day, and I played her another song, and she said, ‘Honey, it’s time to put all the journeys together. The world needs to hear this.”

“I wasn’t writing for any specific genre; I was writing for the hearts and ears of the people I believed would listen. I was writing as an artist. I was out here letting myself draw from whatever musical wells I had, and whatever was in me,” Ewing explains. “I was writing imagining I was going to share it with people all over the world. That made a big difference in where I went, and it felt good to be free,” he says.

“You can hear that I’m happy. There’s so much warmth and encouragement around this record. People are genuinely excited to hear it. And when they listen, they’re excited to share it. I’m praying that leads to the immense good fortune of getting to create music for a living again.



Sunday, November 28, 2021

Opry Country Christmas 11/28

I know it was mentioned already, but the Opry will be putting on several Opry Country Christmas shows this holiday season with Larry Gatlin as the host. The first show is tonight and in addition to Larry, the show will also feature the following: 

Host: Larry Gatlin
Spotlight Artist: Steve Wariner
Also Appearing: The Gatlin Brothers, Jason Crabb, Mandy Barnett, Charlie McCoy, Riders In The Sky, Jeannie Seely

A very nice line-up for the first show. For those who have not heard any of these artists singing their Christmas favorites, you are in for a treat tonight. 

The show will be broadcast on WSM. 

Saturday November 28, 1925

Saturday November 28
Announcer: George D. Hay
Artist: Uncle Jimmy Thompson

The first night. At the time, it had no name. Soon it was to be called the WSM Barn Dance, later the Grand Ole Opry.

History was made and is repeated every Saturday night. 

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Grand Ole Opry 11/26 & 11/27-Thanksgiving Weekend

The weekend after Thanksgiving and the Christmas shopping season is officially upon us. Depending on when you read this, you are either getting ready for Thanksgiving, or hopefully have had a nice Thanksgiving and getting ready for the big weekend of shopping and football games. As far as the Grand Ole Opry this weekend, the shows both nights look solid, with a nice group of Opry members performing. 

Looking at the schedule for this weekend, Grand Ole Opry members Jeannie Seely and Riders In The Sky are scheduled for both nights. They will be joined on the Friday Night Opry by Mark Wills and Dailey & Vincent, while on Saturday night, Bill Anderson and Bobby Osborne are set to perform. 

In looking at the list of non-members, the name that stands out this weekend is Doyle Lawson and Quicksilver, as Doyle will be making his final Opry appearance. Doyle has announced that he will be retiring from performing at the end of the year. Doyle, a member of the Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame, has been one of the most influential leaders in bluegrass music and while never an Opry member, has appeared on the Opry numerous times over his career. 

As Doyle stated, “I’ve been thinking about this for a long time. 2022 will be coming up on 60 years in music, and I feel like this is the time to step away from my position as a bandleader. I think it’s been 43 years for me in this role. In a few days I’ll be 77 years old, and while my voice has held up well and my hands feel good, I want to leave while I can still feel proud of my performance on stage.”

As Doyle said in his quote, he planned on retiring at the end of 2022, however last month he announced that he had decided that the end of 2021 would be it for him. Doyle will be missed on the bluegrass circuit. 

While Doyle Lawson will be appearing only on Friday night, comedian Gary Mule Deer is scheduled for both nights, joined on Friday night by veteran country artist Darryl Worley and making her Opry debut, Sierra Ferrell. The final artist scheduled for Friday is Gail Davies, who it seems hasn't appeared on the Opry for a number of years. 

Saturday night's line-up, in addition to Gary Mule, has Caroline Jones scheduled, along with the legendary T. Graham Brown, The SteelDrivers, and making his Opry debut, Sam Grow. 


Friday November 26
7:00: Mark Wills; Gail Davies; Jeannie Seely; Riders In The Sky; Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver
Intermission
8:15: Darryl Worley; Gary Mule Deer; Sierra Ferrell; Dailey & Vincent

Saturday November 27
7:00: Opry Square Dancers; Jeannie Seely; Sam Grow; Bill Anderson; The SteelDrivers
Intermission
8:15: Caroline Jones; Bobby Osborne & The Rocky Top X-Press; Gary Mule Deer; T. Graham Brown; Riders In The Sky

No live TV again this weekend as Circle will be showing a previously recorded show featuring Connie Smith, Marty Stuart, Tennessee Mafia Jug Band and Lee Ann Womack. 
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As mentioned, there are a couple of artists who will be making their Opry debuts this weekend. 

Sierra Ferrell is from West Virginia. A singer/songwriter/multi-instrumentalist left home in her early 20s to journey across the country with a troupe of nomadic musicians, playing everywhere from truck stops to alleyways to freight-train boxcars speeding down the railroad tracks. After years of living in her van and busking on the streets of New Orleans and Seattle, she moved to Nashville and soon landed a deal with Rounder Records on the strength of her magnetic live show. Now, on her highly anticipated label debut Long Time Coming, Ferrell shares a dozen songs beautifully unbound by genre or era, instantly transporting her audience to an infinitely more enchanted world.

Co-produced by Stu Hibberd and 10-time Grammy Award-winner Gary Paczosa (Alison Krauss, Dolly Parton, Gillian Welch), Long Time Coming embodies a delicate eclecticism fitting for a musician who utterly defies categorization. “I want my music to be like my mind is—all over the place,” says Ferrell, who recorded the album at Southern Ground and Minutia studios in Nashville. “I listen to everything from bluegrass to techno to goth metal, and it all inspires me in different ways that I try to incorporate into my songs and make people really feel something.” In sculpting the album’s chameleonic sound, Ferrell joined forces with a knockout lineup of guest musicians (including Jerry Douglas, Tim O’Brien, Chris Scruggs, Sarah Jarosz, Billy Strings, and Dennis Crouch), adding entirely new texture to each of her gracefully crafted and undeniably heartfelt songs.

As she continues to embark on her own career. Sierra has appeared at several major festivals, such as The Avett Brothers at the Beach, AmericanaFest and Out on the Weekend, while also touring with Parker Milsap and Charley Crockett. 
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After the breakout success of his first studio album, 2019’s Love and Whiskey, a lot has changed for Average Joes Entertainment star Sam Grow. That milestone project followed years of grinding work, writing his own tunes, booking his own shows and recording his own EPs … but it was all rewarded.

Love and Whiskey hit Number One on iTunes’ Country Albums chart – doing so with zero radio airplay – and since then he’s only poured more gas on the fire. Grow’s 2020 single “Song About You” burned red hot, pulling in more than 50 million streams and getting named one of Spotify’s “Best Country Songs” in the process. Grow’s been featured on Billboard’s coveted “7 Country Acts To Watch” list, and touted by Music Row as a sure-bet for future superstardom, among other accolades, as the temperature continues to spike. 

“I feel like right now I’m making some of the best music I’ve ever made,” he says – and honestly, that’s saying a lot, since the Maryland native is the definition of a “prolific creator.” Since his 2014 arrival in Nashville, he’s dropped three EPs and his milestone debut album, never letting more than a few years pass between releases. But things are different now.

“2020 was a big revelation to me, of how important music is to people’s lives – even in the worst times,” he says. “To be able to put on a song and not feel alone, even when the world seems like it’s crashing around you, that’s such an intimate thing.”
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Now from 50 years ago, Saturday November 27, 1971: 

1st show
6:30: The 4 Guys (host); Stringbean; Margie Bowes
6:45: Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper (host); Ernie Ashworth; Del Wood
7:00: Charlie Louvin (host); Earl Scruggs Revue; Grandpa Jones; Jack Barlow; Diane McCall
7:30: Roy Acuff (host); Jean Shepard; Merle Kilgore; Crook Brothers
8:00: George Morgan (host); Skeeter Davis; Archie Campbell; Louie Roberts
8:30: Wilburn Brothers (host); Peggy Little; Jay Lee Webb; Fruit Jar Drinkers; Ed Hyde

2nd show
9:30: Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper (host); Margie Bowes; Louie Roberts; Harold Weakley
10:00: The 4 Guys (host); Stringbean; Jack Barlow
10:15: Roy Acuff (host); Earl Scruggs Revue
10:30: Charlie Louvin (host); Diane McCall; Grandpa Jones; Del Wood
10:45: George Morgan (host); Jean Shepard; Crook Brothers
11:00: Archie Campbell (host0; Skeeter Davis; Merle Kilgore; Fruit Jar Drinkers; Phil Campbell; Sam McGee
11:30: Wilburn Brothers (host); Peggy Little; Jay Lee Webb

I highlighted Margie Bowes as these were her last shows as a member of the Grand Ole Opry cast. She would appear a couple of more times as a guest, usually in relation to the Opry's annual reunion shows. 
___________________________________________________________________________

Saturday November 26, 2005 was a special night at the Grand Ole Opry as Jean Shepard was recognized upon her 50th year as a member of the Grand Ole Opry. 

Here is the running order from the show that night: 

1st show
6:30: Cracker Barrel
Jimmy Dickens (host): Take an Old Cold Tater
Osborne Brothers: Mansion for Me/Rocky Top
Danielle Peck: Isn't That Everything/I Don't
Jimmy Dickens: Another Bridge to Burn

7:00: Tootsie's
Mike Snider: Soldier's Joy/Angeline the Baker/Old Molly Hare
Jan Howard: He Thinks I Still Care
Mel McDaniel: Stand Up
Restless Heart: (?)/Dancy's Dream
Mike Snider: Fire on the Mountain

7:30: Standard Candy
Hal Ketchum (host): Past the Point of Rescue
Jean Shepard: A Satisfied Mind/Second Fiddle
Shannon Brown: Can I Get an Amen/Corn Fed
Hal Ketchum: Stay Forever

8:00: Martha White/Tennessee Pride
Jeannie Seely (host): Winter Wonderland
Billy Walker: Behind Closed Doors
Cherryholmes: You Don't Know What Love Is/Dixie Hoedown
Opry Square Dance Band: Cherokee Shuffle
Jeannie Seely and Danny Davis: What's Going on In Your World
Jack Greene: Walkin' the Floor Over You/There Goes My Everything
Marty Stuart: Badlands/Beyond the Point of Return
Jeannie Seely: I'll Be Home for Christmas

2nd show
9:30: Cracker Barrel
Jimmy Dickens (host): Sleepin' at the Foot of the Bed
Mike Snider: (?)/If My Nose was Runnin' Money
Danielle Peck: Isn't that Everything/I Don't
Jimmy Dickens: We Could

10:00: Martha White
Hal Ketchum (host): It's A Five O'Clock World
Osborne Brothers: Nobody's Darling But Mine/Rocky Top
Restless Heart: Bluest Eyes in Texas/Why Does it Have to Be Wrong or Right
Hal Ketchum: Small Town Saturday Night

10:30: J.W. Tours
Jean Shepard (host): I Thought of You/It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels/You Win Again/A Dear John Letter
Jack Greene: Statue of a Fool
Shannon Brown: Can I Get an Amen/Corn Fed
Opry Square Dance Band: Tennessee Waggoner
Jean Shepard: Blanket on the Ground

11:00: Opry Cruise/Country Christmas
Jeannie Seely (host): Burning That Old Memory
Mel McDaniel: Louisiana Saturday Night/Stand Up
Marty Stuart: Hillbilly Rock/It Takes One To Know One/Country Boy Rock 'N Roll
Jeannie Seely and Danny Davis: What's Going On In Your World
Billy Walker (host): Smokey Places/A Million & One
Cherryholmes: When He Reached Down His Hand for Me/Nine Yards
Jeannie Seely: I'll Be Home for Christmas

A couple of notes from that night: both Porter Wagoner and Bill Anderson cancelled out. Porter was supposed to host the 8:00 segment on the 1st show and Bill the 8:30 segment. Jeannie Seely ended up hosting both. On the late show, it was the same deal as Bill Anderson was scheduled to host the 11:00 segment and Jeannie at 11:30. Jeannie ended up hosting the final hour. 

As far as Jean Shepard, her Opry career did not stop at 50. Jean would go on to be an Opry member for just over 60 years, becoming the only female, as of this writing, to have reached the 60 year mark as an Opry member.

To finish up, let's go back to Saturday November 26, 1955, which was Jean's first Saturday night at the Opry as a member (her actual induction date was November 21). Here is the running order from that night: 

7:30: Marty Robbins; Minnie Pearl; Don and Rita
7:45: George Morgan; Goldie Hill; Eddie Hill
8:00: Flatt and Scruggs; Jim Reeves; Hawkshaw Hawkins; Jean Shepard; Moon Mullican; Possum Hunters; Maybelle Carter
8:30: Ferlin Husky; Rod Brasfield; Louvin Brothers; Del Wood; Minnie Pearl Chet Atkins
9:00: Hank Snow; Fruit Jar Drinkers; Lonzo and Oscar; Bill Monroe; Carlisles; Marty Robbins
9:30: Ray Price; Slim Whitman; Anita Carter; Cousin Jody; Crook Brothers; Grandpa Jones; Chet Atkins; Jordanaires
10:00: George Morgan; Bill Monroe; Moon Mullican
10:15: Marty Robbins; Carlisles; Goldie Hill
10:30: Jim Reeves; R.D. Heardon; Jean Shepard
10:45: Hank Snow; Jimmie Snow; Gully Jumpers
11:00: Lonzo and Oscar; Ferlin Husky; Rod Brasfield; Slim Whitman; Grandpa Jones; Maybelle Carter; Crook Brothers
11:30: Ray Price; Louvin Brothers; Eddie Hill; Sam and Kirk McGee; Cousin Jody; Dot and Smokey; Fruit Jar Drinkers

There you have it for this week. As always, thanks for reading and commenting and I hope everyone enjoys the Grand Ole Opry this weekend. 





Sunday, November 21, 2021

Tuesday Night Opry 11/23

A very good line-up for the Tuesday night Opry. 

7:00: Jeannie Seely; Jake Hoot; Riders In The Sky; Mandy Barnett
Intermission
8:15: Charlie McCoy; Gary Mule Deer; Lee Greenwood; Lauren Alaina

Interesting that we are seeing another guest appearance by Lauren so soon after her last appearance and with another appearance scheduled before the end of the year. 


Wednesday, November 17, 2021

Grand Ole Opry 11/19 & 11/20

Looking at the line-ups for the Friday Night Opry and Saturday's Grand Ole Opry this weekend, I see that Opry member Rhonda Vincent is scheduled for both nights and that brings a smile to my face. 

For years and years, Rhonda had a dream and desire to be a member of the Opry. Sadly, under the previous general manager, the invitation to join never came. Happily, after a change at the top, the invitation for Rhonda to join came in 2020, with her official induction taking place in February 2021. 

Talk about being a loyal member of the Opry, and taking her Opry membership seriously, the two shows this weekend will mark Rhonda's 22nd and 23rd Opry appearances of the year, with only Jeannie Seely, Riders In the Sky and Connie Smith appearing more often. 

Here is a perfect example of Rhonda's devotion to the Opry. After appearing on the Tuesday night Opry this week, Rhonda was off to Branson, Missouri to appear Wednesday and Thursday at the Mansion Theater, and then back to Nashville to perform at both Opry shows this weekend. A very busy week for Rhonda. 

So who else will be joining Rhonda at the Opry this weekend? As far as Opry members, John Conlee is on the schedule for both nights, with Connie Smith listed for Friday night with Jeannie Seely and Bobby Osborne on the schedule for Saturday night. 

A number of interesting guest artists this weekend. Starting with Friday night, Kristian Bush is back on the schedule, along with comedian Chonda Pierce. Additionally, there is Eric Paslay, Caitlyn Smith and Hayes Carll. Can't honestly say that any of these are huge names, but they certainly fill out the show with a lot of variety. 

Saturday night has a return appearance by Kat & Alex, along with The War and The Treaty, and John Crist, another of the comedians who seems to be in the rotation that the Opry is using. 

On an added note, there is no live Circle TV Opry show this weekend as the network will be showing a previously recorded show. 

Friday November 19
7:00: John Conlee; Eric Paslay; Caitlyn Smith; Hayes Carll
Intermission
8:15: Connie Smith; Chonda Pierce; Kristian Bush; Rhonda Vincent

Saturday November 20
7:00: Opry Square Dancers; Jeannie Seely; Kat & Alex; Bobby Osborne & The Rocky Top X-Press; John Conlee
Intermission
8:15: Rhonda Vincent; John Crist; The War and The Treaty

And now from 50 years ago, here the running order from Saturday November 20, 1971: 

1st show
6:30: Mrs. Grissoms
Jimmy C Newman (host): Diggy Liggy Lo
Ernie Ashworth: A New Heart
Jimmy C Newman: A Fallin' Star/Boo Dan

6:45: Rudy's
George Hamilton IV (host): West Texas Highway
Barbara Mandrell: After Closing Time
George Hamilton IV: Anyway
Barbara Mandrell: Treat Him Right
George Hamilton IV: Country Fried

7:00: Luzianne
Bill Monroe (host): Cotton Eyed Joe
Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper: Poor Ellen Smith
Grandpa Jones: Make Me a Pallet Down on the Floor
Connie Smith: Louisiana Man
Bill Monroe: The Little Community Church
Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper: Satisfied
Grandpa Jones: My Dear Old Southern Home
Connie Smith: In the Garden
Bill Monroe: (?)

7:30: Standard Candy
Roy Acuff (host): Wabash Cannonball
Bobby Bare: Four Strong Winds
Willis Brothers: Women's Liberation
Crook Brothers: (?)
Roy Acuff: I Saw the Light
Bobby Bare: Miller's Cave
Willis Brothers: For the Good Times
Roy Acuff: Cabin in Gloryland

8:00: Martha White
Lester Flatt (host): It's Mighty Dark for Me to Travel
Stringbean: Train 45 Heading South
Archie Campbell: Hey, Waiter
Mac Wiseman: I'll Still Write Your Name in the Sand/The Bluebirds Singing for Me
Stringbean: Y'all Come
Haskel McCormick: McCormick's String Picnic
Lester Flatt: Before I Met You

8:30: Stephens
Ernest Tubb (host): A Good Year for the Wine
Wilburn Brothers: We Need a Lot More Happiness
Stu Phillips: I'd Rather Be Sorry
Marion Worth: You Don't Have to Be a Baby to Cry
Ernest Tubb: Blue Christmas
Fruit Jar Drinkers: Bill Cheatham
Wilburn Brothers: The War Keeps Draggin' On
Ernest Tubb: Kansas City Blues

2nd show
9:30: Kellogg's
George Hamilton IV (host): Early Morning Rain
Willis Brothers: Give Me 40 Acres
Jimmy C Newman: Jambalaya
Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper: The Banks of the Ohio
George Hamilton IV: She's a Little Bit Country
Barbara Mandrell: Tonight My Baby's Coming Home
Jimmy C Newman: Cry, Cry Darling
George Hamilton IV: Country Fried

10:00: Fender
Roy Acuff (host): Little Pal
Bobby Bare: Detroit City
Howdy Forrester: Sally Goodin'
Roy Acuff: The Great Speckled Bird

10:15: Union 76
Bill Monroe (host): You Won't Be Satisfied That Way
Grandpa Jones: Are You From Dixie
Bill Monroe: Sally Goodin'

10:30: Trailblazer
Lester Flatt (host) and Bill Monroe: Rollin' In My Sweet Baby's Arms
Mac Wiseman: Shackles & Chains
Lester Flatt and Mac Wiseman: Will You Be Loving Another Man
Uncle Josh: Just Joshin'

10:45: Beechnut
Ernest Tubb (host): I'm Looking High & Low For My Baby
Connie Smith: How Great Thou Art
Crook Brothers: 8th of January
Ernest Tubb: Shenandoah Waltz

11:00: Coca Cola
Archie Campbell (host): Make Friends
Stringbean: Little Pink
Fruit Jar Drinkers: Hickory Leaf
Phil Campbell: Mule Skinner Blues
Stringbean: Hot Corn; Cold Corn
Sam McGee: Victory Rag
Archie and Phil Campbell: Release Me

11:30: Elm Hill
Wilburn Brothers (host): It Looks Like the Sun's Gonna Shine
Marion Worth: For the Good Times
Stu Phillips: Help Me Make it Through the Night
Wilburn Brothers: The War Keeps Draggin' On
Marion Worth: Okie from Muskogee
Stu Phillips: Danny Boy
Wilburn Brothers (with Lester and Leslie): The Old Country Church

A pretty solid show from 1971 with future Opry member Barbara Mandrell appearing. 

There you have it for this week. As always, thanks for reading and commenting and I hope everyone enjoys the Grand Ole Opry this weekend. 




Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Tuesday Night Opry 11/16

Coming off a very good weekend of shows at the Grand Ole Opry, the line-up for the Tuesday Night Opry has been posted.

Grand Ole Opry members scheduled for Tuesday include Connie Smith, Del McCoury and Rhonda Vincent. Looks like we are going to get a good sampling of bluegrass. 

Comedian Henry Cho will be making another Opry appearance as will songwriter and Hall of Fame member Don Schlitz. 

7:00: Connie Smith; Travis Denning; Del McCoury; Don Schlitz
Intermission
8:15: Jameson Rodgers; Henry Cho; Maggie Rose; Rhonda Vincent

As I mentioned, I thought last weekend was a very good one for the Opry. I thought every artist who appeared on Friday night did an excellent job, including Mackenzie Porter, who was making her Opry debut. The last hour, with her and Dustin Lynch, Lauren Alaina and Vince Gill was particuarly strong. 

The last hour on Saturday night was a salute to Veterans Day and Billy Ray Cyrus really did a nice job. I give credit to those in charge having Bill Anderson and Billy Ray closing out the show with Bill's song "Old Army Hat." It was well done. Five of the eight were Opry members. 

Wednesday, November 10, 2021

Grand Ole Opry 11/12 & 11/13

So here we go with another weekend of Grand Ole Opry shows, with Saturday night being #5002. Standing out this week is the return of Crystal Gayle to the Opry, as she is on the schedule for Friday night. Strangely, this will only be Crystal's 2nd appearance of 2021. Also listed on the schedule for Friday, and somewhat of a last minute addition, is Opry member Vince Gill. Bobby Osborne was originally on the schedule, but he was taken off and Vince added. 

Also scheduled on the Friday Night Opry are members Dustin Lynch and Mark Wills. Mark returns on Saturday night, where he will be joined by Jeannie Seely, Bill Anderson, Connie Smith and John Conlee. Nice to see Mark and John scheduled for the TV portion on Circle. 

Lauren Alaina, who many feel will be a future member of the Opry, is also on the schedule for Friday night, along with Sam Williams, comedian Aaron Weber and making her Opry debut, Mackenzie Porter. Speaking of Sam Williams, I can say that I have been pretty impressed with the grandson of Hank Williams, Jr. 

Besides the Opry members already listed, bluegrass veteran Dale Ann Bradley is on the schedule for Saturday night, while Jesse James Decker and Billy Ray Cyrus are listed for the televised portion, which is being promoted as a salute to veterans. 

Speaking of Dale Ann Bradley, seems to me that it has been a few years since she has been on the Opry as a solo performer, although she has appeared on the Opry recently when she was a member of Sister Sadie. Dale Ann is a member of the Kentucky Music Hall of Fame and during her career she has won six IBMA Female Vocalist of the Year awards. She has also received two Grammy nominations. In January of 2020, she was voted SPGBMA’s Female Vocalist of the Year. Oh Darlin’, her first 2020 project- a collaborative album of stripped down duet recordings with Sister Sadie bandmate Tina Adair, produced a chart topping single of the same name.

Friday November 12
7:00: Mark Wills; Sam Williams; Aaron Weber; Crystal Gayle
Intermission
8:15: Mackenzie Porter; Dustin Lynch; Lauren Alaina; Vince Gill

Saturday November 13
7:00: Opry Square Dancers; Jeannie Seely; Bill Anderson; Connie Smith; Dale Ann Bradley
8:00: Mark Wills; Jesse James Decker; John Conlee; Billy Ray Cyrus

So who is Mackenzie Porter? 

Originally from Canada, Mackenzie Porter records for Big Loud Records and is now being featured on Country radio with the headline-making Dustin Lynch collaboration “Thinking ‘Bout You,” alongside last year’s DRINKIN’ SONGS: THE COLLECTION – an arsenal of two years’ worth of new music produced by Joey Moi. 

Entertainer of the Year, 5X Female Artist of the Year, Songwriter of the Year, Video of the Year and 2X Fans’ Choice – as well as 2021 and 2015 JUNO Award nominations, both for Country Album of the Year. Mackenzie became the first female artist to have three back-to back #1 singles at Canadian Country radio in 22 years with “About You,” “These Days” and “Seeing Other People” in early 2020, following Shania Twain in 1998. Porter also earned her first crossover Top 10 at Canadian Pop radio – a first since 2003 for a Canadian Country artist – with “These Days (Remix),” and joined CMT’s elite sisterhood of tastemakers and trailblazers as one of their Next Women of Country class of 2021. The Pandora 2021 Country Artist to Watch and co-star of Netflix’s Travelers joins Jordan Davis’ 2021 BUY DIRT this fall after touring extensively on her own, previously sharing the stage with Kenny Chesney, Blake Shelton, Brad Paisley, Rascal Flatts, Chris Lane, and Dallas Smith.

I am sure she will be doing a collaboration with Dustin Lynch on Friday night. 
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Now from 50 years ago, with the running order from Saturday November 13, 1971: 

1st show
6:30: Mrs. Grissoms
Osborne Brothers (host): Rocky Top/Nine Pound Hammer/Take Me Home Country Roads

6:45: Rudy's
Stonewall Jackson (host): Me & You & A Dog Named Boo
Del Wood: Gloryland March
Dickey Lee: Never Ending Song of Love
Stonewall Jackson: Washed My Hands in Muddy Water

7:00: Luzianne
Bill Monroe (host): Careless Love
Charlie Walker: Got My Mind on the Border of Mexico
Earl Scruggs Revue: Nashville Skyline Rag
Barbara Mandrell: Treat Him Right
Bill Monroe: In the Pines
Charlie Walker: My Baby Used to Be That Way
Earl Scruggs Revue: Brand New Tennessee Waltz
Bill Monroe: Mule Skinner Blues/White Oak Breakdown

7:30: Standard Candy
Stu Phillips (host): Help Me Make it Through the Night
Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper: Big Midnight Special
Stringbean: Mountain Dew
Willis Brothers: Pretty Diamonds
Stu Phillips: I'd Rather Be Sorry
Crook Brothers: Arkansas Traveler
Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper: Lord, I'm Coming Home
Stringbean: Nine Pound Hammer

8:00: Martha White
Lester Flatt (host): Will You Be Loving Another Man
Billy Walker: Darling Days
Dottie West: Paper Mansions
Harold Weakley: Where No One Stands Alone
Lester Flatt and Uncle Josh: The Bluebirds Sing for Me
Billy Walker: Smokey Places
The 4 Guys: Ruby, Don't Take Your Love to Town
Dottie West: Six Weeks Every Summer; Christmas Every Other Year

8:30: Stephens
Roy Acuff (host): Wabash Cannonball
Wilburn Brothers: That's She Leaving Feeling
Connie Smith: I'm Sorry if My Love Got in Your Way
Fruit Jar Drinkers: Devil's Dream
Roy Acuff: Where Could I Go But to the Lord
Wilburn Brothers: Someone Before Me
Connie Smith: Crumbs From the Table

2nd show
9:30: Kellogg's
Bill Anderson (host): I Get the Fever
Willis Brothers: Chant of the Plains
Jan Howard: Evil on Your Mind
Osborne Brothers: Take Me Home Country Roads
Bill Anderson: Quits
Bill Anderson and Jan Howard: Dis-Satisfied
Osborne Brothers: Ruby
Bill Anderson: Cincinnati, Ohio

10:00: Fender
Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper (host): Forget; Forgive Us #1
Del Wood: Are You From Dixie
Dickey Lee: Never Ending Song of Love
Wilma Lee Cooper: No One Now

10:15: Union 76
Bill Monroe (host): Train 45 Heading South
Earl Scruggs Revue: T for Texas
Barbara Mandrell: Tonight My Baby's Coming Home
Bill Monroe: Cripple Creek

10:30: Trailblazer
Lester Flatt (host): Rollin' In My Sweet Baby's Arms
Stringbean: Ol' Man, Can You Play the Banjo
Charlie Walker: Got My Mind on the Border of Mexico
Lester Flatt: Father's Table Grace

10:45: Beechnut
Roy Acuff (host): I Saw the Light
Crook Brothers: Gray Eagle
Onie Wheeler and Charlie Collins: Mother Prays Loud in Her Sleep
Roy Acuff: The Great Speckled Bird

11:00: Coca Cola
Billy Walker (host): Things/Ashes of Love
Dottie West: Six Weeks Every Summer; Christmas Every Other Year
Stu Phillips: Have I Told You Lately That I Love You/You Win Again/Release Me
Fruit Jar Drinkers: Katy Hill
Billy Walker: You Gave Me a Mountain
Dottie West: Willy's Winter Love
Sam McGee: Wheels
Billy Walker, Dottie West and Connie Smith: Farther Along

11:30: Elm Hill
Wilburn Brothers (host): It Looks Like the Sun's Gonna Shine
Connie Smith: Ribbon of Darkness
The 4 Guys: Cottonfields/Maria/Let There Be Peace
Connie Smith: Down in the Valley
Wilburn Brothers: Little Johnny From Down the Street

Pretty solid line-up for the 1971 show. A reminder that Barbara Mandrell was not an Opry member as of yet and interesting that the Osborne Brothers had the opening segment to themselves as Ernie Ashworth was originally slated for that time slot. 

There you have it for this week. As always, thanks for reading and commenting and I hope everyone enjoys the Grand Ole Opry this weekend. 

Tuesday, November 9, 2021

Tuesday Night Opry 11/9

Starting with the month of November, there is only one weeknight Opry show the rest of the year, with the exception of the Opry Christmas shows which will be beginning a little bit later.

Looking at the lineup for the show this week, Grand Ole Opry members John Conlee and Jeannie Seely are scheduled to perform, along with frequent Opry guest Steven Curtis Chapman. Also appearing will be Sara Evans and making his Opry debut, Jelly Roll. 

Tuesday November 9
7:00: John Conlee; Sister Sadie; Jeannie Seely; Steven Curtis Chapman
Intermission
8:15: Jelly Roll; Russell Dickerson; Killer Beaz; Sara Evans

Those who might not be familiar with Jelly Roll will like to know that he is a native of Nashville and has been involved in the Nashville music scene. His music is hard to describe, with most calling him a rapper. He is also a singer and songwriter who blends Old School Rap, Classic Rock, Country and Soul together. 

In 2020 he released “Save Me”—a confessional, vulnerable expression of self-doubt took him to new heights, with more than 65 million views on YouTube and Gold certification from the RIAA. The song also helped him find a new voice musically and explore a more melodic songwriting style that brought in more Rock and Country influence to his style.

2021 brought more headlining shows and—for the first time—an album on which Jelly Roll is only singing (not rapping but for one lone verse) and of which all demos were recorded acoustic. “I’m nervous, because that’s stepping into the unknown for me, but I never want to feel like I’m enclosed in a certain box—maybe being incarcerated kind of bleeds over into thinking about my artistry,” he says. “The album leans more toward Southern Rock-Soul with some real stripped-down acoustic records, and some real heavy shit. The older you get, the more melodic things seem to be and this project is definitely reflective of my own journey and finding my voice.”

Those headlining shows included a sold-out September show at the Ryman Auditorium. 


Sunday, November 7, 2021

November Opry Highlights

Hard to believe but November is upon us. Many consider the months of November, December, January and February the "winter" months, as the cold wind from the North starts blowing. And let's not forget that November brings the start of the holiday season. 

November is another busy month at the Opry, so here are the historical and important moments that took place during the month of November in relation to the Grand Ole Opry, or with its members.

November 9, 1895: The man who started it all, George D. Hay was born on this date in Attica, Indiana. A member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, he came to Nashville and WSM in 1925 and in November of that year started the WSM Barn Dance, later to be named the Grand Ole Opry. As his influence at WSM and the Opry declined as the years went on, he would eventually leave Nashville and move to Virginia Beach, Virginia, where he passed away in 1968.

November 11, 1899: Kirk McGee, one of the Opry's original performers, was born in Franklin, Tennessee. Kirk, along with his brother Sam, would perform on the Opry with a variety of performers and often backed up the square dancers. Kirk would remain with the Opry until his death in 1983.

November 28, 1912: Early Grand Ole Opry member Robert Lunn was born in Franklin, Tennessee. He was nicknamed the "Original Talking Blues Man." Robert first appeared on the Grand Ole Opry on March 31, 1934, and he stayed with the Opry until he retired in 1958. What is interesting is that he was known for his "Talking Blues" yes he never recorded the song until 1947. He was very popular and did many early Opry tent shows, often appearing with Roy Acuff.

November 6, 1925: Uncle Dave Macon, Sid Harkreader and Dr. Humphrey Bate performed a show at the Ryman Auditorium that was broadcast on WSM radio. This is considered the first country music concert to have been broadcast on WSM and actually predates the Opry. 

November 9, 1925: George D. Hay began working at WSM radio in Nashville, with the title of "Radio Director." Later in the month, he would put Uncle Jimmy Thompson in front of a WSM microphone on a Saturday night, which was the beginning of the WSM Barn Dance, later renamed the Grand Ole Opry.

November 28, 1925: At 8:00 p.m., and originating from the fifth-floor studio at the National Life and Accident Insurance Company's headquarters in downtown Nashville, George D. Hay stepped up to a microphone and introduced Uncle Jimmy Thompson on WSM radio. This is considered as the birth of the Grand Ole Opry. The first tune played by Uncle Jimmy was "Tennessee Wagoner."

November 2, 1926: Former Grand Ole Opry member Charlie Walker was born in Texas. This former disc jockey joined the Grand Ole Opry in 1967 and would remain a member of the Opry until his death in 2008. Each of the occasions that I had the opportunity to speak to Charlie, I always found him friendly and interesting.

November 30, 1931: Teddy Wilburn was born. Teddy, along with his brother Doyle, were longtime members of the Grand Ole Opry. After Doyle's death, Teddy remained as a solo artist on the Opry, until his death in 2003. There are many who make the argument that the Wilburn Brothers deserve a spot in the Country Music Hall of Fame. 

November 1, 1937: Grand Ole Opry member Bill Anderson was born. Bill became an Opry member in 1961 and is still an active member today. Not only has the Country Music Hall of Fame member have numerous hit records to his credit, but he is also considered one of the great songwriters in the history of country music and this past year he was elected to the Songwriters Hall of Fame.  Hard to believe that Bill will be 84 this year and recently celebrated his 60th year as a member of the Grand Ole Opry. 

November 30, 1940: Minnie Pearl made her Grand Ole Opry debut. Minnie would become one of the most beloved members in the history of the Grand Ole Opry and would be an Opry member for over 50 years.

November 2, 1948: Roy Acuff was defeated in his campaign to become the Governor of Tennessee. While Roy would remain a big supporter of Republican candidates, Roy himself would never run for public office again. Roy's campaign mixed country music and politics. He would usually start off his appearances with music, then get into the political speeches. By then, most of the crowd would begin to filter out. 

November 6, 1948: While official records are many times hard to come by, it would appear that this was the date that Jimmy Dickens first became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Jimmy was an Opry member until leaving in 1957, however he returned to the cast in 1975. Jimmy then stayed with the Opry until his death in January 2015.

November 13, 1949: The Grand Ole Opry sponsored its first overseas tour, as a group of Opry performers traveled to England, Germany and the Azores as part of a USO sponsored tour. Among the Opry stars making the trip were Roy Acuff, Rod Brasfield, Jimmy Dickens, Red Foley, Minnie Pearl and Hank Williams.

November 22, 1952: The first Country Music Disc Jockey convention took place in Nashville. Among the activities that took place was the Grand Ole Opry birthday celebration, the first time a formal event was held to recognize the Opry's anniversary. The DJ convention would continue to grow, eventually growing into such events as Country Music Month and Fan Fair. While the DJ meetings would move to February, the Opry still celebrates his birthday/anniversary each fall, now usually taking place the first or second weekend in October.

November 13, 1953: Del Wood became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Del was known for her ragtime piano playing, and her #1 record, "Down Yonder." Del would remain as a member until her death in October 1989.

November 14, 1953: Bill Carlisle joined the cast of the Grand Ole Opry. Bill was an Opry member for just over 49 years, until passing away on March 17, 2003, the same year that he was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame. At times, Bill, along with his daughter Sheila and son Bill, Jr., would be listed on the Opry program as The Carlisles. 

November 28, 1953: Future Grand Ole Opry member Hank Locklin made his first guest appearance on the show. 

November 19, 1954: After returning to Nashville from the Army, Faron Young made his first Opry appearance on the Friday Night Frolics. Faron would eventually join the Opry, staying until being fired in 1964 for a lack of appearances. 

November 20, 1954: Western singer and television star Gene Autry made his first appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. Gene, who was one of the early members elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame, was based out west and didn't venture to Nashville very often. 

November 21, 1955: Jean Shepard became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Jean, who passed away in 2016, was an Opry member for over 60 years, the only female to achieve that number. Not only was November 21 the date that Jean joined the Opry, but it was also her birthday and wedding anniversary. It should be noted that after Jean joined the Opry in 1955, she never left.

November 3, 1956: The great Stonewall Jackson originally joined the cast of the Grand Ole Opry. This year will mark his 65th anniversary from when he first joined the show. While it is now over 60 years since Stonewall originally joined, it should be noted that Stonewall was fired from the Opry in 1964 for failing to make the required number of annual appearances. He rejoined the cast in 1969. Stonewall's last appearance on the Opry was several years ago when he was recognized upon his 60th anniversary of joining the Opry. Sadly, Stonewall is battling some serious health issues and we have probably seen the last of him on the Opry. 

November 10, 1956: The Wilburn Brothers, Teddy and Doyle, became official members of the Grand Ole Opry. Teddy and Doyle, along with other family members, originally came to the Opry in the 1940s, however due to child labor laws, they were sent packing. Thankfully, with the help of Roy Acuff and Webb Pierce, the brothers returned and became one of the most successful brother acts in the history of country music.

November 9, 1960; Hank Locklin accepted an invitation to become a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Hank had made his first Opry guest appearance on November 28, 1953. Over the years, he would continue to guest until finally becoming an Opry member. Hank would remain an Opry member until his death in March 2009, 6 month short of 50 years as an Opry member. (Hank's first actual appearance as a member would take place on November 12. 

November 3, 1961: The Country Music Association announced the first class of inductees to the new Country Music Hall of Fame. In that first class were Jimmie Rodgers, Fred Rose and Hank Williams. Roy Acuff would join that group the following year to become the first living inductee into the Hall.

November 25, 1961: Former Grand Ole Opry announcer, and WSM air personality, Eddie Stubbs was born in Gaithersburg, Maryland. Before joining WSM, Eddie was a fiddle player with the Johnson Mountain Boys, and then later he was a part of Kitty Wells' band. Eddie retired from WSM in 2020 and has apparently left Nashville behind in his rear view mirror. 

November 29, 1961: A group of Opry members, which included Jim Reeves, Marty Robbins, Bill Monroe, Patsy Cline and Grandpa Jones, performed before a sold-out audience at Carnegie Hall in New York.

November 7, 1964: Minnie Pearl performed on the Grand Ole Opry for the final time before taking a leave of absence from the show. If not for taking the leave, Minnie would have been dismissed from the Opry the following month as part of the Purge of 1964. Minnie was just so busy traveling and doing television shows that she wasn't around Nashville all that often. Minnie would return to the Opry on February 12, 1966.

November 28, 1964: Willie Nelson became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Willie was an Opry member for just several years, as Nashville was tough on him and he eventually left Music City, returning to his native Texas and reinventing his career. While at the Opry, Willie would constantly complain about the low pay and having to give up every Saturday night to be there.

November 25, 1965: Leroy Van Dyke was fired/suspended as a member of the Grand Ole Opry for failing to meet the Opry's attendance requirements. Leroy had joined the Opry's cast a few years earlier. While Leroy never returned as an Opry member, he has made many guest appearances on the show. According to people I have spoken to over the years, Leroy still feels that he should be considered an Opry member. 

November 25, 1967: Porter Wagoner and Dolly Parton performed on the Grand Ole Opry for the first time. Dolly's first Opry appearance since 1959 was the previous month, however on that show, Porter and Dolly did not do a duet. The song they performed that night was "The Last Thing on My Mind." While not an Opry member at the time, Dolly would join the cast in January 1969.

November 20, 1968: While not specific to the Grand Ole Opry, the first televised Country Music Association Awards show was televised on NBC. While the awards started in 1966, it took several years to find a network interested in airing it. The show was televised from the Ryman Auditorium with Roy Rogers and Dale Evans as the hosts. As a side note, the show was taped and played at a later date as network executives were not sure how the country performers would act on live television. 

November 12, 1971: Construction officially started on the new Grand Ole Opry House at Opryland USA. It was a massive project, taking until March 1974 to complete. While there were initial worries about the Opry leaving downtown and the Ryman Auditorium, the Opry has done just fine in its new home.

November 27, 1971: Grand Ole Opry member Margie Bowes made her final appearance as a member of the Grand Ole Opry cast. Margie, who came to the Opry in the late 1950s, would return a couple of times for guest appearances but when she left the Opry she basically moved away from the music business. 

November 10, 1973: David Akeman, known professionally as Stringbean, made his final appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. Later that night, when he and his wife Estelle returned home, they were ambushed and murdered by two men who were waiting in their home to rob them. The bodies were found the following morning by their neighbor and good friend, Grandpa Jones, who had come to pick up Stringbean for a fishing trip. Nashville, and the Opry, was shaken by the murders, with many Opry members, led by Roy Acuff, calling for the death penalty. Grandpa Jones left Nashville for a number of years, moving to Arkansas and opening his own dinner theater. The killers were quickly caught and convicted. One died in prison and the other is out on parole.

November 24, 1975: One of the Opry's early members, Asher Sizemore, passed away at the age of 69. Asher appeared on the Opry with his son, known as "Little Jimmie." While there is some confusion as to when they started on the Opry, the date appears to be September 24, 1932. They were on the Opry for most of the 1930s, leaving the Opry in 1942. Years after they left the Opry, the pair would continue to perform on various radio stations, primarily in the Midwest.

November 29, 1975: This would appear to be the final date that Porter Wagoner and Dolly Parton performed on the Opry together. While they would both be scheduled to work the show, they would appear on separate segments. The popular duo would not get back together again until the night of Roy Acuff's 50th anniversary as an Opry member in February 1988. 

November 1, 1978: Tanya Tucker made a guest appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. According to reports, Tanya was not very well received as she didn't stick to country music during her performance. 

November 18, 1978: Grand Ole Opry member Del Wood was recognized upon her 25th anniversary as a member of the Opry's cast. Del, known as the "Queen of the 88's" was one of the few instrumentalists to have recorded a No. 1 record. 

November 5, 1983: Glen Campbell made his first guest appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. He performed a melody of his hits.

November 21, 1985: Reba McEntire made her first appearance as a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Reba had actually joined the show earlier when she was asked to join during a taping of the Opry's 60th anniversary show. Since the show was taped for later broadcast, news of her Opry membership was kept under wraps. Reba, whose Opry appearances have become few and far between, has been an Opry member for 36 years. 

November 3, 1990: Minnie Pearl was honored as an Opry member for 50 years. She joined the cast in 1940. As a member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, this comedian is considered one of the great stars in the history of the Grand Ole Opry. As part of the celebration, Dwight Yoakam sent 50 dozen roses to Minnie. 

November 15, 1992: The Grand Ole Opry radio program was inducted into the Museum of Broadcast Communication's Hall of Fame.

November 23, 1992: Grand Ole Opry member Roy Acuff passed away in Nashville, just one month after his final appearance on the Opry. His influence at the Opry, and with country music in general, cannot be overstated. Thanks in large part to Acuff-Rose Publishing, Nashville became the home of country music. Roy was a member of the Grand Ole Opry for over 50 years, and for many years he was the Opry's most popular member. There are many who feel that his death was the first nail in the coffin that had led to the many changes that have taken place at the Opry over the past several decades.

November 28, 1992: Marty Stuart became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. This will be Marty's 29th year as an Opry member. Marty joined the Opry's cast the week after Roy Acuff passed away and I thought Marty would be great addition to the Opry. Sadly, Marty seems to have gone in a different direction and he seldom appears on the show. On a happier note, it was announced in 2020 that Marty had been elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame. 

November 27, 1993: Joe Diffie became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Sadly, Joe passed away in 2020 from Covid. He left us much too early. 

November 6, 1993: Grand Ole Opry member David Houston made his final appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. 

November 30, 1993: Just weeks after his final Opry appearance, David Houston passed away at the age of 57. David, who came to Nashville and the Opry from the Louisiana Hayride, had one of the biggest hits in the history of country music with "Almost Persuaded." David had joined the Opry in 1972. In addition to his solo career, David also toured and recorded with Barbara Mandrell. 

November 30, 1995: Martina McBride became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Martina joined during a CBS television special that celebrated the Opry's 70th anniversary. This will be her 26th year as an Opry member. Loretta Lynn, who Martina said was a big influence to her while she was learning the business, did the formal induction. Regarding Martina, I love this story that I have repeated several times: She actually appeared on the Opry as part of the 70th anniversary birthday bash that was televised by TNN. She was the last performer on the televised segment before the cake was to be brought out, along with the cast singing "Happy Birthday Grand Ole Opry" which always concluded the televised segment. During her portion, she sang two ballads that ran long, causing the cake and singing to be delayed until the next segment, which was not televised. There were many unhappy viewers at home who missed this Opry tradition, and many unhappy Opry members, who missed the chance to be onstage during the televised segment. Martina was very upset afterwards, believing that her mistake on the timing of her songs, cost her a chance of becoming an Opry member, something she always dreamed of. She apologized to everyone she could fine that night, and dreams do come true as the following month, she became an Opry member.

November 23, 1996: Trace Adkins made his first appearance as a guest on the Opry. 7 years later, in August 2003, he would become an Opry member. Trace has told the story several times that on the night of his first appearance, Grandpa Jones, who was hosting the segment, forgot his name. Not unusual for Grandpa.

November 8, 1997: Johnny Paycheck became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. For Johnny, this came pretty late in his life, and after several years of trying to rebuild his image and career after some series legal issues that included prison. Johnny Russell did a lot of work behind the scenes to help Johnny become a member, convincing Opry management that Johnny had cleaned up his act. Sadly, Johnny became ill a few years after joining the show. On a side note, this was also the night that future Grand Ole Opry member Terri Clark made her Opry debut. 

November 7, 1998: Jimmy Dickens was honored for 50 years of Opry membership. Jimmy, who originally joined the Opry in 1948, was joined that night by Waylon Jennings, Bill Anderson, Carl Smith and Bobby Bare. Nashville also honored Jimmy by proclaiming the day as "Jimmy Dickens" day in the city. 

November 5, 1999: In a stunning move, Opry General Manager Pete Fisher announced a reorganization of the Opry Staff Band, which resulted a several of the band members being dismissed. Included in that list were Buddy Harman, Leon Rhodes, Joe Edwards, Ralph Davis and Ray Johnston. According to Pete Fisher, "After several months of observing what was going on with the staff band I made a decision to restructure it, not only to achieve efficiency, but also to upgrade the quality so that we're providing the best service we can." Personally, I did not think there was any issue with the quality of the staff band and neither did Vince Gill, who was quoted as saying, "Leon Rhodes can play circles around most guitar players, and Buddy Harman can play circles around most drummers. The sad thing is, younger ain't better." It sure didn't take Pete Fisher long to begin making changes at the Opry. 

November 23, 2000: Dolly Parton and Vince Gill hosted a CBS televised special celebrating the 75th anniversary of the Grand Ole Opry. The special had been taped a week after the Opry's actual 75th celebration in October. 

November 24, 2000: Grand Ole Opry member Johnny Russell made his final appearance on the Friday Night Opry, thus ending his performing career as ill health forced his retirement. Johnny's final Saturday night appearance had taken place the previous week, on Saturday November 18. Johnny passed away several years later after a period of declining health.

November 8, 2002: The Grand Ole Opry was broadcast for the first time on Sirius satellite radio. For many, it was the first time that they were able to listen to an entire Opry show, while for others, it was the first time to enjoy the show without static.

November 23, 2002: Jim & Jesse McReynolds performed on the Opry for the final time. Jim McReynolds, who was in the final stages of an illness that would lead to his death on December 31, sang and played his guitar while sitting. The brothers had been Opry members since 1964, with Jesse still actively performing on the Opry.

November 30, 2002: Tim McGraw made his first guest appearance on the Opry. While never becoming an Opry member, Tim would appear on the Opry stage a few more times.

November 1, 2003: Grand Ole Opry member Holly Dunn made her final appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. Holly made the decision to give up her musical career and moved to New Mexico to pursue her passion as an artist. Sadly, and unlike a few other Opry members who retired from performing, Holly was fired as an Opry member several years later in a move that made absolutely no sense. 

November 17, 2003: Grand Ole Opry member Don Gibson passed away in Nashville. Don was one of the greatest songwriters in the history of country music and in 2001 he had been elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame. Don joined the Opry on May 20, 1958, but was fired in December 1964 for failing to meet the required number of Opry appearances. He rejoined the show several years later, but even after coming back, his appearances were few. His last Opry show was on March 16, 1996.

November 24, 2003: Grand Ole Opry member Teddy Wilburn passed away. Teddy had been in declining health and had not performed on the Opry in several years. He, along with his brother Doyle, joined the Opry's cast in the 1950s and were instrumental in the early career of Loretta Lynn. 

November 14, 2005: Following in the footsteps of Porter Wagoner, Trisha Yearwood rang the bell to open the trading day on the New York Stock Exchange in honor of the Opry's 80th anniversary. 

November 14, 2005: The Grand Ole Opry returned to Carnegie Hall in New York for just the 3rd time in its history, this time to promote the Opry's 80th anniversary. The show included performances by Trace Adkins, Bill Anderson, Jimmy Dickens, Vince Gill, Alan Jackson, Alison Krauss, Martina McBride, Brad Paisley, Charley Pride, Ricky Skaggs and Trisha Yearwood.

November 26, 2005: Grand Ole Opry member Jean Shepard was honored upon her 50th anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Jean had joined the Opry's cast in November 1955. Sadly, Jean's recognition did not take place during the televised segment that evening. 

November 11, 2006: The Academy of Country Music presented its Pioneer Award to Little Jimmy Dickens during a Grand Ole Opry performance at Nashville's Ryman Auditorium. The honor was announced six months prior.

November 18, 2006: Grand Ole Opry member Stonewall Jackson hosted the Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree and was honored upon his 50th anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Sadly, due to Stonewall's lawsuit against Gaylord and the Opry, he did not appear on the Opry to commemorate the occasion. 

November 24, 2006: Longtime Grand Ole Opry Staff Band member Jimmy "Spider" Wilson quit. He had been a member of the Staff Band for over 50 years and reportedly quit do to being kept off the televised portion of the Opry. 

November 2, 2007: Lady A (as they are now called) made their debut on the Grand Ole Opry. It would take a while but in 2021, the trio became members of the Grand Ole Opry, in an induction that took place during the Opry's 95th special. 

November 19, 2007: During Charlie Daniel's 11th annual Christmas For Kids benefit at the Ryman Auditorium, Opry member Martina McBride surprised Charlie on stage with an invitation to become a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Charlie, who passed away last year, always said that being an Opry member was one of the highest honors he had achieved in his life. 

November 8, 2008: Actor Kevin Costner and his country and western band, Modern West, performed on the Grand Ole Opry for the first time.

November 14, 2009: The Grand Ole Opry streamed part of its show on MySpace. The segment featured Carrie Underwood, Martina McBride, Jake Owen and Rodney Atkins. This was the first time that the Opry attempted a broadcast like this and despite numerous technical issues, the Opry considered it a success.

November 9, 2010: Grand Ole Opry member Charlie Louvin made his final Opry appearance, in a show that took place at the Ryman Auditorium. Charlie was an Opry member for over 50 years and like Jean Shepard, Charlie always made it a point of telling folks that once he joined the Opry with his brother Ira, he never left. 

November 10, 2012: Charles Esten, star of the ABC-TV series "Nashville" made his first appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. Over the decade, Charles has appeared on the Opry over 150 times. He has been the one star of the now cancelled series that continues to appear on the Opry. 

November 21, 2015: Jean Shepard celebrated her 60th anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry. She appeared in a segment hosted by Bill Anderson, her first Opry appearance in a year. During the show, she announced her retirement and this was Jean's final appearance on the Opry.

November 5, 2016: Grand Ole Opry member Stonewall Jackson was recognized and honored upon his 60th anniversary of when he first joined the Grand Ole Opry. This was also Stonewall's last appearance on the show.

November 15, 2016: During a guest appearance on the Tuesday Night Opry, Carrie Underwood surprised Crystal Gayle during a guest appearance, with an invitation to become the newest member of the Grand Ole Opry. Crystal's official induction took place the following January.

November 24, 2016: Former Grand Ole Opry member Holly Dunn passed away in New Mexico from ovarian cancer. Holly joined the Opry's cast in October 1989 and was a member of the Opry until she was fired in the 2000's, after leaving Nashville and moving to New Mexico. In addition to her Opry duties, Holly also was a regular host of the Opry Backstage show.

November 19, 2017: Grand Ole Opry member, and Country Music Hall of Fame member, Mel Tillis passed away in Florida after an extended illness. Mel had joined the Opry in June 2007 after a very successful career as a singer, songwriter and actor.

November 15, 2018: Grand Ole Opry member Roy Clark passed away. The Country Music Hall of Fame member had joined the Opry's cast in 1987 and while he did not appear often, it was always a treat to see Roy on the Opry. 

November 6, 2020: The Friday Night Opry returned after being suspended in March due to the Covid pandemic. 

November 23, 2020: Grand Ole Opry member Hal Ketchum passed away after a period of declining health. Hal came to Nashville and the Opry via New York and always did an amazing job when performing on the show. 

November 2, 2021: Mandy Barnett became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. Mandy had been surprised late in September with an invitation to join the cast, delivered by Connie Smith. Mandy had been a guest on the Opry hundreds of times and her membership was well deserving and well received. 

There you have it for this month. Happy Thanksgiving to everyone. 

Wednesday, November 3, 2021

Grand Ole Opry 11/5 & 11/6

With Saturday night Grand Ole Opry show #5,000 out of the way, the Opry shows this week look more like we have seen over the past year, with eight artists scheduled for both nights, half of them Grand Ole Opry members. 

The Friday Night Opry will feature members Jeannie Seely, Riders In The Sky, Dailey & Vincent and Connie Smith. Two of those (Connie Smith and Dailey & Vincent) are back on Saturday night, joined by John Conlee and Bobby Osborne & The Rocky Top X-Press. 

Interesting that a couple of the guest artists scheduled this weekend have been brought up as future Opry members. T. Graham Brown certainly would fit in with the current theme of bringing on veterans who have supported the Opry in the past, and with over 150 guest appearances, Charles Esten is a name that has come up time to time. It will be interesting to see if there is another member added before the end of the year. 

There was a time when Tracy Lawrence was mentioned as a potential Opry member. A few years back, Tracy was on the Opry quite a few times, although that number has gone done since Covid hit. I think he would make a good fit as a veteran with a great country sound. I mention Tracy as, along with T. Graham Brown, he is scheduled for Friday night. Also guesting is Charlie Worsham and making his Opry debut, Breland. 

While Breland will be debuting on Friday night, Frank Ray will be hitting the Opry stage for the first time on Saturday night. Besides Frank and the previously mentioned Charles Esten, Saturday's show also has Priscilla Block and comedian John Crist listed on the schedule. 

Friday November 5
7:00: Jeannie Seely; Riders In The Sky; T. Graham Brown; Dailey & Vincent
Intermission
8:15: Connie Smith; Breland; Charlie Worsham; Tracy Lawrence

Saturday November 6
7:00: John Conlee; Priscilla Block; Charles Esten; Connie Smith
Intermission
8:15: Bobby Osborne & The Rocky Top X-Press; Frank Ray; John Crist; Dailey & Vincent

What I have shared is the posted line-up from the Opry. However, they also have listed Del McCoury, Henry Cho and Travis Denning as appearing on Saturday night, yet those names are not listed on the schedule posted. While those three are listed, John Conlee and Connie Smith are not. Once I receive an official clarification from the Opry, I will update as needed. 

There will be no live Circle TV this weekend as instead of a live show, Circle will be showing Luke Combs, Asleep At The Wheel and Old Crow Medicine Show, in a show that was taped on the Tuesday Night Opry several weeks past. 

As mentioned, this will be the Opry debut for Breland and Frank Ray. 

With the arrival of his PLATINUM-certified debut single “My Truck,” singer/songwriter/producer BRELAND emerged as a bold new force on today’s music landscape. Originally from New Jersey, BRELAND moved to Atlanta after graduating from Georgetown University, kicking off his songwriting career by scoring cuts with artists like YK Osiris and Ann Marie. Soon after releasing “My Truck” in late 2019, he saw the Hip-Hop and Country hybrid hit #1 on Spotify’s Global Viral 50, with a remix featuring Country hitmaker Sam Hunt landing on best-of-the-year lists from NPR and The New York Times. The song’s success paved the way for his signing to Bad Realm Records/Atlantic Records, leading to collaborations with heavy-hitters from the Country, Pop, and Hip-Hop worlds (including Gary LeVox of Rascal Flatts, Nelly, Blanco Brown, Lauren Alaina, and Chase Rice).

BRELAND’s 2021 single “Cross Country” further reveals his passion for transcending boundaries, continuing his mission of breaking down genre barriers in Country music. The Nashville-based artist made his national TV debut with “Cross Country” on The Kelly Clarkson Show, where she surprised him with a PLATINUM plaque for “My Truck.” Now at work on the follow-up to his 2020 self-titled debut EP, he enlisted superstar Keith Urban for the dynamic collaboration “Throw It Back.” 

Frank Ray was born and raised in New Mexico (just north of the Mexican border), with stints in El Paso and San Antonio. Making his debut for BBR Music Group/ Stoney Creek Records, he has already achieved two No. 1’s on the Texas Country Regional Radio chart.  A versatile artist who turned to music as a stress buster for the pressures of being a police officer, Ray put together Border Ave, a band that played everything from Emo Pop to R&B but leaned into the Strait, Tracy Lawrence and Tim McGraw-inspired ‘90s Country-style songs Ray wrote and consumed. It worked in ways he couldn’t have imagined. Before long, they won a battle of the bands, earning an opening slot for Keith Urban.

Promising to get Ray on Texas radio and into a proper studio, they struck a deal and started chasing a dream. Another Battle of the Bands brought contact with noted musician and Songwriters Hall of Fame member Steve Dorff. After listening to Ray sing, he not only took him in the studio, Dorff opened up his vault of late son Andrew’s songs. Suddenly, the magic was happening. A major Los Angeles Times profile proclaimed of his live show, “Ray’s voice has quick power. It can dip deep and fly, and with the twist of a syllable, he can sound like a grown-up Backstreet Boy or Vicente Fernández, the Mexican king of Ranchera music. He roamed the stage as if set loose at recess. The crowd swayed beneath the American and New Mexican flags. Their faces — white, Latino and Native American — were a different portrait… living at the border’s edge, a mix of cultures and rhythms bound and tempered by dust storms, day laborers and children fleeing violence in Honduras and Guatemala.”

Having spent the last few years growing his career, touring the nation and sharing stages in support of artists like Kane Brown, Brett Eldredge, Luke Bryan, Kip Moore, LANCO, Old Dominion, and Hunter Hayes and signing with some of the top players in the game, the high energy performer is ready to take things to the next level. _____________________________________________________________________

Now from 50 years ago, Saturday November 6, 1971: 

1st show
6:30: Stonewall Jackson (host); Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper
6:45: Jim and Jesse (host); June Stearns; Jerry Smith
7:00: Charlie Louvin (host) and Diane McCall; Stringbean; Ernie Ashworth; Joe and Rose Lee Maphis
7:30: Roy Drusky (host); Willis Brothers; Louie Roberts; Crook Brothers
8:00: Roy Acuff (host); Stu Phillips; Jeanne Pruett; Brother Oswald
8:30: Porter Wagoner (host); Dolly Parton; Jack Reno; Fruit Jar Drinkers

2nd show
9:30: Stonewall Jackson (host); Willis Brothers; Wilma Lee and Stoney Cooper; Jerry Smith
10:00: Jim and Jesse (host); Stringbean; June Stearns
10:15: Charlie Louvin (host); Joe and Rose Lee Maphis; Diane McCall
10:30: Roy Drusky (host); Louie Roberts; 
10:45: Roy Acuff (host); Crook Brothers; Onie Wheeler
11:00: Porter Wagoner (host); Dolly Parton; Fruit Jar Drinkers; Sam McGee
11:30: Stu Phillips (host); Jeanne Pruett; Jack Reno

One name from that night that some might not be familiar with is Jack Reno. Jack was from Bloomfield, Iowa and was noted as a singer and guitarist. At one time he was a regular on the Ozark Jubilee.  His best-known single was ‘I Want One’ for Dot Records, but he also charted with country versions of pop hits, ‘Hitchin’ a Ride,’ ‘Do You Want to Dance?,’ ‘Beautiful Sunday,’ and ‘Let the Four Winds Blow,’ with his last chart entry, ‘Jukebox,’ in 1974. His awards include the Country Music Association’s Disc Jockey of the Year in 1978, but his career was curtailed by Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He recovered and began recording duets with his daughter Sheila in 1986. Before his death in 2008 from a brain tumor, he was involved in management and production.
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Looking back, it was on Saturday November 6, 1993 that Grand Ole Opry member David Houston made his final appearance on the Opry. 

Born and raised in Bossier City, Louisiana, country singer David Houston  became a regular on The Louisiana Hayride as a teenager. Apparently his soaring tenor voice wasn't totally appreciated; he found trouble getting work in the music business, and ended up as an insurance underwriter. But record producer Billy Sherrill brought Houston into the fold when Epic Records was still a young label (the early '60s), and Houston brought the company its first real hit with "Mountain of Love." In 1966 he broke through to major status with "Almost Persuaded," which netted a pair of Grammy Awards and brought pop recognition as well. 

A member of The Grand Ole Opry since 1971, he racked up 28 hit records over a decade, including duets with Tammy Wynette and Barbara Mandrell. In November 1993, Davis suffered a ruptured brain aneurism and remained in a coma for five days until his death on November 30.

Here is the running order from November 6, 1993: 

1st show
6:30: GHS Strings
Del Reeves (host): Bells of Southern Bell
The Whites: Pins & Needles
Del Reeves: A Dozen Pair of Boots

6:45: Country Music Hall of Fame
Grandpa Jones (host): What'll I Do With the Baby-O
The 4 Guys: How Married Are You Mary Ann
Bill Carlisle: Knothole
Grandpa Jones: Little Old Cabin By the Stream

7:00: Shoney's
Jimmy C Newman (host): Diggy Liggy Lo
Jeannie Seely: Don't Touch Me
Charlie Walker: Pick Me Up on Your Way Down
Jean Shepard: Why Don't You Haul Off & Love Me/Second Fiddle
David Houston: My Elusive Dreams
Jimmy C Newman: Cajun's Dream/Alligator Man

7:30: Standard Candy
Bill Monroe (host): Why Did You Wander
Skeeter Davis: The End of the World
Hank Locklin: Please Help Me I'm Falling
Brother Phelps: Let Go; Baby/Playing House
Bill Monroe: Walk Softly on My Heart/Bluegrass Breakdown

8:00: Martha White
Bill Anderson (host): Southern Fried
Oswald: Mountain Dew
Jack Greene: Statue of a Fool
Connie Smith: Once a Day
Opry Square Dance Band & The Melvin Sloan Dancers: Golden Slippers
Bill Anderson: Still

8:30: Kraft
Jim Ed Brown (host): Looking Back to See
Charlie Louvin: Think I'll Go Somewhere & Cry Myself to Sleep
Jan Howard: Oh, Lonesome Me
Mike Snider: Soldier's Joy/Angeline the Baker/Old Molly Hare
Jim Ed Brown: The 3 Bells

2nd show
9:30: Dollar General
Grandpa Jones (host): Apple Jack
Stonewall Jackson: Ol' Chuck of Coal
Wilma Lee Cooper: Wreck on the Highway
Bill Walker: A Million & One
The Whites: Doing it By the Book
Ray Pillow: Someone Had to Teach You
Grandpa Jones: My Little Old Home Down in New Orleans

10:00: Little Debbie
Bill Monroe (host): Love, Come Home
Roy Drusky: Homesick
Bill Monroe: Just a Little Talk With Jesus/Old Dangerfield

10:15: Tennessee Pride/Sunbeam
Bill Anderson (host): Family Reunion
Mike Snider: Snuff Dipper
Bill Anderson: Deck of Cards

10:30: Piccadilly
Jim Ed Brown (host): Morning Comes Too Early
Jean Shepard: Bouquet of Roses
Jim Ed Brown: A Child is Born

10:45: Opry Book
The 4 Guys (host): In the Middle of the Night
Jimmy C Newman: Thibodaux & His Cajun Band
Opry Square Dance Band and The Melvin Sloan Dancers: Liberty
The 4 Guys: May You Find Yourself in Heaven

11:00: Coca Cola
Charlie Walker (host): A Way to Free Myself
Connie Smith: The Deepening Snow
David Houston: Living in a House Full of Love
Nashville Bluegrass Band: On Again; Off Again/I've Got a Newborn Soul
Charlie Walker: Smoke; Smoke; Smoke

11:30: General Jackson
Jack Greene (host): Your Love Takes Good Care of Me
Jan Howard: Rock Me Back to Little Rock/Evil on Your Mind
Charlie Louvin: I Don't Love You Anymore
Johnny Russell: Ain't No Reason Now for Going Home
Jack Greene and Martha Carson: Satisfied

I will admit, I was a big fan of David Houston. Sadly, he did suffer some voice issues toward the end of his career but when he passed away suddenly, I was saddened. He's another of those Opry stars that few remember today. 

That covers it for this week. As always, thanks for reading and commenting and I hope everyone enjoys the Grand Ole Opry, and Saturday night show #5001 this weekend. 


Tuesday, November 2, 2021

Tuesday Night Opry 11/2

Coming off the big 5,000 show weekend at the Grand Ole Opry, Tuesday night will be another historic night as the Opry welcomes Mandy Barnett as the newest member of the Opry's cast. Mandy has been a guest on the Opry hundreds of times over the past several decades and is certainly deserving the honor of being an Opry member. 

In addition to Mandy's Opry induction, Eddie Montgomery returns to the Opry for his first appearance of 2021. In fact, it will be his first Opry appearance since Covid. 

Along with Eddie, Opry members Jeannie Seely, The Isaacs, Riders In The Sky, Connie Smith and Marty Stuart are also on the schedule. Based on the line-up, it would appear that Connie and Marty will be the ones formally welcoming Mandy to the Opry family. 

7:00: Jeannie Seely, Eddie Montgomery, Hailey Whitters, The Isaacs
Intermission
8:15: Riders In The Sky, Connie Smith, Marty Stuart, Mandy Barnett

Yes, you are reading this correctly. 7 of the 8 acts are Opry members and there is no comedian on the schedule. 

So, with Eddie Montgomery appearing on Tuesday night, the list of active members who have not appeared in 2021 is now down to Clint Black, Diamond Rio, Alan Jackson, Alison Krauss, Martina McBride and Keith Urban. Patty Loveless and Dolly Parton have not appeared, but they have not been performing anywhere. The Whites continue to lay low. There are a few others but some are out due to health concerns. 

Congratulations to Mandy Barnett, the newest member of the Grand Ole Opry.