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Like everyone, the Nashville music community had a dreadful 2020.
The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic claimed the lives of Joe Diffie, John Prine, Bill Mack, Bobby Jonz, Bill Pusell and Charley Pride. Other top stars lost included Kenny Rogers, Mac Davis, K.T. Oslin, Jan Howard, Jerry Jeff Walker, Charlie Daniels, Hal Ketchum, Doug Supernaw, Roy Head and The Statler Brothersâ Harold Reid.
The songwriting community said farewell to Billy Joe Shaver, David Olney, Eddie Setser and Alex Harvey, among others. Gospel musicâs Gary McSpadden, jazz great Jim Williamson and rock superstar Little Richard passed, too.
The music-business world was especially hard hit. Dick Whitehouse, Fuzzy Owen, Stan Byrd, Gary Walker, Sam Howard, Ray Pennington and Walter C. Miller all passed away during this past year.
Below is a roll-call of the many who said goodbye.
STEPHEN GUDIS, 68, died Jan. 6.
Concert-industry exec. Began in Nashville at Pace Concerts 1994 as production manager at Starwood Amphitheater. Worked as road manager, show promoter, stage manager throughout Southeast. In 1990s toured with Oaks, Brooks & Dunn, Alabama, CDB, Marty Stuart, Toby, Brad, others. Stage manager of Volunteer Jam for a decade and of more than 20 FarmAid concerts. Event manager for Nissan, TPAC, T.J. Martell, Warners, Parnelli Awards. Launched New Yearâs Eve Guitar Drop for Hard Rock CafĂ©. Worked on Music City Irish Festival, Music City Jazz Festival.
BARRY FREEMAN, 83, died Jan. 10.
Record promoter, radio executive, songwriter, trade journalist. Wrote Dinah Shore hit âSo Dear to My Heartâ (1948). Record promoter in 1950s at Coral label (Buddy Holly, Debbie Reynolds, Rosemary Clooney, etc.). Positions at United Artists, Harmon, Kapp labels (1958-68). As independent, promoted âHarper Valley P.T.A.â to No. 1 (1968). Returned to labels 1970s at Capitol (Ronstadt, Steve Miller Band, McCartney, etc.), Atlantic (Aretha, Bette Midler, CSN&Y, Zeppelin, etc.). Head of Talent Acquisition for Westwood One (1981-84). Head of Artist Relations for Entertainment Radio Networks (1985-93) booking âCountryline USA.â Bureau chief of Nashville trade publication Network 40 (1994-96). Joined ABC Radio Networks (1996-99). Returned to record promotion repping Warner comedy acts. Formed FM Entertainment (2000-08) booking morning-show interviews.
DICK WHITEHOUSE, died Jan. 14.
CEO of Curb Records. Began with label when it was launched in 1964. Key exec. in Curb signing Sawyer Brown, Lyle Lovett, Desert Rose Band, The Judds, Junior Brown, others.
WADE JACKSON, 90, died Jan. 14.
Wrote âDonât Be Angry,â a 1964 Top 10 hit for brother Stonewall Jackson, revived by Billy âCrashâ Craddock as minor 1973 success, then returned to Top 10 by Donna Fargo 1977. Prolific songwriter of thousands of others. Multi-instrumentalist on guitar, fiddle, harmonica, mandolin. (full name: Waymond D. Jackson).
CHRIS DARROW, 75, died Jan. 15.
Multi-instrumentalist in Nitty Gritty Dirt Band on its hit LP Uncle Charlie & His Dog Teddy (1970). On singles âMr. Bojangles,â âHouse at Pooh Corner,â âSome of Shelleyâs Bluesâ and in movie Paint Your Wagon (1969). Also backed Ronstadt, James Taylor, Sonny & Cher, Helen Reddy, etc. In band Kaleidoscope and solo LPs.
DAVID OLNEY, 71, died Jan. 18.
Nashville singer-songwriter. Made initial mark in band Simpson with arrangement of âBlack Betty.â First Nashville impact as leader of The X-Rays (1978-85), a founding band of cityâs alternative-rock scene. Became acclaimed figure in Americana movement via 20+ albums. Also performed and recorded in Nashville Jug Band. His songs sung by Emmylou, Steve Earle, Joe Ely, Del McCoury, Cash, Tim OâBrien, James King, Ronstadt, Slaid Cleaves, Lonnie Brooks and more. Gripping, theatrical live performer who became widely known in Europe, as well as on American folk circuit. Opera Memphis adapted some songs for theatrical work âLight in August.â Performed during Nashville Shakespeare Festival. Opened shows for Bonnie Raitt, Kristofferson, Nanci Griffith, Elvis Costello. Rave reviews in New York Times, Stereo Review, USA Today, L.A. Times, Miami Herald, Philadelphia Enquirer, etc. Died performing on stage at 30A Songwriters Festival in Florida.
TOM POWELL, 86, died Jan. 21.
Editor of Amusement Business magazine, 1972-2006. Tennessean sportswriter (1958-72). Race announcer at Nashville Speedway 1970s. Columinist for Outdoor Amusement Business Association (2007-2019). Member Showmanâs League of American Hall of Honor, International Independent Showmenâs Association Hall of Fame.
IRA PARKER, 63, died Jan. 24.
Former hair stylist, personal assistant, property manager, tour coordinator for Dolly. Widow of drummer Martin Parker (1952-2015), noted for his work with Vince, Skaggs, Patty, Alison, etc.
BOB SHANE, 85, died Jan. 26.
Last surviving member of original Kingston Trio. Folk group topped pop charts with Appalachian folk song âTom Dooleyâ (1958) & won the first country Grammy Award.
EDDIE SETSER, 77, died Jan. 27.
Nashville songwriter noted for âSeven Spanish Angelsâ (Willie & Ray Charles), âWeekend Friendâ (Con Hunley), âDonât Look Backâ (Gary Morris), âForget About Meâ (Bellamys), âWhy Lady Whyâ (Morris), âLet the Music Lift You Upâ (Reba), âBeyond Those Yearsâ (Oaks), âLove You Ainât Seen the Last of Meâ (John Schneider), âAnything Goesâ (Morris), âCountry Girlsâ (Schneider), âIâve Got a Rock & Roll Heartâ (Clapton), âDown on the Farmâ (Pride), âIf I Had Any Pride Left at Allâ (John Berry), âIt Ainât Realâ (Mark Gray), âCountry Til I Dieâ (John Anderson), âBut I Willâ (Faith). Formerly in R&B band The Dapps on King Records. Songs also cut by Aretha, 4 Tops, Rod Stewart, Delbert, Rita Coolidge, Etta James, Isaac Hayes, plus Country Hall of Famers Conway, Brenda, Merle, Randy, Waylon, Alabama, Cash, Jones, Don Williams, Glen Campbell.
EDDIE LUNN JR., 70, died Jan. 29.
Co-writer, co-producer of folk musical Good News (1967), highly influential turning point in gospel music. (full name: Wallace Edward Lunn Jr.)
JIMMIE DELOZIER, 88, died Jan. 31.
Fiddler who worked with Benny & Vallie Cain, Joe Sacra, The Bluegrass Buddies & own band The Sensations. Rebel Records artist. Former Virginia Fiddle Championship winner.
HELEN HUNLEY GLASER YATES, 81, died Feb. 3.
One of Nashvilleâs first female D.J.s (1955, WLAC). Miss Tennessee USA crown led to work as print & runway fashion model 1960s. Founded own American Institute of Modeling (1980) & American Models, Actors and Extras (AMAX) (1990) businesses. Known as âThe Model Maker of the South.â Spokesperson for Easter Seal Foundation, active on many other charity boards.
BUDDY CAGE, 73, died Feb. 4.
Steel guitarist for New Riders of the Purple Sage. Noted for his work on âPanama Red,â âWhiskey,â âGypsy Cowboyâ & other band favorites.
KEITH BLAYDES, 56, died Feb. 6.
Co-owner of the LGBTQ+ friendly nightspots The Tribe and Play.
JOE HALTERMAN, 69, died Feb. 11.
Drummer in Bobby Pierce & The Nashville Sounds (1966-72) and in Bob Lumanâs band (1972-76), both with lifelong friend Buddy Cannon. Went on to gigs with Cal Smith, Ray Price, Dr. Hook, Buddy Emmons, Joe Carter, Tompall Glaser, Dean Dillon, others. Co-wrote 1983 Top 10 hit by The Whites âI Wonder Whoâs Holding My Baby Tonight.â
PAUL ENGLISH, 87, died Feb. 12.
Willieâs Nelsonâs drummer and longtime friend. Immortalized in Willieâs songs âMe and Paulâ (1985) and âDevil in a Sleepinâ Bagâ (1973).
MICHAEL LILLY, 69, died Feb. 12.
Banjo player who competed on TVâs Ted Mack Amateur Hour at age 11. Later worked in bluegrass bands of Powell Brothers, Larry Sparks, Harley Allen & Wendy Miller.
DANIEL LEE MARTIN, 54, died Feb. 14.
Country singer with CDs All That I Am (2003), On My Way to You (2007). Hosted TV shows Brotherhood Outdoors (Sportsman Channel), Til Death Do Us Part (CarbonTV0, Backstage and Backroads (Sportsman Channel). CMA Music Fest performer. Suicide following child-sex charges.
MAC BENFORD, 79, died Feb. 15.
Old-time banjo player who co-founded prominent & influential revival group Highwoods String Band. Group popular on Rounder Records & at festivals 1970s. Later in Backwoods Band (1980s), Woodshed All-Stars (1990s), both also on Rounder.
JIM WILLIAMSON, 78, died Feb. 26.
Trumpeter who led Nashville Jazz Orchestra for 25 years. Session musician for Aretha, B.B., Randy Brecker, Michael McDonald, Reba, Mavericks, Delbert, Boots, etc. Toured with Ice Follies, played at Opryland, taught at MTSU, wrote music for jazz ensembles, concerts with Muscle Shoals Horns, Knoxville Jazz Orchestra. Performed with Temptations, Four Tops, Lee Greenwood, Dinah Shore, Andy Williams, OâJays, etc.
ANON BEY, 96, died March 1.
R&B/soul-music disc jockey on WVOL & WSOK known as âBlabber Mouthâ Bey.
BIFF ADAM, 83, died March 7.
Drummer in Merle Haggardâs band The Strangers since 1970. Name-checked in title of instrumental âBiff Bam Boomâ on LP Presenting My Friends, The Strangers (1970). Innovator of influential âdouble-shuffle beatâ in country music. Strangers in Clint Eastwood movie Bronco Billy (1980). Previously sessions for The Ventures, soundtrack of movie The Jungle Book (1967). Stage work with Bobby Bare, Roger Miller, Bob Wills, etc.
QUAY AUSTIN, 62, died March 9.
Broadcast engineer at WSMV-Channel 4.
ROBIN SMITH, 71, died March 13.
Nashville banjo luthier & musician. Created banjo for Scott Vestal. Played with Reno Brothers.
RAMSEY KEARNEY, 86, died March 14.
Co-writer with Mel Tillis of 1961 Brenda Lee pop smash âEmotions.â Also co-wrote âNine Little Teardropsâ for Sue Thompson (1961), âLonely Peopleâ for Eddy Arnold (1964), âBig Flicking Babyâ for Moe Bandy (1978). Longtime indie country recording artist on NRS, Safari, Silver Dollar, Nashco, SunJay, Stomper Time, etc. Charted with âKing of Oak Streetâ (1985), âOne Time Thingâ (1988). Released more than 25 albums.
ROBB HOUSTON, 57, died March 16.
Guitarist in country group Sixwire, which charted with âLook at Me Nowâ and âWay Too Deepâ in 2002, both on Warner. Band later became TV fixture on series Nashville Star, Next Great American Band, Can You Duet, CMTâs Next Superstar, Nashville. Previously solo artist on Carlyle Records with CD Dream State, staff writer for MTM, lead guitarist for Brothers Phelps, Randy Travis.
BROWLEE CURREY JR., 91, died March 18.
Owner of Nashville Banner 1980-98. Co-founder of public-radio company Osborn Communications 1989-97.
PATRICIA MAXWELL BURTON, 94, died March 19.
Sinking Creek Film Festival worker, film production assistant, poet, essayist, theater actor, song collaborator with Nashville jazz great W.O. Smith (1917-1991). Co-founder (1977) of annual Whitland Avenue Fourth of July Celebration.
KENNY ROGERS, 81, died March 20.
Pop/country superstar. Country Music Hall of Fame inductee 2013. Three-time Grammy winner with 15 nominations. CMA Male Vocalist 1979 and Duo of Year (with Dottie West) 1978, 1979. Sold 100 million+ records. Charted 77 country singles, issued 65+ albums. Began career in pop in The Scholars and as solo (âThat Crazy Feelingâ 1958). Recorded for Columbia in jazz combo Bobby Doyle Three (1962). Worked in Kirby Stone Four, New Christy Minstrels 1960s. Fronted First Edition 1967-75 with hits âJust Dropped Inâ (1968), âBut You Know I Love Youâ (1969). âRuby Donât Take Your Love to Townâ (1969), âSomethingâs Burningâ (1970) + syndicated TV show Rollinâ (1972). Country solo career took off with âLucilleâ (1977, CMA Song & Single, Grammy, Gold Record). Other huge hits include âDaytime Friendsâ (1977), âLove Or Something Like Itâ (1978), âThe Gamblerâ (1978, Grammy), âShe Believes in Meâ (1979, Gold), âYou Decorated My Lifeâ (1979), âCoward of the Countyâ (1980, Gold), âLadyâ (1980, Gold), âLove Will Turn You Aroundâ (1982), âCrazyâ (1985), âMorning Desireâ (1985), âBuy Me a Roseâ (2000). Teamed with Dottie West (1932-1991) on âEvery Time Two Fools Collideâ (1978), âAnyone Who Isnât Me Tonightâ (1978), âAll I Ever Need Is Youâ (1979), âWhat Are We Doinâ in Loveâ (1981), etc. Duets with Dolly Parton include âIslands in the Streamâ (1983, Platinum), âReal Loveâ (1985), âYou Canât Make Old Friendsâ (2013), etc. Other duet partners Kim Carnes (âDonât Fall in Love with a Dreamerâ 1980), Sheena Easton (âWeâve Got Tonightâ 1983), Ronnie Milsap (âMake No Mistake Sheâs Mineâ 1987, Grammy). USA Today Favorite Singer of All Time 1986. Starred in five Gambler TV movies plus Six Pack, Rio Diablo, Wild Horses, Coward of the County, etc. Photographer with museum exhibitions and books Kenny Rogers America (1986), Your Friends and Mine (1987). Other books Making It With Music (1978), Christmas in Canaan (2001), What Are the Chances (2013). Philanthropist helped spearhead âWe Are the Worldâ (1985, 4x multi-Platinum, multiple Grammys). Franchise restaurants: Kenny Rogers Roasters. Music City Walkway of Stars induction & all-star tribute concert 2017. Autobiography: Luck Or Something Like It (2012).
HANS KAYSER, 80, died March 20.
Bluegrass guitarist, mandolinist, resonator guitarist, singer. With his band Big River Boys recorded LPs Live From the Territorial House (1977) and Still Pickinâ Still Kickinâ (1992).
ERIC WEISSBERG, 80, died March 22.
New York session musician who scored big with Grammy winning âDueling Banjosâ (1973) from movie Deliverance. Began career in Greenbrier Boys (1958-59), then Tarriers (1960-65), Blue Velvet Band (1969). Studio multi instrumentalist for Bob Dylan, Talking Heads, Frankie Valli, Jim Croce, Art Garfunel, Clancy Brothers, Billy Joel, Melanie, Doc Watson, Judy Collins, John Denver, Tom Paxton, Loudon Wainwright III, Richie Havens, Nanci Griffith, Bette Midler, Barbra Streisand, Herbie Mann, Sha Na Na, Earl Klugh, B,J, Thomas, Willie Nelson, Burt Bacharach, Starland Vocal Band, Buffy Sainte Marie, Ian & Sylvia, Jean Ritchie, Leon Redbone, Blood Sweat & Tears, etc.
H.G. ROBERTS, 94, died March 22.
Backer of Nashvilleâs Grand Masters Fiddle Championship. He & wife Dorothy owned Fiddlers BBQ restaurant, which catered parties for Opry, Hee Haw & numerous stars.
JIMMY HENLEY, 56, died March 22.
Roy Clarkâs banjo player for 25 years. Many appearances on Hee Haw, The Tonight Show, Austin City Limits, etc. Own band: A Touch of Grass. Formerly national banjo champion at age 10.
JOHN RAGSDALE, 75, died March 25.
Music publisher, songwriter, musician, business exec. Brother of Ray Stevens, for whom he wrote songs, emceed shows, did business management, appeared in videos, oversaw merchandise sales. Formerly with MCA Music.
JAN HOWARD, 91, died March 28.
Singer-songwriter known as one of âThe Grand Ladies of the Grand Ole Opryâ and showâs senior cast member. Recorded 15 albums 1960-1986. Charted 30 titles, including solo hits âThe One You Slip Around Withâ (1960), âBad Seedâ (1966) and Grammy-nominated âEvil On Your Mindâ (1966) and âMy Sonâ (1968). Duet partner Bill Anderson with hits âFor Loving Youâ (1967), âIf Itâs All the Same to Youâ (1969), âSomeday Weâll Be Togetherâ (1970), âDis-Satisfiedâ (1971). Harmony singer for Tammy, Carters, Cash (on 1969âs âDaddy Sang Bass,â singing âMama sang tenorâ), plus âGhost Riders In the Sky,â âGone Girl,â âI Will Rock and Roll With You,â etc.). Married 1957-67 to Country Music Hall of Fame songwriter Harlan Howard (1927-2002). Began career on West Coast. Recorded Harlanâs âPick Me Up on Your Way Downâ and âI Wish I Could Fall in Love Todayâ 1958-59; both later country standards. Duets 1958-60 âWrong Company,â âHow the Other Half Lives,â âYankee Go Homeâ with Wynn Stewart (1934-1985). In Nashville since 1960. Demo singer for Patsy Cline (via Harlanâs âI Fall to Pieces,â âWhen I Get Through With You,â âHe Called Me Baby,â etc.). Wrote Kitty Wells hit âItâs All Over But the Cryingâ (1966), Andersonâs hit âLove Is a Sometimes Thingâ (1970) and own singles âMarriage Has Ruined More Good Love Affairsâ (1971), âMy Sonâ (1968), âLife of a Country Girl Singerâ (1981), plus âRing the Bells for Jimâ (Cash), âChristmas As I Knew Itâ (Cash), âWherever You Areâ (Jean Shepard) and songs for Conway, Osborne Brothers, Tammy, others. She and Anderson co-wrote hit duet âDis-Satisfiedâ and Connie Smithâs hit âI Never Once Stopped Loving Youâ (1970). In later years, active in veteransâ issues, campaigned for Vietnam War Memorial, spokesperson for Veteranâs Administration. Autobiography Sunshine and Shadow (1987). (real name: Lula Grace Johnson).
MARTY MARTEL, 81, died March 29.
Former manager of Johnny Paycheck. Show promoter and booking agent for âLegends Festâ country concerts via his Midnight Special Productions. (full name: Donald Robert Martel).
JOE DIFFIE, 61, died March 29.
Grand Ole Opry star. More than 20 Top 10 hits. Four Gold Records, two Platinum albums. Songwriter who co-wrote 9 of his hits, plus songs for Jo Dee Messina (âMy Give a Damnâs Bustedâ 2005), Holly Dunn (âThere Goes My Heart Againâ 1989), Tim McGraw (âMemory Laneâ 1993), Conway Twitty (âIâm the Only Thing Iâll Hold Against Youâ 1993), Hank Thompson (âLove on the Rocksâ 1988), others. Began career in Oklahoma gospel groups like Higher Power and in bluegrass band The Special Edition. In Nashville since 1986. Demo singer for hits âIâve Cried My Last Tear for Youâ (Ricky Van Shelton), âBorn Countryâ (Alabama), âYou Donât Count the Costâ (Billy Dean), âI Cross My Heartâ (Strait). Own hits began with âHomeâ (1990) and 1991-92âs âIf You Want Me To,â âIf the Devil Danced in Empty Pockets,â âNew Way (To Light Up an Old Flame),â âIs It Cold in Here,â âShips That Donât Come In,â âNot Too Much to Askâ (Grammy-nominated duet with Mary Chapin Carpenter). CMA Award 1993 âI Donât Need Your Rockinâ Chair,â with George Jones, others. Inducted into Opry cast, co-hosted IBMA awards, 1993. Biggest hits thereafter âHonky Tonk Attitudeâ (1993), âProp Me Up Beside the Jukeboxâ (1993), âJohn Deere Greenâ (1994), âThird Rock from the Sunâ (1994), âPickup Manâ (1994, later Ford Truck national ad jingle), âIâm in Love with a Capital Uâ (1995), âBigger Than the Beatlesâ (1996), âC-O-U-N-T-R-Yâ (1996). In 1997: CRB Humanitarian Award, acted in Cash TV movie All My Friends Are Cowboys, Grand Marshall of Nashville Christmas Parade. Later hits âTexas Size Heartacheâ (1998), âSame Old Trainâ (1998, Grammy with Marty Stuart and others), âA Night to Rememberâ (1999), âThe Quittinâ Kindâ (1999), âItâs Always Somethinââ (2000), âIn Another Worldâ (2001), âTougher Than Nailsâ (2004). Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame 2002. Homecoming: The Bluegrass Album 2010. Homecoming: The Diffie Family Cookbook 2010. All in the Same Boat CD with Aaron Tippin, Sammy Kershaw 2013. Name checked in Jason Aldeanâs â1994â (2012), Chris Youngâs âRaised on Countryâ (2019). First music star to succumb in coronavirus pandemic.
ZENON B. CYMBALA, 67, died March 31.
Former WLAC radio personality as âBear Bradley.â Later in media sales with Turner Broadcasting, CNN, Petry, NBC/Universal.
ALEX HARVEY, 73, died April 4.
Songwriter with classics âDelta Dawnâ (Tanya, 1972 & Helen Reddy, 1973), âRingsâ (Cymarron, 1971 & Tompall & Glaser Brothers, 1971), âHell and High Waterâ (T. Graham, 1986), âReuben Jamesâ (Kenny & First Edition, 1969), âBaby, Baby I Know Youâre a Ladyâ (David Houston, 1970), âSomebody Newâ (Billy Ray, 1993), âTell It All Brotherâ (Kenny Rogers, 1970). Also âSomeone Who Caresâ (Dusty Springfield, 1970), âNo Place But Texasâ (Willie, 1986), âDance in Circlesâ (Tim Ryan, 1990), âFive Dollar Fineâ (Chris LeDouz, 1999), âMakinâ Music for Moneyâ (Buffett, 1974). Songs also recorded by Anne Murray, Andy Williams, Eydie Gorme, Merle, Ferlin, Shirley Bassey, Percy Faith, George Hamilton IV, Leo Kottke, Roy Drusky, Arthur Prysock, Jim Ed Brown, Ed Bruce, Vikki Carr, Peggy Lee. Featured actor in TV series Dallas, Dukes of Hazzard, Walker, Texas Ranger, plus movies The Blue and the Gray (1982), The Dollmaker (1984), Parent Trap II (1987), Country (1985), Fire Down Below (1997), The Long Summer of George Adams (1982), The Sky Is No Limit (1984), Adam (1983), and Houston Knights (1987). Recorded more than a dozen albums on Capitol, Buddah, TAM, etc.
JIMMY JAY, 84, died April 6.
Country singer, songwriter, musician. Recording artist in 1960s for Starday (âRun Wildâ), Philips (âYouâre Still With Meâ), Hickory (âBayou Girlâ), Penny Stock, Texas International, Wizard labels. Touring sideman for Eddy Raven, Conway. Songwriter with cuts by Twitty (âYou Put it Thereâ), Strait (âNeon Rowâ), Neal McCoy (âWhy Not Tonightâ). (real name: James T. Pickard Jr.)
KENT CATHCART, 84, died April 7.
Co-founder of the Acting Studio at TPAC. Live-performance coach for country artists in 1980s. Lifelong theater educator.
JOHN PRINE, 73, died April 7.
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member (2003). Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award honoree (2020). Americana Music Association Artist of the Year 2005, 2017, 2020. BMI Trailblazer Award 2018. Inducted into national Songwriters Hall of Fame (2019). Pioneer in marketing music via own label. Wrote or co-wrote Don Williamsâ âLove Is on a Rollâ (1983), Bonnie Raittâs âAngel From Montgomeryâ (1974), Lynn Andersonâs âParadiseâ (1975), Straitâs âI Just Want to Dance with Youâ (1998). Debut LP John Prine (1971) included âSam Stone,â âIllegal Smile,â âSpanish Pipe Dream.â Bette Midler popularized âHello in There.â Raitt did âAngel From Montgomeryâ as did Carly Simon, Tanya, Old Crow. The LPâs âParadiseâ cut by Everlys, Jackie DeShannon, Cash, Tom T., Dwight, Fogerty, Anderson. John Prine album voted into Grammy Hall of Fame 2015. Diamonds in the Rough (1972) = âSouvenirsâ sung by Steve Goodman, Country Gentlemen, Maggie Bell and âThe Late John Garfield Bluesâ cut by Kristofferson. Prine nominated as 1972âs Best New Artist at Grammys. Sweet Revenge (1973) = âPlease Donât Bury Me,â âChristmas in Prison,â âDear Abby.â Its âGrandpa Was a Carpenterâ was recorded by Dirt Band, Lonesome Standard Time. In 1975, David Allan Coe hit with âYou Never Even Called Me By My Nameâ (Prine cowrote with Steve Goodman but took no credit). Common Sense (1975), Prime Prine (Gold record, 1976), Bruised Orange (1978 with âThatâs the Way the World Goes Roundâ cut by Miranda, Norah Jones, Green on Red). Pink Cadillac (1979), Storm Windows (1980). Prine moved to Nashville 1980, formed own Oh Boy label. Aimless Love (1984) = âUnwed Fathersâ cut by Wynette, Gail Davies, Cash. German Afternoons (1986) = âSpeed of the Sound of Lonelinessâ sung by Nanci Griffith, Kim Carnes, Amos Lee, Gove, plus âI Just Want to Dance with You.â John Prine Live (1990) = âOldest Baby in the Worldâ cut by Bobby Bare. The Missing Years (Grammy Award 1991) = âAll the Bestâ cut by Zac Brown. Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings (1998), In Spite of Ourselves (1999 country duets CD with Yearwood, Connie, Melba, Emmylou, Patty, Iris DeMent, etc). Appeared in Billy Bob Thornton movie Daddy & Them (2001). Other albums include Souvenirs (2000), Fair & Square (Grammy Award 2005), Standard Songs for Average People (2007 oldie duets with Mac Wiseman [1925-2019]), Singing Mailman Delivers (2011), For Better Or Worse (2016, country duets with Lee Ann Womack, Mattea, Miranda, Kacey, Krauss, etc.). Tree of Forgiveness (2018) his highest-charting album, nominated for three Grammys. Coronavirus victim.
CARL DOBKINS JR., 79, died April 8.
Nashville pop recording artist whose big hit was 1959âs âMy Heart Is an Open Book.â Also charted with Decca singles âIf You Donât Want My Lovinââ (1959), âLucky Devilâ (1959), âExclusively Yoursâ (1960).
JOHN B. KAPARAKIS, 82, died April 12.
Bluegrass Unlimited journalist for 33 years. Backing guitarist for Kenny Baker, Butch Robbins, Gene Parsons, Hazel Dickens. A&R director for Briar Records 1970s, including LPs by Kentucky Colonels. Formerly in band Lonesome River Boys 1958-61.
JERRY HLUDZIK, 68, died April 12.
MCA Music writer with cuts by Oak Ridge Boys (âToo Many Heartachesâ 1988). Formerly in rock groups The Buoys (âTimothyâ 1971), Dakota (âIf It Takes All Nightâ 1980).
ARTHUR CONNOR, 95, died April 13.
Fiddler and fiddle maker. Crafted instruments for Ricky Skaggs, Gene Elders, Billy Hurt and family band The Connor Brothers.
DONALD HILDEBRAND, 91, died April 14.
Nashville attorney who hosted WLAC talk show Conservative Viewpoint in 1970s. Saxophonist in big band The Establishment.
GARY McSPADDEN, 77, died April 15.
Gospel great as vocalist, songwriter, record producer, TV producer. Began career 1960s in Statesmen & Oak Ridge Boys (3 albums), then 1970s in Imperials (12 albums), 1980s in Bill Gaither Trio & Gaither Vocal Band (10+ albums). Also 20 solo albums. Songwriter of âNo Other Name But Jesus,â âHallelujah Praise the Lamb,â âJesus Lord to Me.â Songs recorded by Talleys, Whiteheart, Sandi Patty, Kelly Nelon Thompson, Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir, etc. Produced records by Cathedrals, Terri Gibbs, Lulu Roman, Talleys, others. Produced Branson TV series Gospel Jubilee 1990s, starred in The Gary McSpadden Show 2000s. Co-host of PTL Today 1987.
DALE PYATT, 59, died April 15.
Bluegrass songwriter of 50+ titles for Dave Adkins, Cumberland Gap Connection, Marty Raybon, Lizzy Long, Junior Sisk, etc. Also a recording artist.
KNOX PHILLIPS, 74, died April 15.
Memphis Music Hall of Fame member. Studio owner, engineer, producer. Ambassador of Memphis music and 1973 co-founder of the cityâs chapter of The Recording Academy. Engineered records by Willie Nelson (Shotgun Willie, Phases & Stages), Jerry Jeff Walker (âMr. Bojanglesâ), Amazing Rhythm Aces (âThird Rate Romance,â âThe End Is Not In Sightâ), Phineas Newborn, Jackie DeShannon, Jim Post, Alex Chilton, Panther Burns. Co-produced John Prineâs 1979 LP Pink Cadillac and recordings by Jerry Lee Lewis released in 2014 as Jerry Lee Lewis: The Knox Phillips Sessions. Also worked with pop/rock groups Randy & Radiants, Gentrys. Son of Sun Records founder Sam Phillips (1923-2003), providing invaluable assistance to Peter Guralnickâs biography Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock ânâ Roll (2014). Also helped organize Country Music Hall of Fame exhibit âFlying Saucers Rock & Roll: The Cosmic Genius of Sam Phillipsâ (2015-16).
TOM LESTER, 81, died April 20.
Nashville-based actor and evangelist, best known as âEb Dawsonâ on TV series Green Acres 1965-71. In films Gordy (1994), Benji (1974).
HAROLD REID, 80, died April 24.
Statler Brothers bass singer, songwriter, comedian. Country Music Hall of Fame 2008. Gospel Music Hall of Fame 2007. CMA Group of Year 1972-77, â79, â80, â84. Earned 48 Music City News Awards. Act hosted own TNN cable series 1991-98 as networkâs top-rated program. Harold wrote Statlers 1970 smash âBed of Roseâs.â He and brother Don Reid co-wrote 1970s hits âDo You Remember Theseâ (1972), Grammy-winning âClass of â57â (1972), âCarry Me Backâ (1973), âWhatever Happened to Randolph Scottâ (1973), âSome I Wroteâ (1978), âDo You Know You Are My Sunshineâ (1978), âThe Official Historian on Shirley Jean Burrellâ (1978), âHow to Be a Country Starâ (1979). Reid brothers also co-wrote â80s hits âBetter Than I Did Thenâ (1980), âDonât Wait on Meâ (1981), âWhateverâ (1982), âGuiltyâ (1983), âSweeter and Sweeterâ (1986), âLetâs Get Started If Weâre Gonna Break My Heartâ (1988). Haroldâs comedic alter ego led parody group, Lester âRoadhogâ Moran & Cadillac Cowboys. Statlers discovered by Cash & performed in his roadshow 1964-71 also on Cash network TV series 1969-71. Group recorded 50+ albums, garnering 13 Gold & 8 Platinum. Statlers placed 66 titles on charts, 33 Top 10 hits. Hosted huge âHappy Birthday U.S.A.â July 4th celebrations in Staunton, Virginia hometown 1970-95. Act retired 2002. Don & Harold Reid co-authored history of group Random Memories (2008).
ERNIE HARRIS, 67, died April 24.
Music Row session drummer. Formerly in 1970s Nashville frat-party show band Glory.
THOM KING, 65, died April 24.
Nashville journalist, photographer, video maker, publishing entrepreneur, music maven. In mid-1970s opened one of first recording studios in Franklin, Tennessee. In 1977-80 launched Take One, Nashvilleâs first alternative magazine, next The Metro paper. Writer for Nashville Scene. Wrote or co-wrote 53 books including Danny Davis memoir Guess Who I Met Today. Independent filmmaker. Music videos for Amy Grant, Morgan Heritage, others.
RICHARD PRYOR, 57, died April 24.
Drummer for Drivinâ N Cryin, Concrete Blonde who relocated to Nashville and drummed for Willie Heath Neal, Lillie Mae, Travis Stephens, Kenneth Brian, Ether Dogs, Brian N. Hooks, Floyd the Barber, Escape Goats, Uncle Slim, Shadow 15, Peace Cry both live and on records.
JIM LUSK, 80, died April 25.
Indie country artist, songwriter, publisher with 2011 CD Rockinâ Away the Blues as Jim Lusk & Counterfeit Cowboys. Co-wrote âIt Started All Over Againâ (Vern Gosdin, David Houston 1978), âI Can Almost Touch the Feelinââ (LeGardes 1979), âI Rememberâ (Four Guys theme song). Songs also recorded by Dorsey Burnette, R.W. Blackwood, Jay Lee Webb, Gary S. Paxton. Atlanta Country Music Hall of Fame 2009.
CADY GROVES, 30, died May 2.
Nashville pop and country artist with EPs A Month of Sundays (2009), The Life of a Pirate (2010), This Little Girl (2012), Dreams (2015). Singles âThis Little Girl,â âWeâre the Shit,â âLove Actually,â âForget You,â âCrying Game,â âOil and Water,â âDreams.â Signed to RCA, Vel, Thirty Tigers.
SUE ARMSTRONG THOMPSON, 79, died May 4.
Known as âSuzabelle,â the hoop-skirted Southern greeter at Opryland USA. Preserver/restorer of historic propertiesâThe Lotz House (Franklin), Moreland Plantation (Brentwood), Longview Mansion (Caldwell Lane, Nashville), Clover Bottom (Donelson), Belmont Mansion (Nashville). Antique appraiser known as âThe One-Woman Road Show.â
BENNY GARCIA, 64, died May 7.
Vince Gillâs guitar tech and best friend for 30 years. Also worked with The Chicks, Reba, Yearwood, Mary Chapin-Carpenter, CSN.
LITTLE RICHARD, 87, died May 9.
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame member who began and ended career in Music City. Rose to local fame in Macon, Gearogia early 1950s, then thrived in clubs of North Nashville, which became his second home. Summoned from club in Fayetteville, Tennessee to record for Specialty Records in New Orleans. Resulting âTutti Fruttiâ launched to stardom by Nashvilleâs 50,000-watt WLAC 1955. âLong Tall Sally,â âSlippinâ and Slidin,ââ âRip It Up,â âReady Teddyâ ensued in 1956. By 1957, starred on national & international rock ânâ roll tours and appeared in early rock films The Girl Canât Help It, Donât Knock the Rock, Mister Rock ânâ Roll. Hits âLucille,â âSend Me Some Lovin,ââ âThe Girl Canât Help It,â âJenny, Jenny,â âKeep a Knockin,âââ âGood Golly Miss Molly,â âOooh My Soulâ 1957-58. Charismatic showmanship with frenetic piano pounding, hoarsely shouted vocals, onstage prancing, flashy costuming, wild gyrations, bug-eyed facial contortions, ebullient outbursts. Pioneered male rock stars wearing mascara & heavy makeup, exhibiting fluid sexuality. Also one of early rockers who broke down barriers attracting both black & white people to shows. Nashvilleâs Pat Boone infamously toned down Richardâs outrageous personality on cover of âTutti Frutti.â But other Nashville-related artists saluted himâElvis, Everlys, Bill Haley, Gene Vincent, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee. Recorded gospel LP 1958. Returned to rock via 1964 comeback âBama Lama Bama Loo.â Worked in Nashville with Jimi Hendrix & hired him for his band The Upsetters 1964-65. âGreenwood Mississippiâ 1970 single made some regional country charts. Returned to Music City to re-record hits for K-Tel Records 1976. Gospel LP Godâs Beautiful City recorded in Nashville 1979. Rock superstars cited Little Richard as influenceâBeatles, Stones, James Brown, Michael Jackson, Prince, Stevie Wonder, Otis, Bowie, Dylan, Fogerty, plus piano-playing showman Elton, Milsap, Billy Joel, Ray Charles, Michael McDonald, Billy Preston, Leon Russell. Autobiography 1984. Reemerged on charts 1986 with âGreat Gosh A-Mightyâ from movie Down & Out in Beverly Hills, which featured him, as did TV series Full House, Columbo, Miami Vice, Baywatch, etc. Inaugural inductee into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame 1986. Star on Hollywood Walk of Fame 1990. Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award 1993. âLong Tall Sally,â âTutti Frutti,â âLucilleâ & 1957 debut LP Hereâs Little Richard all in Grammy Hall of Fame. Reconnected with Nashville 1994 by recording âSomethinâ Elseâ with Tanya on all-star CD Rhythm, Country & Blues. Performed it on CMA Awards. Moved to Nashville area c.2005, resided in downtown Hilton & in Tullahoma, Tennessee. Inducted into Songwriters Hall of Fame 2003. Star on Music City Walk of Fame 2008. Also saluted in Nashville by National Museum of African American Music 2015 & via Tennessee Governorâs Arts Award. 2019. (Birth name: Richard Penniman).
FUZZY OWEN, 91, died May 11.
Bakersfield Sound entrepreneur. Originated âA Dear John Letterâ as 1952 duet with Bonnie Owens. Took co-writer credit, published & played steel on cover version by Ferlin Husky & Jean Shepard, which became first Bakersfield national hit 1953. Co-founded cityâs first recording studio, cutting Buck Owens âHot Dogâ (as âCorky Jonesâ), Wally Lewis âKathleen.â Formed Tally Records with cousin Lewis Talley. Label launched Merle Haggard, whom Owen managed throughout the rest of his life. Tally Records had original 1966 version of âApartment No. 9â by Bobby Austin (written by Owen/Austin/Johnny Paycheck), a major hit for Wynette 1967. Label also recorded solo singles by Bonnie Owens, plus Harlan Howard, Cousin Herb Henson, Cliff Crofford, Bill Carter, George Rich, Abe Mulkey, etc. Owen also wrote 1959 Ray Price hit âThe Same Old Me.â Steel guitarist at Blackboard & Lucky Spot Bakersfield venues & on TV show Trading Post. (real name: Charles Owen).
FAITH BAILEY MORFORD, 81, died May 13.
Formerly âMiss Maryâ on Nashville childrenâs TV show Romper Room in 1960s.
DICK THRALL, 90, died May 14.
Formerly Snr. VP of Operations at TV syndicator Multimedia Entertainment, Inc. in Nashville. Distributed several syndicated country series. Also worked at broadcast TV stations in Pittsburgh, Columbus, Cincinnati. Longtime Emmy Awards chair for the Television Academy. (full name: Richard C. Thrall Jr.)
CY SCARBOROUGH, 93, died May 19.
Founder of The Bar D Wranglers, the cowboy band at the Bar D Chuckwagon Supper attraction near Durango, Colardo since 1969. Group recorded songs with Charlie Daniels and made guest appearances on the Opry. Began career in 1953 entertaining at the similar Flying W Ranch in Colorado Springs.
BUD SOESBEE JR., 82, died May 20.
Banjo maker who created instruments for David Holt, Marc Pruett, others. Also an Appalachian banjo player and banjo historian.
TONY de BOER, 81, died May 20.
Regarded as the âGrandfather of Canadian Bluegrass.â Promoter who launched festivals and tours in Ontario. Founded River Valley Music Park 1984, began River Valley Bluegrass Jamboree 1985, started Country & Bluegrass Gathering 1988. Park continues as major bluegrass destination today.
STAN BYRD, 77, died May 23.
Veteran country record promoter & Music Row businessman. CBS Records 1970-76 (George Jones, Marty, Tammy, Cash, Ray Price, Lynn Anderson, Joe Stampley, Charlie Rich, Tanya, Gatlin, Coe etc.). National director of country promotion at Warners 1976-83 (Emmylou, Margo Smith, John Anderson, T.G., Frizzell & West, Hank Jr., Gail Davies, Bellamys etc.). Own firm Chart Attack 1984-97 (promoting B.J. Thomas, Ricky Van, Diffie, Earl Thomas, etc.). Promotion VP Asylum 1997-2001 (Bryan White, Kevin Sharp, George Jones, Lila McCann, Mark Nesler, Monte Warden etc.). Also real-estate entrepreneur with Music Row properties. Owner BDM Management (Mark Chesnutt). Formerly regional promo for Capitol in Houston.
BUCKY BAXTER, 65, died May 25.
Longtime steel guitarist for Bob Dylan. Founding member of Steve Earleâs band The Dukes, on LPs Guitar Town (1986), Exit 0 (1987), Copperhead Road (1988), The Hard Way (1989). Also backed R.E.M., Suzy Bogguss, Sara Evans. With Dylan 1992-99 on road & many albums, including Grammy winner Time Out of Mind (1997). Resumed session work via Los Lobos, Ben Folds, Joe Henry, Webb Wilder, Shawn Camp, Kathy Chiavola, Ryan Adams, Jim Lauderdale. Solo album Most Likely No Problem (1999). Since 2010, sessions with Will Hoge, Billy Ray, Greta Gaines, Old Crow, Kacey Musgraves, others. Father of singer-songwriter Rayland Baxter. Played on his albums Imaginary Man (2015), Wide Awake (2018).
JIMMY CAPPS, 81, died June 2.
Guitar player in Opry staff band for 60+ years, the showâs longest tenured musician. Also prolific studio musician performing on standards âHe Stopped Loving Her Today,â âThe Gambler,â âStand By Your Man,â âI Was Country When Country Wasnât Cool,â âElvira,â âAmarillo By Morning,â etc. Member Musicians Hall of Fame. Began career in Louvin Brothers band 1958. Former member of Ferlin Huskyâs band. Studio career playing more than 500 sessions a year. Skilled on both acoustic & electric guitar, played both lead & rhythm. Known as âthe master of smoothnessâ for making intricate picking appear effortless. Sessions in 1970s for Moe Bandy, Mickey Newbury, Freddie Hart (âEasy Lovinââ), J.J. Cale, Dolly (âMy Tennessee Mountain Homeâ), Waylon, soundtrack of movie Nashville, Milsap (âIt Was Almost Like a Song,â âSmoky Mountain Rainâ), Cash, Tubb. In 1980s, Amy Grant, John Denver, Strait, Tom Jones, Reba (âHow Blueâ), K.D. Lang, Whites, Alan (âHere in the Real Worldâ), Wayne Newton, Vern Gosdin, Dean Martin, Andy Williams, B.J. (âTwo Car Garageâ), Keith Whitley, Lacy J. Dalton, David Allan Coe, Charlie Rich. In 1990s, Lorrie Morgan, Gene Watson, Florida Boys, John Conlee, Ed Bruce, Ray Charles, Hank Locklin, Riders in the Sky, T. Graham Brown, etc.. Heard on discs by Hall of Famers George Jones, Kenny Rogers, Connie, Dottie, Conway, Loretta, Barbara, Roy Clark, Jean Shepard, Eddy Arnold, Ray Price, Porter, Pride, Faron, Oaks, Statlers, Don Gibson, Bill Anderson, Charlie McCoy. At annual NARAS Super Picker Awards in 1970s & 1980s repeatedly honored as âMost Valuable Acoustic Player.â Joined Opry band 1967, rose to become bandleader. Performed on more Opry shows than anyone in history. On 60th anniversary, rehearsal space backstage at Opry christened The Jimmy Capps Music Room. Performed in âhouse bandâ for CMA Awards for 20+ years. Regular on RFD-TVâs Larryâs Country Diner since 2009, billed as âThe Sheriff.â Autobiography, The Man in Back, 2018.
BONNIE POINTER, 69, died June 8.
Member of pop vocal group Pointer Sisters. Act won country Grammy with her co-written âFairytaleâ single 1974. Sister Anita later Nashville duet partner with Earl Thomas Conley. Bonnie left group for successful disco & soul solo career on Motown (1979âs âHeaven Must Have Sent You,â etc.).
GLENN RAY, 82, died June 11.
Hit country songwriter with âI Just Came Home to Count the Memoriesâ (Bobby Wright No. 75, 1975; Cal Smith No. 15, 1977; John Anderson No. 7, 1982; Tim Barrett, 1984; Jack Scott, 2015). Also âHold Meâ (Barbara Mandrell No. 12, 1977). Others include ââTil a Better Memory Comes Alongâ (Shelby Lynne, 1990; Mark Chesnutt, 1993; Gene Watson, 2009) and âYesterday Will Come Again Tonightâ (Leroy Van Dyke, 1972; Loretta Lynn, 1973). (full name: Glenn Ray McGuirt)
LARRY W. JOHNSON, 69, died June 12.
Co-writer of âDonât Take the Girl,â breakthrough No. 1 hit for Tim McGraw, sold 2 million, BMI Award. More than 50 other titles registered with BMI, including âIf You Think Youâre Lonelyâ (Ray Price, 2002).
KATHERINE WILLIAMS-DUNNING, 27, died June 13.
Hank Williams Jr.âs daughter, the 27-year-old was killed in a one-car crash in Henry County, Tennessee.
JANE DORRIS BILLINGSLEY, 75, died June 15.
Singer-songwriter, publicist, event planner who founded Nashville venue The Chapel 1991. Space used by Ben Folds, Taylor, Martina, Cash, Waylon, Sheryl, Rascal Flatts etc. as video/film location and/or backdrop for photo shoots.
RANDY FRAZIER, 60, died June 19.
Nashville singer, songwriter, musician. Began in Nashville rock band Munchkin. Bass player in McBride & The Ride (âSacred Ground,â âGoing Out of My Mind,â âJust One Night,â âLove on the Loose Heart on the Run,â âHurry Sundownâ 1992-93). Founding member Palomino Road (âWhy Baby Whyâ 1993). Also in Sammy Kershawâs band. Solo CCM singer-songwriter. (full name: Randall Wayne Frazier).
ABBE DeMONTBREUN-STROUD, 64, died June 19.
Longtime executive assistant to producer/label exec Jimmy Bowen. Formerly a performer.
ALAN SCHULMAN, 66, died June 24.
Grammy winning Muscle Shoals studio engineer on records by Shanandoah, Mac McMcAnally, John Prine, Ricky Skaggs, Alabama, Widespread Panic, T.G. Sheppard, Vern Gosdin, Mac Davis, Roy Orbison, Thelma Houston, others.
PETE CARR, 70, died June 27.
Musicians Hall of Fame inductee as member of Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Lead guitarist on â70s & â80s records by Bob Seger (âMain Streetâ), Joan Baez, Paul Simon (âKodachromeâ), Rod Stewart (âTonightâs the Nightâ), Staple Singers, Wilson Pickett, Joe Cocker, Barbra Streisand & Barry Gibb (âGuiltyâ), Paul Anka, Kim Carnes, Luther Ingram (â[If Loving You Is Wrong] I Donât Want to be Rightâ), Mary MacGregor âTorn Between Two Loversâ). Also backed Nashville artists Hank Jr., Becky Hobbs, Dobie Gray, Willie, Paul Davis, Billy Swan, Narvel Felts, Russell Smith, Marie Osmond. Produced Sailcat (âMotorcycle Mamaâ). Member LeBlanc & Carr (âFallingâ) and of Boatz. Two solo albums 1975 & 1978. Previously in Hour Glass & Allman Joys 1968.
ED IRWIN, 82, died June 28.
Gospel songwriter with cuts by Speer Family, Jimmy Snow, Dignity Quartet, Chuck Wagon Gang, Imperials, Trevecca Choir, others. Also Nazarene minister.
SONNY LONAS, 81, died June 30.
Drummer for Patsy Cline, Ernest Tubb, etc. Well known to Nashvillians as member of Music Meister Band playing at Gerst Haus restaurant. (full name: Maurice Lonas)
CRAIG MARTIN, 52, died July 3.
Country singer-songwriter. Co-wrote Tim McGrawâs 1994 breakthrough No. 1 hit âDonât Take the Girl.â Usually billed as âCraig J. Martin,â he entertained at Nashville Shores, Listening Room CafĂ©, Maxwell House Hotel, etc, & released singles âI Have a Dream,â âLet Him Walk You Home,â âIâm a Kid in Trouble.â Wrote songs for George Jones, Southern Comfort, Rod Stewart, Backstreet Boys, others. Clinton Gregory recorded several Martin songs, including music-video fan favorite âShe Did.â Western Flyer hit top-40 country with his âWhat Will You Do with M-Eâ 1996. (full name: Craig Matthew Martin Sr.)
CHARLIE DANIELS, 83, died July 6.
Member Country Music Hall of Fame, Grand Ole Opry cast. Mainstay of Southern rock music, Sold more than 13 million albums, won Grammy, Dove, CMA, BMI, ACM awards. Charted more than 35 titles. Host of famed multi-act, multi-genre Volunteer Jam events. First recorded with own band The Rockets, 1959âs âJaguarâ rock instrumental. Co-wrote 1964 Elvis hit âIt Hurts Me.â Moved to Nashville 1967 to works as session musician for Marty Robbins, Claude King, Johnny Cash, Pete Seeger, Leonard Cohen, Al Kooper, Ringo Starr. Famously played on Dylan Nashville LPs Nashville Skyline, New Morning, Self Portrait 1969-70. Produced Youngbloods 1969-70 LPs Elephant Mountain, Ride the Wind. Own solo disc debut with self-titled LP 1970. Formed Charlie Daniels Band & scored Top 10 1973 pop hit âUneasy Rider.â Began Volunteer Jam 1974. Southern-rock anthems âThe Southâs Gonna Do It,â âLong Haired Country Boyâ 1975. First top-40 country hit âTexasâ 1976. Breakthrough LP Million Mile Reflections contained huge 1979 pop and country hit âThe Devil Went Down to Georgia,â which won Grammy & CMA awards. Song & band featured in movie Urban Cowboy. âIn Americaâ groupâs second major crossover hit 1980. âThe Legend of Wooly Swampâ (1980), âCarolinaâ (1981), âSweet Home Alabamaâ (1981) on both rock and country playlists. âStill in Saigonâ (1982) bandâs final big pop hit. Subsequent big country hits âAmerican Farmerâ (1985), âStill Hurtinâ Meâ (1986), âDrinkinâ My Baby Goodbyeâ (1986), âBoogie Woogie Fiddle Country Bluesâ (1988), âSimple Manâ (1989), âMister DJâ (1990), â(What This World Needs Is) A Few More Rednecksâ (1990), âAll Night Longâ (with Montgomery Gentry, 2000), âThis Ainât No Rag Itâs the Flagâ (2001). Nine Gold, Platinum or multi-Platinum albums; Super HitsâŻdouble Platinum, Million Mile Reflection triple Platinum, A Decade of Hits quadruple Platinum. âThe Devil Went Down To Georgiaâ CMA Single of Year 1979 & Grammy for Best Country Vocal Performance by Duo or Group. Daniels also CMA Instrumentalist of the Year in 1979, while CDB won CMA Instrumental Group of the Year 1979, 1980. Philanthropist for cancer research, muscular dystrophy research, farmers aid, military causes. Founded Journey Home Project 2014 to benefit veterans. Dove Awards from GMA 1995, 1997. Won BMI Icon honor 2005, Spirit of America Free Speech Award from Americana Music Association 2006. Joined Opry cast 2008, inducted into Country Music Hall of Fame 2016. Books: The Devil Went Down to Georgia (2005), Never Look at the Empty Seats (2017), Letâs All Make the Day Count (2018).
TOMMY QUINN, 69, died July 8.
Crystal Gayleâs store manager. For 20+ years managed Crystalâs Fine Gifts & Jewelry in Belle Meade, which also sold her CDs & tour merchandise. Photographer. Art collector.
GARY WALKER, 87, died July 8.
Best known as founder of used-record & comics retail chain The Great Escape. Earlier careers as hit songwriter, recording artist, manager, publisher, record producer, song plugger, record-label executive, studio owner. Began music-biz career in Missouri by co-writing âThatâs Itâ for Porter Wagoner 1953. Wrote Top 10 hits âTrademarkâ Carl Smith (1953), âAccording to My Heartâ Jim Reeves (1956), âRepentingâ by Kitty Wells (1957). Also wrote songs covered by George Morgan (âLook What Followed Me Home Tonightâ), Webb Pierce (âOne Week Later,â with Kitty Wells), pre-teen Brenda Lee (âDoodle Bug Ragâ), others. Own singles on MGM 1957-58. Co-owned Reevis Studio, which became Fidelity Recording. Pioneered the profession of Nashville song plugger. Represented Atlantaâs Lowery Music songwriting stable including Jerry Reed, Joe South, Ray Stevens, Freddy Weller, Mac Davis. Successfully plugged songs âMisery Loves Companyâ (Porter Wagoner), âThatâs All You Gotta Doâ (Brenda Lee), âWalk On Byâ (Leroy VanDyke). Branched out into record production 1960s via sides for Sonny James, Bill Carlisle, Bobby Russell, Lynn Anderson, more. Founded Chart Records 1964. Roster eventually included Anderson, Johnny Bush, Billy âCrashâ Craddock, Managed singer Sandy Posey with her big pop hits 1966-67 âBorn a Woman,â âSingle Girl,â âWhat a Woman in Love Wonât Do,â âI Take It Back.â Continued to work as song plugger 1970s, repping Painted Desert Music, Don Wayne. Screen Gems. Opened Great Escape 1977 on Broadway near Vanderbilt. Headquarters now on Charlotte with branches in Madison and Murfreesboro, plus Bowling Green, Kentucky and Louisville, Kentucky. Sold stores 2017 to focus on The Great Escape Music Group, including three publishing companies and Great Escape Records, which has had some success in bluegrass.
SAM HOWARD, 81, died July 10.
Owner/operator of Nashvilleâs Black radio stations WVOL and WQQK (â92 Qâ). First African-American chairman of Nashville Chamber of Commerce. Former v.p. at Meharry, HCA. Honored with Image Award for Lifetime Achievement by Nashville NAACP.
HELEN OWEN, 68, died July 13.
Dimpled, curly-headed blonde âLittle Miss Sunshineâ child mascot of Sunbeam Bread. Later lead singer in local rock and country groups, notably one of Nashvilleâs first âall-girlâ bands.
JAMIE OLDAKER, 68, died July 16.
Drummer in country-rock band The Tractors with hits âBaby Likes to Rock Itâ (1994), âThe Santa Claus Boogieâ (1994), âThe Last Timeâ (1997), âShortninâ Breadâ (1998). Groupâs debut CD sold a million. Regarded as a founder of âThe Tulsa Sound.â Member of Oklahoma Hall of Fame. Began career in The Rogues Five with 1966 local hit âToo Good for Love.â Member of Bob Segerâs band 1971-73. In Eric Claptonâs band 1974-80, playing on hits âI Shot the Sherriffâ (1974), âWonderful Tonightâ (1978),âLay Down Sallyâ (1978). In rock band Frehleyâs Comet 1983. Returned to Clapton 1983-86. Tulsa session musician backing Leon Russell, New Grass Revival, Bee Gees, Bellamy Brothers, Stephen Stills, Asleep at the Wheel, Freddie King, Peter Frampton, John Arthur Martinez, Phil Collins, Peter Rowan, etc. Produced all-star 2005 album Mad Dogs & Okies including Clapton, Vince Gill, J.J. Cale, Taj Mahal, Willie Nelson, Tony Joe White, Bonnie Bramlett, others.
JOHN DENNY, 79, died July 21.
Former v.p. Cedarwood Publishing. Produced artists for Cedarwood spin-off label Dollie Records, notably Carl Perkins on 1966-67 charting singles âCountry Boyâs Dreamâ & âShine, Shine, Shine.â Also wrote songs for Cedarwood. Formed own Denny Music Group 1965 including JED Records. Label issued singles by Kent Westbury, Bobby Sykes, Scotty Stoneman, Rusty Adams, Chris Gantry, Jimmy Smart, Max D. Barnes, Ruthie Steele, Audie Ashworth, etc. Lifetime Achievement award from R.O.P.E. (Reunion of Professional Entertainers) 2004. Son of Country Hall of Famer Jim Denny (1911-1963), brother of former music exec Bill Denny.
BOBBY JONZ, 84, died July 21.
Soul & blues artist who recorded his Bobby Jonz Sings Country LP in 1998. A victim of the coronavirus pandemic. (real name: Bob Willy Jones).
DAN KELLY, 54, died July 22.
Fiddler who won Grand Masters Fiddling Championship in Nashville 1983 as teenager, joined Roy Acuffâs Smoky Mountain Boys. On the road with Alan, Clint, Faith, Wariner, SheDaisy, Pam Tillis, others. Later longtime entertainer at Opryland & member of popular Tennessee Mafia Jug Band.
MEMARIE, 48, died July 22.
Singer-songwriter & indie country recording artist with 2003 self-titled CD & âI Need a Changeâ single. Both on Cupit Records, label founded by father Jerry Cupit (1954-2014). As âMemarie Gayleâ author of 2020âs Journey Back to the Soul recounting music career & ovarian cancer fight. Book included music CD. Part of âUnstoppableâ womenâs ministry tour 2019-20. Designer of âFearless Memoriesâ jewelry line. (Full name: Memarie Gayle Cupit Jobe).
ALAN ROWE, 66, died July 23.
Music director at WAKG and a MusicRow radio reporter.
CHARLES EDWARD CATHEY, 84, died July 24.
Beloved Nashville vocalist whose Ed Cathey Singers were heard by many at annual concerts. Perhaps Nashvilleâs most ethnically and ecumenically diverse events these benefited the homeless, released prisoners and others. Also with the Nashville Symphony Chorus.
EDWARD âFELIXâ McTEIGUE, 48, died July 24.
Songwriter and record producer whose credits include Florida Georgia Lineâs âAnything Goesâ and Lori McKennaâs âWreck You.â
JOHN SAXON, 83, died July 25.
Murfreesboro resident with extensive Hollywood acting credits. More than 200 roles included teen-idol films Running Wild (195), Rock Pretty Baby (1956); A-list comedies This Happy Feeling (1958), The Reluctant Debutante (1958); westerns The Unforgiven (1960), Death of a Gunfighter (1969); martial-arts flicks Enter the Dragon (1973) etc.; horror features A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) etc. Golden Globe Award as Best New Star (1958). (real name: Carmine Orrico).
THOMAS PRINCE, 67, died July 25.
Bass player for country artist Johnny Carver for 14 years.
KENNY INGRAM, 67, died July 26.
Bluegrass banjo virtuoso. Band member for Lester Flatt, Jimmy Martin, James Monroe, Rhonda Vincent, Nashville Grass, Larry Stephenson, Curly Seckler. Banjo and/or vocals on more than 200 reccordings.
BOB RICKER, 65, died July 27.
Multi-instrumentalist, producer, founder of Ricker Music Group & Waltzing Bear Productions.
BILL MACK, 91, died July 31.
Grammy winning songwriter & legendary deejay. Elected to Country Music Disc Jockey Hall of Fame 1982, Texas Music Hall of Fame 1995, Texas Country Music Hall of Fame 1999. Famed for all-night broadcasts from Ft. Worth, Texas over WBAP Bill Mack Trucking Show 1969-2001. Singer-songwriter on Imperial, Starday, United Artists, Hickory, MGM, Phillips, others, Starday rockabilly classics âKitty Catâ and âThe Cat Just Got Into Town.â Regional hit âLadonnaâ on Hickory. Successful songwriter with âDrinking Champagneâ for Cal Smith 1968 & George Strait 1990. Also wrote âBlueâ recorded by LeAnn Rimes 1996 which won Best Country Song Grammy Award, ACM Song of the Year. His gospel tune âClinging to a Saving Handâ recorded by Rimes, Connie, Conway, Bill Monroe, Chuck Wagon Gang, George Hamilton IV, John Conlee, Dale Ann Bradley, etc. Songs also recorded by George Jones, Ray Price, Jerry Lee, Dean Martin, Waylon, Boxcar Willie, Hank Thompson, Don Gibson, Jim Ed, Cash and more. Trucking show continued on Sirius/XM 2001-2011. Also hosted nationally syndicated Country Crossroads gospel show and Overtime Top Ten Countdown show. TV emcee of The Buck Owens Show, The Bob Wills Show, Cowtown Jambore and cable series Country Crossroads. Autobiography Spins and Needles 1971. A victim of the coronavirus pandemic. (full name: Bill Mack Smith Jr.)
COLLIER ROBERT WOODS JR., 64, died Aug. 1.
Murfreesboro native and U.T. Speech/Theater grad who became a top lighting designer & stage technician. Designed for Dance Theatre of Harlem, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, national tour of The Color Purple, Gil Scott-Heron, Branford Marsalis, Bruce Springsteen, Albert King, Pennsylvania Opera Theater, Seattle Repertory Theater plus Broadway tours of Phantom of the Opera, Showboat, Hairspray, West Side Story, Anything Goes, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, The Full Monty, Spring Awakening, etc.
HAROLD MITCHELL, 82, died Aug. 5.
Country radio personality. Master of ceremonies for 44 years at Galax Old Time Fiddlers Convention. Stints at WHHV Hillsdale, Virginia; WBOB Galax, Virginia; WZYD Dobson, North Carolina; WMEV Marion, Virginia; WBRF Galax, Virginia; WYVE Wytheville, Virginia.
WAYNE CHANDLER, 54, died Aug. 7.
Gaylord Entertainment Director of Sales. Formerly in Pigeon Forge hospitality industry, at Opryland Hotel and with Kitty Wells organization. Also formerly co-owner of Nashville Nightlife Dinner Theater.
TOM ANNASTAS, 67, died Aug. 13.
Former BMI Vice President, General Licensing. Board member T.J. Martell Foundation. Leadership Music class 2008.
HERRIETTE DEW, died Aug. 16.
Accounting manager of the Americana Music Association. Mother of Americana festival producer and marketing manager Sarah Comardelle.
STEVE GULLEY, 57, died Aug. 18.
Award-winning bluegrass guitarist, songwriter, tenor vocalist. Noted for his work at Kentuckyâs Renfro Valley Barn Dance and in groups Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver, Mountain Heart, Grasstowne and own band Steve Gulley & New Pinnacle, Formed last named in 2014.
Groupâs CD Aim High led to 2016 IBMA nomination as Emerging Artist of the Year. Other albums included Time Wonât Wait, Steve Gulley & New Pinnacle, High Peaks and New Ground, Family, Friends & Fellowship. Songs recorded by Kenny & Amanda Smith, Blue Highway, Doyle Lawson, others. His âThrough the Window of a Trainâ named IBMA Song of the Year 2008. Appeared more than 90 times on Grand Ole Opry. Worked as DJ on WDVX in Knoxville. Co-owner of Curve recording studio in East Tennessee.
EDDIE HOOVER, 84, died Aug. 20.
Georgia Country Music Hall of Fame member. Fiddler & luthier who toured with bluegrass bands then had career building and repairing guitars, fiddles and cellos for clients of Randy Wood Guitars.
BUDDY KING, 79, died Aug. 21.
Country disc jockey, program director and longtime record promoter. Worked with indie hit maker C.J. Solar, plus Bobby Wills, Rachael Turner, others. Unique character did not own a computer or a cell phone, but worked âold schoolâ with pen, paper and a home phone.
PANDORA DENNY, 74, died Aug. 23.
Administrative assistant at Denny Music Publishing. Owned by husband John Denny, who died one month earlier.
JUSTIN TOWNES EARLE, 38, died Aug. 23.
Singer-songwriter with eight albums and awards from Americana Music Association. Debut EP Yuma 2007. Full length album debut The Good Life 2008. Second CD 2009âs Midnight at the Movies, led to his being named Emerging Artist of the Year at the 2010 Americana Music Awards & nomination for AMA Album of the Year. Title tune of Harlem River Blues 2010 CD named Song of the Year at AMAâs 2011 awards show. Performed on Late Night with David Letterman, Bonnaroo, MerleFest, Grand Ole Opry. Produced Wanda Jackson 2012 album Unfinished Business and sang with her on it. Own disc output continued with 2012âs Nothingâs Gonna Change the Way You Feel About Me Now, 2014âs Single Mothers, 2015âs Absent Fathers, 2017âs Kids in the Street, 2019âs The Saint of Lost Causes. Son of Steve Earle.
MERCER TRAPP, 82, died Aug. 31.
Stage and TV actor, notably on TNNâs I-40 Paradise series and with Tennessee Rep in Hot L. Baltimore. Also formerly a secretary at the CMA.
BILL PURSELL, 94, died Sept. 3.
Belmont University professor known Music Row sessions, pop instrumental hits and classical works as pianist/composer. Studied at Peabody Conservatory, Eastman School of Music. Toured as R&B and jazz musician 1950s. Arrived Nashville 1960. Became studio sideman as keyboardist on records by Cash, Patsy, Jim Reeves, Dylan, Willie, Atkins, Joan Baez, Robbins, Fogelberg, Paycheck, etc. Easy-listening piano piece âOur Winter Loveâ a hit 1963. LPs for Columbia 1963âs Bill Pursell, 1964âs Chasing a Dream, 1965âs A Remembered Love. Then Bill Pursell at the Piano: The âInâ Sound of Country and Western Music for Spar Records. Regular soloist with Nashville Symphony. Composed piano sonatas, overtures, symphonies, preludes, concertos, tone poems, opera, plus theme music for Six Flags Over Georgia, Cypress Gardens, Circus World, as well as ad jingles and incidental music for film & TV. Work as an arranger led to Grammy nominations 1974, 1978. Reemerged on disc with 1976 pop LP Bill Pursell and The Nashville Sweat Band and its British disco hit âNow.â Joined Belmont faculty 1980. Students included Paisley, Yearwood. Belmont premiered his opera, Crooked River City 2016. Biography Crooked River City: The Musical Life of Nashvilleâs William Pursell 2018. Death due to COVID-19-related pneumonia.
LUCILLE STARR, 82, died Sept. 4.
First female Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductee. Rockabilly pioneer with ex husband Bob Regan billed as âThe Canadian Sweethearts.â In addition to rockabilly classics like âEenie Meenie Miney Mo,â duoâs Canadian hits included âHootenanny Express,â âFreight Train,â âDonât Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes,â âIâm Leaving It All Up to You,â âLooking Back to See,â âDonât Knock on My Door,â âLetâs Wait a Little Longer,â âDream Baby.â Yodeling singing voice of âCousin Pearl Bodineâ character on top-rated network comedy The Beverly Hillbillies in 1962-63. International pop hit with bi-lingual âThe French Songâ 1964. Originated country standard âToo Far Goneâ 1967. Solo Canadian hits with âCrazy Arms,â âIs It Love?â âCajun Love,â âBonjour Tristesse,â âSend Me No Roses,â âYours,â âColinda,â âJolie Jacqueline,â âHere Come More Roses,â âThe First Time Iâve Been in Love,â âBack to You.â Gold and Platinum record awards in Canada, Holland and South Africa. Also tours and hits in Belgium, England, Mexico, Guam, Philippines, Japan, Korea, China.
BARRY SCOTT, 65, died Sept. 10.
Actor, director, writer, producer and voice-over artist. Noted for his annual recitations at Nashvilleâs âLet Freedom Singâ Fourth of July celebrations. Founder and artistic director of the American Negro Playwright Theatre at TSU. Signature voice-over work for the NBA, ESPN and TNA Wrestling. Many commercials and PSAs, including Discovery Channel, ABC, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Burger King, CBS, SPIKE-TV, McDonaldâs, American Heart Association, NBC, Disney. Nashville Repertory Theater stage roles in Othello, Macbeth, Taming of the Shrew, Camelot, Man of La Mancha, Jesus Christ Superstar, Prates of Penzance, Evita, Ainât Misbehavin,â Big River, The Piano Lesson, Blood Knot, etc. TV parts on In the Heat of the Night, Iâll Fly Away, etc.
TROY JONES, 64, died Sept. 11
Songwriter, was known for penning songs including Billy Curringtonâs âPeople Are Crazyâ and âPretty Good at Drinkinâ Beer.”
FREEMAN RAMSEY JR., 76, died Sept. 12.
Former Tennessean newspaper photographer with much Nashville concert documentation.
ELLEN REEVES, 87, died Sept. 15.
Country-music lyricist. Co-wrote with husband Del Reeves (1932-2007). BMI Award for âSing a Little Song of Heartacheâ (Rose Maddox, 1962). Del Reeves singles âThis Must Be the Bottomâ (1966), âThe Only Girl I Canât Forgetâ (1963). Songs also cut by Loretta, Conway, Tubb, Carl Smith, etc.
DOAK SNEAD, 70, died Sept. 16.
Texas singer-songwriter a favorite at The Armadillo in Austin and Kerrville Folk Festival. Albums Think of Me Sometimes (1977), Powderhorn (1978). Moved to Nasvhille 1989. Hosted songwriter nights at Douglas Corner, Bluebird, billed as âWriterâs Wrodeo.â Signed to Starstruck as writer 1993. Cuts with Lari White (âJohn Wayne Walking Awayâ), Avalon (âOnly For the Weakâ), Mark W. Winchester, Lanie Marsh, Lisa Daggs, Jamie Slocum, etc. Further solo albums Inside, After 33 1/3 Years, Catalogue, A Welcome Affair in 2000-18. Widower of recording artist Kellee Sallee-Snead (Roses and Tumbleweeds).
ROY HEAD, 79, died Sept. 21.
Country-rocker best known for 1965 pop hit âTreat Her Right.â Wild, gymnastic showman. Between 1974 & 1986 placed 24 singles on country charts. âMost Wanted Woman in Town,â âCome to Me,â âNow You See âEm Now You Donâtâ top-20 hits. Country versions of Rod Stewartâs âTonightâs the Nightâ (1978), Loggins & Messinaâs âYour Mama Donât Danceâ (1983). Self-penned âTreat Her Rightâ became big country hit for Barbara Mandrell 1971. Also covered by Jerry Lee, Billy âCrashâ Craddock, Springsteen, Bon Jovi, Mae West, Robert Plant, Tom Jones, Otis, Thorogood, Box Tops, Doug Sahm, Sandy Nelson, Joe Stampley, Los Straighjackets, etc. Father of country singer Sundance Head, who won on TVâs The Voice 2016.
BONNIE LOU MOORE, 93, died Sept. 21.
Longtime country guitarist-singer with husband Buster Moore (1919-1996) in duo Bonnie Lou & Buster, formed 1945. Stints at WRVAâs Old Dominion Barn Dance & WCYBâs Farm & Home Time in Virginia. Also KWKHâs Louisiana Hayride, WNOX Knoxville, WWNC Asheville, WPTF Raleigh, WROL Knoxville. Appearances on Opry, Renfro Valley, etc. TV stars on WJHL-TV in Johnson City, TN 1953-1985. Featured entertainers at Smokey Mountain Hayride in Pigeon Forge, TN 1972-1995. Recoded for Mercury 1949, Waterfall 1960s, & other labels. (real name: Margaret Louise Bell Moore).
W.S. âFLUKEâ HOLLAND, 85, died Sept. 23.
Rockabilly Hall of Fame member. Drummer in Johnny Cash band The Tennessee Three 1960-1979 on the road and on hit records. Sometimes called the most important drummer in country history. Also on records by Dylan, Dale Watson, Waylon, Johnny Western, Marty Stuart, Johnny Horton, Steve Goodman, George Jones.
BILL McEUEN, 79. Died Sept. 24.
Record, film & TV producer. Best known as producer/mastermind behind Nitty Gritty Dirt Bandâs landmark 1971 album Will the Circle Be Unbroken. Also produced Dirt Bandâs 1970 hit âMr. Bojanglesâ and groupâs other early recordings. Managed group and arranged for it to become first American band to tour Soviet Union (1977). Other clients included Pee Wee Herman, Steve Martin, LeRoux, Robert Shimmel, Sunshine Company, John McEuen, Hourglass. Produced four comedy albums for Martin, selling an estimated 10 million units. Also produced comedianâs million-selling 1978 hit single âKing Tut,â as well as movies The Jerk, Dead Men Donât Wear Plaid, The Man With Two Brains, The Lonely Guy, etc. Also produced films Pee Weeâs Big Adventure, Big Top Pee Wee, Cold Dog Soup, The Big Picture, plus a number of TV specials. Owned Aspen Recording Society studio. Brother of John McEuen.
MAC DAVIS, 78, died Sept. 29.
Country and pop songwriter, recording artist, film actor, Vegas headliner, Broadway musical star, television personality, music publisher. Wrote âIn the Ghetto,â âBaby Donât Get Hooked on Me,â âStop and Smell the Roses,â âA Little Less Conversation,â âI Believe in Music,â âSomethingâs Burning,â âItâs Hard to Be Humble,â more. Issued 20 albums, charted 40+ singles, five Gold Records & two Platinum. Into national Songwriters Hall of Fame 2006. Previously in Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame (2000), star on Hollywood Walk of Fame (1998). Also in Texas Country Music Hall of Fame, Georgia Music Hall of Fame & BMI Icon honoree. Worked for Vee Jay, Liberty labels & as songwriter for Nancy Sinatra publishing. Early songs in L.A. recorded by Sinatra, Glen Campbell, Lou Rawls, Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs, etc. Elvis recorded his âA Little Less Conversation,â âMemories,â âIn the Ghetto,â âDonât Cry Daddyâ 1968-70. O.C. Smith Top 10 R&B hit with Davis song âDaddyâs Little Manâ 1969. In 1970-71, Campbell hit with âEverything a Man Could Ever Need,â Kenny Rogers hit with âSomethingâs Burning,â Bobby Goldsboro hit with âWatching Scotty Grow.â Songs also recorded by Cash, Conway, Tammy, Merle, Andy Williams, Tom Jones, Bobby Blue Bland etc. Davis signed with Columbia 1970 & scored Grammy-nominated 1972 No. 1 pop hit âBaby Donât Get Hooked on Me.â Gallery hit with his âI Believe in Musicâ 1972. In country 1972, Campbell hit with âOklahoma Sunday Morningâ & Ray Price hit with âLonesomest Lonesome,â Davis next pop hits 1974-75 âOne Hell of a Woman,â âStop and Smell the Roses,â âRock N Roll (I Gave You the Best Years of My Life).â Own NBC-TV variety series 1974-76. Numerous TV specials thereafter. ACM Entertainer of Year 1974. Starred in movies North Dallas Forty (1979), Cheaper to Keep Her (1981), The Sting II (1983). More than a dozen TV movies. Guest-starred on TVâs Murder She Wrote, Muppets, Lois & Clark: New Adventures of Superman, The Client, Webster, Oswald (voice over) Johnny Bravo, King of the Hill (voice over), Rodney, Freaks and Geeks, Fargo. First top-20 country hit as artist âForever Loversâ 1976. Signed with Casablanca 1979, leading to hits âItâs Hard to Be Humbleâ (1980), âLetâs Keeo It That Wayâ (1980), âTexas in My Rear View Mirrorâ (1980), âHooked on Musicâ (1981), âYouâre My Bestest Friendâ (1982), âI Never Made Love â (1985). Co-hosted CMA Awards Show 1980, 1981, 1982. Co-wrote 1990 hit âWhite Limozeenâ with Dolly, plus other Dolly songs. Other co-writers Doc Severinsen, Billy Strange, Mark James, Delaney Bramlett, Shel Silverstein (âTequila Sheilaâ by Bobby Bare 1980), etc. In 1992-91, Davis starred on Broadway in The Will Rogers Follies. Co-wrote Weezerâs âTime Fliesâ (2010), Aviciiâs âAddicted to Youâ (2013) Bruno Marsâ âYoung Girlsâ (2016).
PHYLLIS UNGER HILLER, 93, died Oct. 1.
Nashville songwriter, schoolteacher, pianist, therapist. Cuts by Kiki Dee (âLucky High Heelsâ), Arthur Prysock (âFunny Worldâ). Wrote popular 1971 childrenâs musical Ramo the Elephant. One-woman show My Name Is Fibby.
RICK DURRETT, 75, died Oct. 6.
Keyboardist for Crystal Gayle (When I Dream 1978), James Talley (Got No Bread 1975, Tryinâ Like the Devil 1976, Blackjack Chain 1977), Johnny Rodriguez, Michael Brown, Davis Daniel (Fighting Fire with Fire 1991), Odetta, Greg Shires, Mason Proffit (Wanted 1969), Billy Stone, etc. Previously in rock bands Coven, Pacific Gas & Electric, Yancey Street Band, others. Produced Rosemarie (DeHerrera) in 2017. Local performances at âPlay it Again Jam,â âRecovery Fest,â 2011-13.
RAY PENNINGTON, 86, died Oct. 7.
Country songwriter, producer, label exec, singer. Wrote Waylon Jennings âIâm a Ramblinâ Manâ (1974), Ricky Skaggs âDonât Cheat in Our Home Townâ (1984), Roy Drusky âThree Hearts in a Tangleâ (1961), Billy Walker âDonât Stop in My Worldâ (1976), more. Kenny Price back-to-back Top 10 hits 1966-67 with Pennington songs âWalking on New Grass,â âHappy Tracks.â Songs also recorded by Browns, Grandpa, Ferlin, George Morgan, Jean Shepard, Mel Tillis, Wagoner, Eric Church, Leona Williams, James Brown, Johnny Bush, Montgomery Gentry, Paycheck, Wanda, Wilburns, Lorrie Morgan, Etta James, Jim & Jesse, Dave Dudley, Jack Greene, others. Pennington recording artist on King, Capitol, Monument, MRC, Step One labels. Co-founded Step One Records 1984. Produced 12 Ray Price charted singles on label, plus Gene Watson LPs Uncharted Mind (1993), The Good Ole Days (1996), Jesus Is All I Need (1997), A Way to Survive (1997). Also produced Clinton Gregory hits â(If it Werenât for Country Music) Iâd Go Crazyâ (1991), âPlay Ruby Playâ (1992). Others on Step One roster Faron, Charlie McCoy, Western Flyer, Kendalls, Kitty, Cal Smith, Celinda Pink, Terry McMillan, Hank Thompson, Geezinslaws, Curtis Potter, etc. Formed Swing Shift Band with steel guitarist Buddy Emmons. Its Step One LPs Swinginâ (1984), In the Mood for Swinginâ (1986), Swing & Other Things (1988), Swinginâ Our Way (1990) Swinginâ By Request (1992), Itâs All In the Swing (1995), Goinâ Out Swinginâ (1997).
KATHY SMARDAK, 60, died Oct. 11.
Co-founder in 1997 of Nashville independent concert-promotion business Outback Concerts with husband Mike Smardak.
DAVID ALFRED FRYER, 94, Oct. 11.
Gospel singer in quartets, with evangelists Pat Robertson & Billy Graham, solo show on KTIS in Minneapolis, produced âTwo Rivers Baptist Church Hourâ in Nashville.
JAMES A. LEWIS, 75, died Oct. 13.
Known as âJukebox Jimmy,â an entrepreneur in coin-operated amusement business. Founded restaurants Boundâry and South Street. Developed Young Executive Building with Faron Young.
JOE MEADOR, 73, died Oct. 21.
Nashville music entrepreneur in management, songwriting, film making, concert promotion, publishing. Managed Ronnie McDowell for 25 years. Co-wrote McDowellâs singles âAll Tied Upâ (No. 6 1986), âLovinâ That Crazy Feelinââ (1987), âIâm Still Missing Youâ (1988), âNever Too Old to Rock & Rollâ (1989). Songs also recoded by Ricky Godfrey, George Strait, Sugarbees, Jeff Hunt. Business partner with Buddy Killen in Killen Entertainment Group managing McDowell, Six Shooter. Later CEO of Grand Entertainment Group & three publishing companies. Co-produced 2007 movie Dixie Rose. Co-authored 2009 book The Genuine Elvis: Photos and Untold Stories. Formerly in Nashville rock band Glass Hammer, co-owned Sumner County Music Center, worked at Hewgleyâs Music Shop.
BRYAN WAYNE, 53, died Oct. 22.
Hit country songwriter via Chris Cagleâs âCountry By the Grace of Godâ (2002) and Tommy Shane Steinerâs âWhat If Sheâs an Angelâ (2002). Cuts by Big & Rich, Emerson Drive, Clay Walker, Jason Blaine, John Rich, Rodney Carrington, others. Solo CD While You Wait in 2018 with guests Shannon Lawson, Joana Janet, James Otto, Big Kenny. Convinced major-league baseball to honor National Lou Gehrig Day for ALS awareness. (full name: Bryan Wayne Galentine).
JERRY JEFF WALKER, 78, died Oct. 23.
Texas music legend with 40+ albums. Co-founder of Austinâs âprogressive countryâ scene. Host TNN series The Texas Connection (1991-92). Writer of standard âMr. Bojanglesâ (1968) covered by hundreds including Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (1970, in Grammy Hall of Fame), Belafonte, Nina Simone, John Denver, Neil Diamond, Dylan, Frankie Laine, Paycheck, Bobbie Gentry, Tom T., Nilsson, Sammi Smith, Nancy Wilson, David Bromberg, Sammy Davis Jr. etc. Co-wrote Lefty Frizzellâs âRailroad Ladyâ (1974) with Jimmy Buffett. Other songs included âSangria Wine,â âGettinâ By,â âGypsy Songman,â âHairy Ass Hillbillies,â âPissinâ in the Wind,â âHill Country Rain,â âLeavinâ Texas,â âNolan Ryan.â Song connoisseur of othersâ works, popularizing such Texas classics as âUp Against the Wall Redneck Mother,â âOld Five and Dimers Like Me,â âL.A. Freeway,â âDesperados Waiting for a Train,â âMississippi Youâre on My Mind,â âPick Uo the Tempo,â âLondon Homesick Blues (Home with the Armadillo),â âBacksliders Wine,â âDonât It Make You Wanna Dance.â Gold Record for 1972 LP Viva Terlingua. Formed own Tried and True label 1986, becoming model of do-it-yourself career control. Autobiography: Gypsy Songman: A Life in Music (1999).
J.T. CORENFLOS, 56, died Oct. 24.
Top Nashville session guitarist, backing a mulitude of stars. ACMâs 2013 Guitar Player of the Year. Multiple citations in MuscRowâs annual rankings. Solo CD 2015âs Somewhere Under the Radar.
SHAWN SCRUGGS, 37, died Oct. 25.
Lower Broadway bass player at Tootsieâs Orchid Lounge, Kid Rockâs Honky Tonk and other venues backing John Stone, Melanie Torres, more.
STAN KESLER, 92, died Oct. 26.
Memphis musician, songwriter, engineer, producer who was a key figure at Sun Records. Played bass, guitar, mandolin, steel guitar. On records by Jerry Lee, Orbison, Carl Perkins, Miller Sisters, etc. Member of country band Clyde Leoppard & Snearly Ranch Boys, also on Sun. Wrote Elvis songs âI Forgot to Remember to Forget,â âPlaying for Keeps,â âIâm Left, Youâre Right, Sheâs Gone,â plus Jerry Leeâs âOne Minute Past Eternity,â âSometimes a Memory Ainât Enough.â Songs also recorded by Robbins, Cash, Prine, Wanda. Produced Sam the Sham & The Pharaohâs âWooly Bullyâ & other hits.
DEZ ZAMEK, 68, died Oct. 28.
Couturier, master tailor, costume designer for Nashville stars & society women. Wife of international music entrepreneur Paul Zamek. (full name: Desray Anne Zamek).
BILLY JOE SHAVER, 81, died Oct. 28.
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member noted for âIâm Just an Old Chunk of Coal,â âRide Me Down Easy,â âOld Five and Dimers Like Me,â âYou Asked Me To,â âI Couldnât Be Me Without You.â Performer and recording artist who was a key figure in countryâs âoutlawâ movement. Discovered by Bobby Bare & signed to his publishing company. Championed by Waylon Jennings, who dedicated most of 1973âs Honky Tonk Heroes LP to Shaver songs. Cuts by Cash, Kristofferson, Willie (âI Been to Georgia on a Fast Trainâ), Elvis, Patty Loveless, George Jones, Tex Ritter, Tennessee Ernie, Bare (âRide Me Down Easyâ), Waylon (âHonky Tonk Heroes,â âBlack Rose,â âYou Asked Me Toâ), Mark Chesnutt, Jerry Lee, Confederate Railroad, BRr-49, Commander Cody, Rodriguez (âI Couldnât Be Me Without Youâ), John Anderson (âIâm Just an Old Chunk of Coalâ), Stonewall Jackson, Lewis Family, Marty Stuart, Tom Jones, Widespread Panic, David Allan Coe, Tom T. (âWilly the Wandering Gypsy and Meâ), Allmans, Alison Krauss, etc. Recorded 20+ solo albums 1973-2014 for Monument, Capricorn, Columbia, New West, Compadre, Sugar Hill, others, some billed as Shaver partnered with guitar-ace son Eddy Shaver (1962-2000). Americana Music Association Lifetime Achievement award for songwriting 2002, ACM Poetâs Award 2019.
NAN KEENAN, 91, died Oct. 30.
Actor, director, teacher. Appeared and/or directed almost all productions of Murfreesboro Little Theater 1970s & 1980s. Taught speech and theater at MTSU. Moved to Franklin & acted in many Nashville theatrical productions thereafter.
TEDDY IRWIN, 77, died Nov. 5.
Guitarist, arranger, composer. Session player on hits by Randy Travis (“Old 8×10”), Buffett (âMargaritavilleâ), Neil Young (âHeart of Goldâ). Also on records by Cash, Ray Stevens, B.J., Earl Scruggs Revue, Juice Newton, Joan Baez, John Lennon (âHappy Christmas War Is Overâ), Jermaine Jackson, Neil Diamond, Richie Havens, Pat Boone, David Soul, more. Composed & produced music for soaps As the World Turns, Guiding Light, Another World. Toured with Petula Clark, Four Seasons, Bette Midler, Pozo Seco Singers, Doc Severinsen, etc. Played lead guitar in original Broadway production of Hair. Recorded 22 albums with partner CC Couch. Three solo guitar albums Music From My Guitar to You, Babies, Three Guitars-A Guitar Christmas.
JUDY KENDALL FRYE, 73, died Nov. 6.
Hostess at Grand Ole Opry for 39 years. Nashville tour guide. Dresser for Broadway shows at TPAC. Hair stylist. Supervisor at CMA Fest.
GENEVA ANN SMITH, 81, died Nov. 10.
Columbia Recording Studio employee for 12 years in the 1950s & 1960s. Later with Davidson County Registrar of Deeds office.
ANDREW WHITE III, 78, died Nov. 11.
Nashville multi-instrumentalist who became sideman for Stevie Wonder, Weather Report, Fifth Dimension, McCoy Tyner, Supremes, etc. Publisher, producer, 40+ solo albums.
DOUG SUPERNAW, 60, died Nov. 13.
Texas singer-songwriter best known for big country hits âRenoâ (1993), âI Donât Call Him Daddyâ (1993) and âNot Enough Hours in the Nightâ (1996). Also had charted singles with Steve Goodmanâs âYou Never Even Call Me By My Name,â Dennis Lindeâs âWhatâll You Do About Me,â Jim Lauderdale/Frank Dycusâ âShe Never Looks Back.â Nominated ACM 1994 New Male Artist of the Year. Also nominated for awards by TNN/Music City News, MusicRow, Billboard. Gold Record for Red and Rio Grande album 1994. Noted as colorful showman, outspoken personality. On soundtrack The Beverly Hillbillies singing Buck Owens classic âTogether Again.â Collaboration with Beach Boys on 1996 novelty âLong Tall Texan.â Texas Country Music Hall of Fame inductee 2016. At CMA Music Fest & all-star Ralph Stanley tribute 2017.
WALTER C. MILLER, 94, died Nov. 13.
Produced/directed CMA Awards 1970-2004. Created multiple Cash TV specials, Opry anniversary specials, plus shows devoted to Dolly, John Denver, Acuff, Tennessee Ernie, Donny & Marie, Minnie Pearl, Mac Davis, Vince, more. Brought Perry Como & George Burns to Nashville for all-star country specials. Became the definitive director of award show/live event television genre. Wrote the book when it came to multi-camera coverage of events. In addition to country specials, directed Grammy Awards 15 times, directed Tony Awards 1987-97, also orchestrated TV coverage of Emmys, Peopleâs Choice Awards, Comic Relief. TV career began with the birth of the medium in 1940s & 1950s: Horn & Hardart Childrenâs Hour, Bell Telephone Hour, Startime, Sing Along with Mitch, etc. Began directing specials 1960s: Streisand, Sinatra, Stevie Wonder, Kathie Lee Gifford, Andy Williams, Bobby Rydell, Sammy Davis Jr., Irving Berlin, Sha Na Na, Al Green, Justin Timberlake, Doug Henning, others. Particularly noted for comedy specials: Rodney Dangerfield, Steve Martin, Sam Kinison, Bill Cosby, Rich Little, Rosie OâDonnell, Alan King, Bob Hope. Directed televised musicals Youâre a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Dames at Sea, The Will Rogers Follies, George M! In 1995 created Soul Train 25th Anniversary TV celebration. In 1989 directed Presidential Inaugural Gala. Appeared in 1991 Bette Midler movie For the Boys. Nominated for 19 Emmys & won five. Three-time Directors Guild of America award winner. CMA Presidentâs Award 2007, CMA Irving Waugh Award 2009, Grammy Trustees Award 2010. Father of TV director Paul Miller, who is also a veteran of CMA telecasts, as well as Saturday Night Live, In Living Color, A Capitol Fourth, two Super Bowl halftime shows & more.
BOB LOFLIN, 91, died Nov. 16.
WSM radio newsman & Opry announcer 1960s. Interviewer on syndicated Country Crossroads radio series 1970s. Formerly cabaret entertainer in Birmingham, TV cowboy & CBS radio announcer in Hollywood. In retirement, volunteer at Frist Museum of Art & Nashville Public Library. Volunteer of the Year 2012 Country Music Hall of Fame. (full name: Clyde Thompson Loflin Jr.)
SUSAN KEEL, 58, died Nov. 20.
Publicist whose clients included Conway Twitty, Ray Stevens, Opry Mills, Ryman Auditorium, TPAC, Tennessee Titans. Worked for CashBox, Bullet Recording Studio, Top Billing, Sen. Jim Sasser, Tennessean, Andrews Agency, Fletcher Rowley Inc., own Keel PR. Daughter of Nashville Banner editor Pinckney Keel, sister of MTSU Dean Beverly Keel (formerly a label exec, music journalist & Music Row publicist).
HAL KETCHUM, 67, died Nov. 23.
Singer-songwriter, country hit maker and Grand Ole Opry star. Seventeen charted titles in 1991-06 with nine top-20 hitsââSmall Town Saturday Nightâ (1991), âI Know Where Love Livesâ (1991), âPast the Point of Rescueâ (1992), âFive OâClock Worldâ (1992), âSure Loveâ (1992), âMama Knows the Highwayâ (1993), âHearts Are Gonna Rollâ (1993), âFall in Love Againâ (1994), âStay Foreverâ (1995). Ten albums, Gold Record for 1992âs Past the Point of Rescue. CMA Horizon Award nominee.
LYNSEY McDONALD, 58, died Nov. 23.
Americana artist manager who helped guide careers of Jason & Scorchers, Todd Snider, Deanna Carter, Georgia Satellites, Robbie Fulks, Jay Joyce. Helped launch live-performance series âMusic City Rootsâ and venue Loveless Barn. Worked at Praxis International, Vector Management, Rising Tide Records, Thirty Tigers, TomKats catering, CMT and own Magnolia Way Management firm.
MAC ALLEN, 79, died Nov. 30.
Radio vet Nashvillian with both on-air and programming credits. (full name: Joseph Mcdermott Allen)
CHARLEY PRIDE, 86, died Dec. 12.
Country Music Hall of Fame inductee, Grand Ole Opry member. CMA Entertainer of the Year 1971, Male Vocalist of the Year 1971 & 1972. Placed 67 titles on country charts, including 52 Top 10 hits & 29 No. 1âs, 12 Gold Records, 35 million sold. Classics include âKiss an Angel Good Morning,â âAll I Have to Offer You Is Me,â âIs Anybody Goinâ to San Antone,â âMountain of Loveâ and âWe Could.â Countryâs first Black superstar. Following failed baseball career, turned to country music 1965. Broke through on country charts with Jack Clement compositions âJust Between You and Meâ (1966) and âI Know Oneâ (1967). Hank Williamsâ âKaw-Ligaâ hit in 1969, followed by Prideâs first No. 1, âAll I Have to Offer You Is Me.â His 1971 âDid You Think to Prayâ won gospel Grammy & âKiss an Angel Good Morningâ Grammy for Country Song of the Year. Prideâs 1972 hit âAll His Childrenâ theme song for Paul Newman movie Sometimes a Great Notion nominated for an Oscar & Pride sang it on Academy Awards. Charley Pride Sings Heart Songs won 1973 Grammy. First Black artist to co-host CMA Awards (with Glen Campbell 1975). Hits continued with âAmazing Loveâ (1973), âWe Couldâ (1974), âHope Youâre Feelinâ Me (Like Iâm Feelinâ You)â (1975), âMy Eyes Can Only See as Far as Youâ (1976), âSheâs Just an Old Love Turned Memoryâ (1977), âSomeone Loves You Honeyâ (1978), Grammy nominated âBurgers and Friesâ (1978), âWhere Do I Put Her Memoryâ (1979). In 1980, Thereâs a Little Bit of Hank in Me, tribute album to Hank Williams spawned back-to-back No. 1âs âHonky Tonk Blues,â âYou Win Again.â Also revived Johnny Rivers hit âMountain of Loveâ (1982), George Jones hit âWhy Baby Whyâ (1982), Webb Pierce hit âMore and Moreâ (1983). Pride 1981 hit âRoll On, Mississippiâ later became a state song. Other hits included âI Donât Think Sheâs in Love Anymoreâ (1982), âYouâre So Good When Youâre Badâ (1982), âNight Gamesâ (1983), âShouldnât It Be Easier Than Thisâ (1988). Formed Music Row song publishing company Pi-Gem Music with producer Tom Collins. Formed Dallas management & booking company Chardon, which helped launch careers of Dave & Sugar, Janie Fricke, Neal McCoy. Also heavily invested in Dallas real estate, banking. In 1973, joined Opry, opened own theater in Branson, published autobiography, Pride. Tritt, Diffie, Ketchum, Marty Stuart joined him on 1994 CD. In 1996, performed for Clintons in White House & accepted Trumpet Award from Turner Broadcasting. Inducted into Country Music Hall of Fame 2000. Neal McCoy 2013 tribute album Pride. Other stars who received career boosts from Pride include Milsap, Trini Triggs, Exile, Janie Fricke, Paisley, Wariner. Some recorded with Pride, as did Oaks, Tanya, Garth, Dolly. Pride included in 2016 No. 1 country single/video âForever Countryâ which won Video of the Year and Gold Record. Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award & NATD Career Achievement honor 2017. PBS American Masters bio-documentary, Charley Pride: Iâm Just Me, narrated by Tanya 2019. CMAâs Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. A COVID pandemic victim.
WANDA WHITE, 87, died Dec. 15.
Country & gospel singer. Notable in East Tennessee in Carlton Scruggs & The Home Folks on Mid-Day Merry-Go-Round, WNOX Tennessee Barn Dance, WSMâs Opry, Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree, etc. Background singer for country artists in 1940s & 1950s. Great grandmother and mentor of teen country/Americana performer EmiSunshine. (married name: Wanda White Matthews).
CARL MANN, 78, died Dec. 15.
Rockabilly star in Sun Records stable with 1958 hit âMona Lisa,â plus âPretend,â âSouth of the Border,â âToo Youngâ as rocked-up pop ballads. Also: âUbangi Stomp,â âFoolish One,â âBaby I Donât Care,â âRockinâ Love,â âIâm Coming Home,â etc. Later a country act on Monument, ABC/Dot. Popularity endured in Europe for decades.
KIRKE MARTIN, 70, died Dec. 16.
Music Row business manager with clients including Dirt Band, Tammy, T. Graham, Keith Whitley, many CCM artists.
K.T. OSLIN, 78, died Dec. 21.
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Famed for country hits â80s Ladies,â âHold Me,â âDo Ya,â âIâll Always Come Back,â âHey Bobby,â âThis Woman,â âCome Next Monday.â Songs recorded by Dusty Springfield, Anne Murray, Gail Davies (âRound the Clock Lovingâ), The Judds, Pam Tillis & Lorrie Morgan, Sissy Spacek (âLonely But Only For Youâ), Dottie West, Dan Seals, Dorothy Moore, Forester Sisters etc. CMA Female Vocalist of the Year 1988. First woman to win CMA Song of the Year (â80s Ladiesâ). First woman to become country star at age 45. Three Grammys, four ACMs, Texas Songwriters Hall of Fame. Gold/Platinum awards for â80s Ladies (1987), This Woman (1988), Love in a Small Town (1990), plus music-video compilation. Other albums Greatest Hits: Songs From an Aging Sex Bomb (1993), My Roots Are Showing (1996), Live Close By, Visit Often (2001), Simply (2015). Actor in TV series Evening Shade, Paradise, and films The Thing Called Love, Poisoned by Love. Favorite personality on TV shows of Carol Burnett, Johnny Carson, Joan Rivers, Oprah Winfrey, Arsenio Hall, Ralph Emery. Starred on 20/20 and own 1992 TNN special USO Celebrity Tour. Raised in Houston folk-music scene. Chorus girl in musicals Hello Dolly, West Side Story, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Darling of the Day, Promises, Promises. In addition to Broadway work, acted in TV commercials, sang ad jingles during 1970s & 1980s.
JOE JOHNSON, 93, died Dec. 22.
Label executive, record producer, song publisher. Affiliated with Columbia Records, Gene Autry, Challenge Records, 4 Star Records, Golden West Melodies, JAT Publishing, others. Produced, published and/or promoted more than 150 hits. Produced Marty Robbins, Jimmy Dickens, Jerry Wallace, etc. Behind such successes as âTequilaâ by The Champs (1958), âThatâs All Rightâ by Robbins (1955), âJust Walkin’ in the Rainâ by Johnny Ray (1956), âWishful Thinkingâ by Wynn Stewart (1960), âThe One You Slip Around Withâ by Jan Howard (1960), âTravelinâ Manâ by Ricky Nelson (1961), âLimbo Rockâ by Chubby Checker (1962), âLiesâ by The Knickerbockers (1966), âRelease Meâ by Englebert Humperdinck (1967), âSignsâ by The Five Man Electrical Band (1971). Co-founder of the ACM. Built the Music Row office building that has housed GAC and RFD-TV.
BERK BRYANT, 90, died Dec. 24, 2020.
Long-running host of Louisville bluegrass radio show âSunday Bluegrassâ on WFPK-FM (1989-2018). Writer of monthly bluegrass column in Louisville Music News. Formerly at WWOD & WBRG in Lynchburg, VA. (full name: Berkley Olin Bryant).
TONY RICE, 69, died Dec. 25.
A virtuoso guitarist and bluegrass musician. Influential acoustic guitar player in bluegrass, progressive bluegrass, newgrass and acoustic jazz. He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2013.
SILVER ANN HAAS, 55, died Dec. 28, 2020.
Owner Platinum Artist Music Group & Silver Dream Promotions in Nashville.
HUGH X. LEWIS, 90, died Dec. 29, 2020.
Country singer-songwriter. Charted 15 titles on charts 1964-79.
Top 40 entries: âWhat I Need Mostâ (1965), âOut Where the Ocean Meets the Skyâ (1965), âIâd Better Call the Law on Meâ (1966), âYouâre So Cold (Iâm Turning Blue)â (1967), âEvolution and the Bibleâ (1968). âAll Heaven Broke Looseâ (1969) a top-20 hit in Canada. LPs The Hugh X. Lewis Album (1965), Just Before Dawn (1965), My Kind of Country (1966), Just a Prayer Away (1967), Country Fever (1968). Wrote hits for Stonewall Jackson âB.J. the D.J.â (No. 1, 1964), âAngry Wordsâ (No. 16, 1968), âShip in the Bottleâ (No. 19, 1969). Also wrote Carl Smithâs âTake My Ring Off Your Fingerâ (1964), Carl Butler & Pearlâs âJust Thought Iâd Let You Knowâ (1965), Del Reeves & Bobby Goldsboro duet âI Just Wasted the Restâ (1968) plus songs for Ray Pillow, Mac Wiseman, Jimmy C. Newman, George Morgan, Pride, Dickens, Kitty, Lynn Anderson, Jim Ed, more. Hosted syndicated weekly TV series Hugh X. Lewis Country Club c.1968-72. Own Printerâs Alley nightclub 1970s. In country movies Forty Acre Feud (1966), Gold Guitar (1967), Cotton Pickinâ Chicken Pickers (1967), plus Christian childrenâs movie Summer of Courage (2005). Later a poet, speaker, gospel recording artist, radio host (âThe Christian Country Story Showâ on WSGS/WKIC in Hazard, KY). Kentucky Colonel honoree, Atlanta Country Music Hall of Fame, Walkway of Stars inductee at Country Music Hall of Fame. (full name: Hubert Bradley Lewis).
GLEN THOMPSON, 75, died Dec. 29, 2020.
President of the Grand Ole Opry Fan Club, 1987-2010. A familiar face on the front row of Opry shows. Singer-guitarist who performed on Junior Grand Ole Opry 1955 at age 9. Burial planned next to Uncle Jimmy Thompson, Opryâs first performer.
DEV TREANOR DAVIS, 85, died Dec. 30, 2020.
Nashville tourism booster for 30+ years. Owner Tennessee Trail Blazers Bus Company & tour businesses. President of United Bus Owners of America 1983. (full name: Christine Devereaux Treanor Davis).
Index:
Adam, Biff â 3/7
Allen, Mac â 11/30
Annastas, Tom â 8/13
Austin, Quay â 3/9
Baxter, Bucky â 5/25
Benford, Mac â 2/15
Bryant, Berk â 12/24
Bey, Anon â 3/1
Billingsley, Jane Dorris â 6/15
Blaydes, Keith â 2/6
Burton, Patricia Maxwell â 3/19
Byrd, Stan â 5/23
Cage, Buddy â 2/4
Capps, Jimmy â 6/2
Carr, Pete â 6/27
Cathcart, Kent – 4/7
Cathey, Charles Edward â 7/24
Chandler, Wayne â 8/7
Connor, Arthur â 4/13
Corenflos, J.T. â 10/24
Currey, Browlee â 3/18
Cymbala, Zenon B. â 3/31
Daniels, Charlie â 7/6
Darrow, Chris â 1/15
Davis, Dev Treanor – 12/30
Davis, Mac â 9/29
DeBoer, Tony â 5/20
Delozier, Jimmie â 1/31
DeMontbreun-Stroud, Abbe â 6/19
Denny, John â 7/21
Denny, Pandora â 8/23
Dew, Harriet – 8/16
Diffie, Joe â 3/29
Dobkins, Carl â 4/8
Durrett, Rick â 10/6
Earle, Justin Townes â 8/23
English, Paul â 2/12
Frazier, Randy â 6/19
Freeman, Barry â 1/10
Frye, Judy Kendall â 11/6
Fryer, David Alfred â 10/11
Garcia, Benny â 5/7
Groves, Cady â 5/2
Gudis, Stephen â 1/6
Gulley, Steve â 8/18
Haas, Silver Ann â 12/28
Halterman, Joe â 2/11
Harris, Ernie â 4/24
Harvey, Alex â 4/4
Head, Roy â 9/21
Henley, Jimmy â 3/22
Hildebrand, Donald â 4/14
Hiller, Phyllis Unger â 10/1
Hludzik, Jerry – 4/12
Holland, W.S. “Fluke” â 9/23
Hoover, Eddie â 8/20.
Houston, Robb â 3/16
Howard, Jan â 3/28
Howard, Sam â 7/10
Ingram, Kenny â 7/26
Irwin, Ed â 6/28
Irwin, Teddy â 11/5
Jackson, Wade â 1/14
Jay, Jimmie – 4/6
Johnson, Joe â 12/22
Johnson, Larry â 6/12
Jones, Troy â 9/11
Jonz, Bobby â 7/21
Kaparakis, John B. â 4/12
Kayser, Hans â 3/20
Kearney, Ramsey â 3/14
Keel, Susan â 11/20
Keenan, Nan â 10/30
Kelly, Dan â 7/22
Kesler, Stan â 10/26
Ketchum, Hal â 11/23
King, Buddy â 8/21
King, Thom â 4/24
Lester, Tom â 4/20
Lewis, Hugh X. â 12/29
Lewis, James A. â 10/13
Lilly, Michael â 2/12
Little Richard â 5/9
Loflin, Bob â 11/16
Lonas, Sonny â 6/30
Lunn, Eddie â 1/29
Lusk, Jim â 4/25
McDonald, Lynsey â 11/23
McEuen, Bill â 9/24
McSpadden, Gary â 4/15
McTeigue, Edward âFelixâ â 7/24
Mack, Bill â 7/31
Mann, Carl â 12/15
Martel, Marty â 3/29
Martin, Craig â 7/3
Martin, Kirke â 12/16
Martin, Daniel Lee â 2/14
Meador, Joe â 10/21
Memarie â 7/22
Miller, Walter C. â 11/13
Mitchell, Harold â 8/5
Moore, Bonnie Lou â 9/21
Morford, Faith Bailey â 5/13
Oldaker, Jamie â 7/16
Olney, David â 1/18
Oslin, K.T. â 12/21
Owen, Fuzzy â 5/11
Owen, Helen â 7/13
Parker, Ira â 1/24
Pennington, Ray â 10/7
Phillips, Knox â 4/15
Pointer, Bonnie â 6/8
Powell, Tom — 1/21
Pride, Charley â 12/12
Prince, Thomas â 7/25
Prine, John – 4/7
Pryor, Richard â 4/24
Pursell, Bill â 9/3
Pyatt, Dale â 4/15
Quinn, Tommy â 7/8
Ragsdale, John â 3/25
Ramsey, Freeman â 9/12
Ray, Glenn â 6/11
Reeves, Ellen â 9/15
Reid, Harold â 4/24
Rice, Tony â 12/25
Ricker, Bob â 7/27
Roberts, H.G. â 3/22
Rogers, Kenny â 3/20
Rowe, Alan â 7/23
Saxon, John â 7/25
Scarborough, Cy â 5/19
Schulman, Alan â 6/24
Scott, Barry, 9/10
Scruggs, Shawn â 10/25
Setser, Eddie â 1/27
Shane, Bob â 1/26
Shaver, Billy Joe â 10/28
Smardak, Kathy â 10/11
Smith, Geneva Ann – 11/10
Smith, Robin â 3/13
Snead, Doak â 9/16
Soesbee, Bud â 5/20
Starr, Lucille â 9/4
Supernaw, Doug â 11/13
Thompson, Glen – 12/29
Thompson, Sue Armstrong â 5/4
Thrall, Dick â 5/14
Trapp, Mercer â 8/31
Walker, Gary â 7/8
Walker, Jerry Jeff â 10/23
Wayne, Bryan â 10/22
Weissberg, Eric â 3/22
White, Andrew â 11/11
White, Wanda â 12/15
Whitehouse, Dick â 1/14
Williams-Dunning, Katherine â 6/13
Williamson, Jim â 2/26
Woods, Collier Robert â 8/1
Yates, Helen Hunley Glaser â 2/3
Zamek, Dez â 10/28
Nashville-Related Music Obituaries 2020
/by Robert K Oermann[click to enlarge]
The worldwide COVID-19 pandemic claimed the lives of Joe Diffie, John Prine, Bill Mack, Bobby Jonz, Bill Pusell and Charley Pride. Other top stars lost included Kenny Rogers, Mac Davis, K.T. Oslin, Jan Howard, Jerry Jeff Walker, Charlie Daniels, Hal Ketchum, Doug Supernaw, Roy Head and The Statler Brothersâ Harold Reid.
The songwriting community said farewell to Billy Joe Shaver, David Olney, Eddie Setser and Alex Harvey, among others. Gospel musicâs Gary McSpadden, jazz great Jim Williamson and rock superstar Little Richard passed, too.
The music-business world was especially hard hit. Dick Whitehouse, Fuzzy Owen, Stan Byrd, Gary Walker, Sam Howard, Ray Pennington and Walter C. Miller all passed away during this past year.
Below is a roll-call of the many who said goodbye.
STEPHEN GUDIS, 68, died Jan. 6.
Concert-industry exec. Began in Nashville at Pace Concerts 1994 as production manager at Starwood Amphitheater. Worked as road manager, show promoter, stage manager throughout Southeast. In 1990s toured with Oaks, Brooks & Dunn, Alabama, CDB, Marty Stuart, Toby, Brad, others. Stage manager of Volunteer Jam for a decade and of more than 20 FarmAid concerts. Event manager for Nissan, TPAC, T.J. Martell, Warners, Parnelli Awards. Launched New Yearâs Eve Guitar Drop for Hard Rock CafĂ©. Worked on Music City Irish Festival, Music City Jazz Festival.
BARRY FREEMAN, 83, died Jan. 10.
Record promoter, radio executive, songwriter, trade journalist. Wrote Dinah Shore hit âSo Dear to My Heartâ (1948). Record promoter in 1950s at Coral label (Buddy Holly, Debbie Reynolds, Rosemary Clooney, etc.). Positions at United Artists, Harmon, Kapp labels (1958-68). As independent, promoted âHarper Valley P.T.A.â to No. 1 (1968). Returned to labels 1970s at Capitol (Ronstadt, Steve Miller Band, McCartney, etc.), Atlantic (Aretha, Bette Midler, CSN&Y, Zeppelin, etc.). Head of Talent Acquisition for Westwood One (1981-84). Head of Artist Relations for Entertainment Radio Networks (1985-93) booking âCountryline USA.â Bureau chief of Nashville trade publication Network 40 (1994-96). Joined ABC Radio Networks (1996-99). Returned to record promotion repping Warner comedy acts. Formed FM Entertainment (2000-08) booking morning-show interviews.
DICK WHITEHOUSE, died Jan. 14.
CEO of Curb Records. Began with label when it was launched in 1964. Key exec. in Curb signing Sawyer Brown, Lyle Lovett, Desert Rose Band, The Judds, Junior Brown, others.
WADE JACKSON, 90, died Jan. 14.
Wrote âDonât Be Angry,â a 1964 Top 10 hit for brother Stonewall Jackson, revived by Billy âCrashâ Craddock as minor 1973 success, then returned to Top 10 by Donna Fargo 1977. Prolific songwriter of thousands of others. Multi-instrumentalist on guitar, fiddle, harmonica, mandolin. (full name: Waymond D. Jackson).
CHRIS DARROW, 75, died Jan. 15.
Multi-instrumentalist in Nitty Gritty Dirt Band on its hit LP Uncle Charlie & His Dog Teddy (1970). On singles âMr. Bojangles,â âHouse at Pooh Corner,â âSome of Shelleyâs Bluesâ and in movie Paint Your Wagon (1969). Also backed Ronstadt, James Taylor, Sonny & Cher, Helen Reddy, etc. In band Kaleidoscope and solo LPs.
DAVID OLNEY, 71, died Jan. 18.
Nashville singer-songwriter. Made initial mark in band Simpson with arrangement of âBlack Betty.â First Nashville impact as leader of The X-Rays (1978-85), a founding band of cityâs alternative-rock scene. Became acclaimed figure in Americana movement via 20+ albums. Also performed and recorded in Nashville Jug Band. His songs sung by Emmylou, Steve Earle, Joe Ely, Del McCoury, Cash, Tim OâBrien, James King, Ronstadt, Slaid Cleaves, Lonnie Brooks and more. Gripping, theatrical live performer who became widely known in Europe, as well as on American folk circuit. Opera Memphis adapted some songs for theatrical work âLight in August.â Performed during Nashville Shakespeare Festival. Opened shows for Bonnie Raitt, Kristofferson, Nanci Griffith, Elvis Costello. Rave reviews in New York Times, Stereo Review, USA Today, L.A. Times, Miami Herald, Philadelphia Enquirer, etc. Died performing on stage at 30A Songwriters Festival in Florida.
TOM POWELL, 86, died Jan. 21.
Editor of Amusement Business magazine, 1972-2006. Tennessean sportswriter (1958-72). Race announcer at Nashville Speedway 1970s. Columinist for Outdoor Amusement Business Association (2007-2019). Member Showmanâs League of American Hall of Honor, International Independent Showmenâs Association Hall of Fame.
IRA PARKER, 63, died Jan. 24.
Former hair stylist, personal assistant, property manager, tour coordinator for Dolly. Widow of drummer Martin Parker (1952-2015), noted for his work with Vince, Skaggs, Patty, Alison, etc.
BOB SHANE, 85, died Jan. 26.
Last surviving member of original Kingston Trio. Folk group topped pop charts with Appalachian folk song âTom Dooleyâ (1958) & won the first country Grammy Award.
EDDIE SETSER, 77, died Jan. 27.
Nashville songwriter noted for âSeven Spanish Angelsâ (Willie & Ray Charles), âWeekend Friendâ (Con Hunley), âDonât Look Backâ (Gary Morris), âForget About Meâ (Bellamys), âWhy Lady Whyâ (Morris), âLet the Music Lift You Upâ (Reba), âBeyond Those Yearsâ (Oaks), âLove You Ainât Seen the Last of Meâ (John Schneider), âAnything Goesâ (Morris), âCountry Girlsâ (Schneider), âIâve Got a Rock & Roll Heartâ (Clapton), âDown on the Farmâ (Pride), âIf I Had Any Pride Left at Allâ (John Berry), âIt Ainât Realâ (Mark Gray), âCountry Til I Dieâ (John Anderson), âBut I Willâ (Faith). Formerly in R&B band The Dapps on King Records. Songs also cut by Aretha, 4 Tops, Rod Stewart, Delbert, Rita Coolidge, Etta James, Isaac Hayes, plus Country Hall of Famers Conway, Brenda, Merle, Randy, Waylon, Alabama, Cash, Jones, Don Williams, Glen Campbell.
EDDIE LUNN JR., 70, died Jan. 29.
Co-writer, co-producer of folk musical Good News (1967), highly influential turning point in gospel music. (full name: Wallace Edward Lunn Jr.)
JIMMIE DELOZIER, 88, died Jan. 31.
Fiddler who worked with Benny & Vallie Cain, Joe Sacra, The Bluegrass Buddies & own band The Sensations. Rebel Records artist. Former Virginia Fiddle Championship winner.
HELEN HUNLEY GLASER YATES, 81, died Feb. 3.
One of Nashvilleâs first female D.J.s (1955, WLAC). Miss Tennessee USA crown led to work as print & runway fashion model 1960s. Founded own American Institute of Modeling (1980) & American Models, Actors and Extras (AMAX) (1990) businesses. Known as âThe Model Maker of the South.â Spokesperson for Easter Seal Foundation, active on many other charity boards.
BUDDY CAGE, 73, died Feb. 4.
Steel guitarist for New Riders of the Purple Sage. Noted for his work on âPanama Red,â âWhiskey,â âGypsy Cowboyâ & other band favorites.
KEITH BLAYDES, 56, died Feb. 6.
Co-owner of the LGBTQ+ friendly nightspots The Tribe and Play.
JOE HALTERMAN, 69, died Feb. 11.
Drummer in Bobby Pierce & The Nashville Sounds (1966-72) and in Bob Lumanâs band (1972-76), both with lifelong friend Buddy Cannon. Went on to gigs with Cal Smith, Ray Price, Dr. Hook, Buddy Emmons, Joe Carter, Tompall Glaser, Dean Dillon, others. Co-wrote 1983 Top 10 hit by The Whites âI Wonder Whoâs Holding My Baby Tonight.â
PAUL ENGLISH, 87, died Feb. 12.
Willieâs Nelsonâs drummer and longtime friend. Immortalized in Willieâs songs âMe and Paulâ (1985) and âDevil in a Sleepinâ Bagâ (1973).
MICHAEL LILLY, 69, died Feb. 12.
Banjo player who competed on TVâs Ted Mack Amateur Hour at age 11. Later worked in bluegrass bands of Powell Brothers, Larry Sparks, Harley Allen & Wendy Miller.
DANIEL LEE MARTIN, 54, died Feb. 14.
Country singer with CDs All That I Am (2003), On My Way to You (2007). Hosted TV shows Brotherhood Outdoors (Sportsman Channel), Til Death Do Us Part (CarbonTV0, Backstage and Backroads (Sportsman Channel). CMA Music Fest performer. Suicide following child-sex charges.
MAC BENFORD, 79, died Feb. 15.
Old-time banjo player who co-founded prominent & influential revival group Highwoods String Band. Group popular on Rounder Records & at festivals 1970s. Later in Backwoods Band (1980s), Woodshed All-Stars (1990s), both also on Rounder.
JIM WILLIAMSON, 78, died Feb. 26.
Trumpeter who led Nashville Jazz Orchestra for 25 years. Session musician for Aretha, B.B., Randy Brecker, Michael McDonald, Reba, Mavericks, Delbert, Boots, etc. Toured with Ice Follies, played at Opryland, taught at MTSU, wrote music for jazz ensembles, concerts with Muscle Shoals Horns, Knoxville Jazz Orchestra. Performed with Temptations, Four Tops, Lee Greenwood, Dinah Shore, Andy Williams, OâJays, etc.
ANON BEY, 96, died March 1.
R&B/soul-music disc jockey on WVOL & WSOK known as âBlabber Mouthâ Bey.
BIFF ADAM, 83, died March 7.
Drummer in Merle Haggardâs band The Strangers since 1970. Name-checked in title of instrumental âBiff Bam Boomâ on LP Presenting My Friends, The Strangers (1970). Innovator of influential âdouble-shuffle beatâ in country music. Strangers in Clint Eastwood movie Bronco Billy (1980). Previously sessions for The Ventures, soundtrack of movie The Jungle Book (1967). Stage work with Bobby Bare, Roger Miller, Bob Wills, etc.
QUAY AUSTIN, 62, died March 9.
Broadcast engineer at WSMV-Channel 4.
ROBIN SMITH, 71, died March 13.
Nashville banjo luthier & musician. Created banjo for Scott Vestal. Played with Reno Brothers.
RAMSEY KEARNEY, 86, died March 14.
Co-writer with Mel Tillis of 1961 Brenda Lee pop smash âEmotions.â Also co-wrote âNine Little Teardropsâ for Sue Thompson (1961), âLonely Peopleâ for Eddy Arnold (1964), âBig Flicking Babyâ for Moe Bandy (1978). Longtime indie country recording artist on NRS, Safari, Silver Dollar, Nashco, SunJay, Stomper Time, etc. Charted with âKing of Oak Streetâ (1985), âOne Time Thingâ (1988). Released more than 25 albums.
ROBB HOUSTON, 57, died March 16.
Guitarist in country group Sixwire, which charted with âLook at Me Nowâ and âWay Too Deepâ in 2002, both on Warner. Band later became TV fixture on series Nashville Star, Next Great American Band, Can You Duet, CMTâs Next Superstar, Nashville. Previously solo artist on Carlyle Records with CD Dream State, staff writer for MTM, lead guitarist for Brothers Phelps, Randy Travis.
BROWLEE CURREY JR., 91, died March 18.
Owner of Nashville Banner 1980-98. Co-founder of public-radio company Osborn Communications 1989-97.
PATRICIA MAXWELL BURTON, 94, died March 19.
Sinking Creek Film Festival worker, film production assistant, poet, essayist, theater actor, song collaborator with Nashville jazz great W.O. Smith (1917-1991). Co-founder (1977) of annual Whitland Avenue Fourth of July Celebration.
KENNY ROGERS, 81, died March 20.
Pop/country superstar. Country Music Hall of Fame inductee 2013. Three-time Grammy winner with 15 nominations. CMA Male Vocalist 1979 and Duo of Year (with Dottie West) 1978, 1979. Sold 100 million+ records. Charted 77 country singles, issued 65+ albums. Began career in pop in The Scholars and as solo (âThat Crazy Feelingâ 1958). Recorded for Columbia in jazz combo Bobby Doyle Three (1962). Worked in Kirby Stone Four, New Christy Minstrels 1960s. Fronted First Edition 1967-75 with hits âJust Dropped Inâ (1968), âBut You Know I Love Youâ (1969). âRuby Donât Take Your Love to Townâ (1969), âSomethingâs Burningâ (1970) + syndicated TV show Rollinâ (1972). Country solo career took off with âLucilleâ (1977, CMA Song & Single, Grammy, Gold Record). Other huge hits include âDaytime Friendsâ (1977), âLove Or Something Like Itâ (1978), âThe Gamblerâ (1978, Grammy), âShe Believes in Meâ (1979, Gold), âYou Decorated My Lifeâ (1979), âCoward of the Countyâ (1980, Gold), âLadyâ (1980, Gold), âLove Will Turn You Aroundâ (1982), âCrazyâ (1985), âMorning Desireâ (1985), âBuy Me a Roseâ (2000). Teamed with Dottie West (1932-1991) on âEvery Time Two Fools Collideâ (1978), âAnyone Who Isnât Me Tonightâ (1978), âAll I Ever Need Is Youâ (1979), âWhat Are We Doinâ in Loveâ (1981), etc. Duets with Dolly Parton include âIslands in the Streamâ (1983, Platinum), âReal Loveâ (1985), âYou Canât Make Old Friendsâ (2013), etc. Other duet partners Kim Carnes (âDonât Fall in Love with a Dreamerâ 1980), Sheena Easton (âWeâve Got Tonightâ 1983), Ronnie Milsap (âMake No Mistake Sheâs Mineâ 1987, Grammy). USA Today Favorite Singer of All Time 1986. Starred in five Gambler TV movies plus Six Pack, Rio Diablo, Wild Horses, Coward of the County, etc. Photographer with museum exhibitions and books Kenny Rogers America (1986), Your Friends and Mine (1987). Other books Making It With Music (1978), Christmas in Canaan (2001), What Are the Chances (2013). Philanthropist helped spearhead âWe Are the Worldâ (1985, 4x multi-Platinum, multiple Grammys). Franchise restaurants: Kenny Rogers Roasters. Music City Walkway of Stars induction & all-star tribute concert 2017. Autobiography: Luck Or Something Like It (2012).
HANS KAYSER, 80, died March 20.
Bluegrass guitarist, mandolinist, resonator guitarist, singer. With his band Big River Boys recorded LPs Live From the Territorial House (1977) and Still Pickinâ Still Kickinâ (1992).
ERIC WEISSBERG, 80, died March 22.
New York session musician who scored big with Grammy winning âDueling Banjosâ (1973) from movie Deliverance. Began career in Greenbrier Boys (1958-59), then Tarriers (1960-65), Blue Velvet Band (1969). Studio multi instrumentalist for Bob Dylan, Talking Heads, Frankie Valli, Jim Croce, Art Garfunel, Clancy Brothers, Billy Joel, Melanie, Doc Watson, Judy Collins, John Denver, Tom Paxton, Loudon Wainwright III, Richie Havens, Nanci Griffith, Bette Midler, Barbra Streisand, Herbie Mann, Sha Na Na, Earl Klugh, B,J, Thomas, Willie Nelson, Burt Bacharach, Starland Vocal Band, Buffy Sainte Marie, Ian & Sylvia, Jean Ritchie, Leon Redbone, Blood Sweat & Tears, etc.
H.G. ROBERTS, 94, died March 22.
Backer of Nashvilleâs Grand Masters Fiddle Championship. He & wife Dorothy owned Fiddlers BBQ restaurant, which catered parties for Opry, Hee Haw & numerous stars.
JIMMY HENLEY, 56, died March 22.
Roy Clarkâs banjo player for 25 years. Many appearances on Hee Haw, The Tonight Show, Austin City Limits, etc. Own band: A Touch of Grass. Formerly national banjo champion at age 10.
JOHN RAGSDALE, 75, died March 25.
Music publisher, songwriter, musician, business exec. Brother of Ray Stevens, for whom he wrote songs, emceed shows, did business management, appeared in videos, oversaw merchandise sales. Formerly with MCA Music.
JAN HOWARD, 91, died March 28.
Singer-songwriter known as one of âThe Grand Ladies of the Grand Ole Opryâ and showâs senior cast member. Recorded 15 albums 1960-1986. Charted 30 titles, including solo hits âThe One You Slip Around Withâ (1960), âBad Seedâ (1966) and Grammy-nominated âEvil On Your Mindâ (1966) and âMy Sonâ (1968). Duet partner Bill Anderson with hits âFor Loving Youâ (1967), âIf Itâs All the Same to Youâ (1969), âSomeday Weâll Be Togetherâ (1970), âDis-Satisfiedâ (1971). Harmony singer for Tammy, Carters, Cash (on 1969âs âDaddy Sang Bass,â singing âMama sang tenorâ), plus âGhost Riders In the Sky,â âGone Girl,â âI Will Rock and Roll With You,â etc.). Married 1957-67 to Country Music Hall of Fame songwriter Harlan Howard (1927-2002). Began career on West Coast. Recorded Harlanâs âPick Me Up on Your Way Downâ and âI Wish I Could Fall in Love Todayâ 1958-59; both later country standards. Duets 1958-60 âWrong Company,â âHow the Other Half Lives,â âYankee Go Homeâ with Wynn Stewart (1934-1985). In Nashville since 1960. Demo singer for Patsy Cline (via Harlanâs âI Fall to Pieces,â âWhen I Get Through With You,â âHe Called Me Baby,â etc.). Wrote Kitty Wells hit âItâs All Over But the Cryingâ (1966), Andersonâs hit âLove Is a Sometimes Thingâ (1970) and own singles âMarriage Has Ruined More Good Love Affairsâ (1971), âMy Sonâ (1968), âLife of a Country Girl Singerâ (1981), plus âRing the Bells for Jimâ (Cash), âChristmas As I Knew Itâ (Cash), âWherever You Areâ (Jean Shepard) and songs for Conway, Osborne Brothers, Tammy, others. She and Anderson co-wrote hit duet âDis-Satisfiedâ and Connie Smithâs hit âI Never Once Stopped Loving Youâ (1970). In later years, active in veteransâ issues, campaigned for Vietnam War Memorial, spokesperson for Veteranâs Administration. Autobiography Sunshine and Shadow (1987). (real name: Lula Grace Johnson).
MARTY MARTEL, 81, died March 29.
Former manager of Johnny Paycheck. Show promoter and booking agent for âLegends Festâ country concerts via his Midnight Special Productions. (full name: Donald Robert Martel).
JOE DIFFIE, 61, died March 29.
Grand Ole Opry star. More than 20 Top 10 hits. Four Gold Records, two Platinum albums. Songwriter who co-wrote 9 of his hits, plus songs for Jo Dee Messina (âMy Give a Damnâs Bustedâ 2005), Holly Dunn (âThere Goes My Heart Againâ 1989), Tim McGraw (âMemory Laneâ 1993), Conway Twitty (âIâm the Only Thing Iâll Hold Against Youâ 1993), Hank Thompson (âLove on the Rocksâ 1988), others. Began career in Oklahoma gospel groups like Higher Power and in bluegrass band The Special Edition. In Nashville since 1986. Demo singer for hits âIâve Cried My Last Tear for Youâ (Ricky Van Shelton), âBorn Countryâ (Alabama), âYou Donât Count the Costâ (Billy Dean), âI Cross My Heartâ (Strait). Own hits began with âHomeâ (1990) and 1991-92âs âIf You Want Me To,â âIf the Devil Danced in Empty Pockets,â âNew Way (To Light Up an Old Flame),â âIs It Cold in Here,â âShips That Donât Come In,â âNot Too Much to Askâ (Grammy-nominated duet with Mary Chapin Carpenter). CMA Award 1993 âI Donât Need Your Rockinâ Chair,â with George Jones, others. Inducted into Opry cast, co-hosted IBMA awards, 1993. Biggest hits thereafter âHonky Tonk Attitudeâ (1993), âProp Me Up Beside the Jukeboxâ (1993), âJohn Deere Greenâ (1994), âThird Rock from the Sunâ (1994), âPickup Manâ (1994, later Ford Truck national ad jingle), âIâm in Love with a Capital Uâ (1995), âBigger Than the Beatlesâ (1996), âC-O-U-N-T-R-Yâ (1996). In 1997: CRB Humanitarian Award, acted in Cash TV movie All My Friends Are Cowboys, Grand Marshall of Nashville Christmas Parade. Later hits âTexas Size Heartacheâ (1998), âSame Old Trainâ (1998, Grammy with Marty Stuart and others), âA Night to Rememberâ (1999), âThe Quittinâ Kindâ (1999), âItâs Always Somethinââ (2000), âIn Another Worldâ (2001), âTougher Than Nailsâ (2004). Oklahoma Music Hall of Fame 2002. Homecoming: The Bluegrass Album 2010. Homecoming: The Diffie Family Cookbook 2010. All in the Same Boat CD with Aaron Tippin, Sammy Kershaw 2013. Name checked in Jason Aldeanâs â1994â (2012), Chris Youngâs âRaised on Countryâ (2019). First music star to succumb in coronavirus pandemic.
ZENON B. CYMBALA, 67, died March 31.
Former WLAC radio personality as âBear Bradley.â Later in media sales with Turner Broadcasting, CNN, Petry, NBC/Universal.
ALEX HARVEY, 73, died April 4.
Songwriter with classics âDelta Dawnâ (Tanya, 1972 & Helen Reddy, 1973), âRingsâ (Cymarron, 1971 & Tompall & Glaser Brothers, 1971), âHell and High Waterâ (T. Graham, 1986), âReuben Jamesâ (Kenny & First Edition, 1969), âBaby, Baby I Know Youâre a Ladyâ (David Houston, 1970), âSomebody Newâ (Billy Ray, 1993), âTell It All Brotherâ (Kenny Rogers, 1970). Also âSomeone Who Caresâ (Dusty Springfield, 1970), âNo Place But Texasâ (Willie, 1986), âDance in Circlesâ (Tim Ryan, 1990), âFive Dollar Fineâ (Chris LeDouz, 1999), âMakinâ Music for Moneyâ (Buffett, 1974). Songs also recorded by Anne Murray, Andy Williams, Eydie Gorme, Merle, Ferlin, Shirley Bassey, Percy Faith, George Hamilton IV, Leo Kottke, Roy Drusky, Arthur Prysock, Jim Ed Brown, Ed Bruce, Vikki Carr, Peggy Lee. Featured actor in TV series Dallas, Dukes of Hazzard, Walker, Texas Ranger, plus movies The Blue and the Gray (1982), The Dollmaker (1984), Parent Trap II (1987), Country (1985), Fire Down Below (1997), The Long Summer of George Adams (1982), The Sky Is No Limit (1984), Adam (1983), and Houston Knights (1987). Recorded more than a dozen albums on Capitol, Buddah, TAM, etc.
JIMMY JAY, 84, died April 6.
Country singer, songwriter, musician. Recording artist in 1960s for Starday (âRun Wildâ), Philips (âYouâre Still With Meâ), Hickory (âBayou Girlâ), Penny Stock, Texas International, Wizard labels. Touring sideman for Eddy Raven, Conway. Songwriter with cuts by Twitty (âYou Put it Thereâ), Strait (âNeon Rowâ), Neal McCoy (âWhy Not Tonightâ). (real name: James T. Pickard Jr.)
KENT CATHCART, 84, died April 7.
Co-founder of the Acting Studio at TPAC. Live-performance coach for country artists in 1980s. Lifelong theater educator.
JOHN PRINE, 73, died April 7.
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member (2003). Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award honoree (2020). Americana Music Association Artist of the Year 2005, 2017, 2020. BMI Trailblazer Award 2018. Inducted into national Songwriters Hall of Fame (2019). Pioneer in marketing music via own label. Wrote or co-wrote Don Williamsâ âLove Is on a Rollâ (1983), Bonnie Raittâs âAngel From Montgomeryâ (1974), Lynn Andersonâs âParadiseâ (1975), Straitâs âI Just Want to Dance with Youâ (1998). Debut LP John Prine (1971) included âSam Stone,â âIllegal Smile,â âSpanish Pipe Dream.â Bette Midler popularized âHello in There.â Raitt did âAngel From Montgomeryâ as did Carly Simon, Tanya, Old Crow. The LPâs âParadiseâ cut by Everlys, Jackie DeShannon, Cash, Tom T., Dwight, Fogerty, Anderson. John Prine album voted into Grammy Hall of Fame 2015. Diamonds in the Rough (1972) = âSouvenirsâ sung by Steve Goodman, Country Gentlemen, Maggie Bell and âThe Late John Garfield Bluesâ cut by Kristofferson. Prine nominated as 1972âs Best New Artist at Grammys. Sweet Revenge (1973) = âPlease Donât Bury Me,â âChristmas in Prison,â âDear Abby.â Its âGrandpa Was a Carpenterâ was recorded by Dirt Band, Lonesome Standard Time. In 1975, David Allan Coe hit with âYou Never Even Called Me By My Nameâ (Prine cowrote with Steve Goodman but took no credit). Common Sense (1975), Prime Prine (Gold record, 1976), Bruised Orange (1978 with âThatâs the Way the World Goes Roundâ cut by Miranda, Norah Jones, Green on Red). Pink Cadillac (1979), Storm Windows (1980). Prine moved to Nashville 1980, formed own Oh Boy label. Aimless Love (1984) = âUnwed Fathersâ cut by Wynette, Gail Davies, Cash. German Afternoons (1986) = âSpeed of the Sound of Lonelinessâ sung by Nanci Griffith, Kim Carnes, Amos Lee, Gove, plus âI Just Want to Dance with You.â John Prine Live (1990) = âOldest Baby in the Worldâ cut by Bobby Bare. The Missing Years (Grammy Award 1991) = âAll the Bestâ cut by Zac Brown. Lost Dogs and Mixed Blessings (1998), In Spite of Ourselves (1999 country duets CD with Yearwood, Connie, Melba, Emmylou, Patty, Iris DeMent, etc). Appeared in Billy Bob Thornton movie Daddy & Them (2001). Other albums include Souvenirs (2000), Fair & Square (Grammy Award 2005), Standard Songs for Average People (2007 oldie duets with Mac Wiseman [1925-2019]), Singing Mailman Delivers (2011), For Better Or Worse (2016, country duets with Lee Ann Womack, Mattea, Miranda, Kacey, Krauss, etc.). Tree of Forgiveness (2018) his highest-charting album, nominated for three Grammys. Coronavirus victim.
CARL DOBKINS JR., 79, died April 8.
Nashville pop recording artist whose big hit was 1959âs âMy Heart Is an Open Book.â Also charted with Decca singles âIf You Donât Want My Lovinââ (1959), âLucky Devilâ (1959), âExclusively Yoursâ (1960).
JOHN B. KAPARAKIS, 82, died April 12.
Bluegrass Unlimited journalist for 33 years. Backing guitarist for Kenny Baker, Butch Robbins, Gene Parsons, Hazel Dickens. A&R director for Briar Records 1970s, including LPs by Kentucky Colonels. Formerly in band Lonesome River Boys 1958-61.
JERRY HLUDZIK, 68, died April 12.
MCA Music writer with cuts by Oak Ridge Boys (âToo Many Heartachesâ 1988). Formerly in rock groups The Buoys (âTimothyâ 1971), Dakota (âIf It Takes All Nightâ 1980).
ARTHUR CONNOR, 95, died April 13.
Fiddler and fiddle maker. Crafted instruments for Ricky Skaggs, Gene Elders, Billy Hurt and family band The Connor Brothers.
DONALD HILDEBRAND, 91, died April 14.
Nashville attorney who hosted WLAC talk show Conservative Viewpoint in 1970s. Saxophonist in big band The Establishment.
GARY McSPADDEN, 77, died April 15.
Gospel great as vocalist, songwriter, record producer, TV producer. Began career 1960s in Statesmen & Oak Ridge Boys (3 albums), then 1970s in Imperials (12 albums), 1980s in Bill Gaither Trio & Gaither Vocal Band (10+ albums). Also 20 solo albums. Songwriter of âNo Other Name But Jesus,â âHallelujah Praise the Lamb,â âJesus Lord to Me.â Songs recorded by Talleys, Whiteheart, Sandi Patty, Kelly Nelon Thompson, Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir, etc. Produced records by Cathedrals, Terri Gibbs, Lulu Roman, Talleys, others. Produced Branson TV series Gospel Jubilee 1990s, starred in The Gary McSpadden Show 2000s. Co-host of PTL Today 1987.
DALE PYATT, 59, died April 15.
Bluegrass songwriter of 50+ titles for Dave Adkins, Cumberland Gap Connection, Marty Raybon, Lizzy Long, Junior Sisk, etc. Also a recording artist.
KNOX PHILLIPS, 74, died April 15.
Memphis Music Hall of Fame member. Studio owner, engineer, producer. Ambassador of Memphis music and 1973 co-founder of the cityâs chapter of The Recording Academy. Engineered records by Willie Nelson (Shotgun Willie, Phases & Stages), Jerry Jeff Walker (âMr. Bojanglesâ), Amazing Rhythm Aces (âThird Rate Romance,â âThe End Is Not In Sightâ), Phineas Newborn, Jackie DeShannon, Jim Post, Alex Chilton, Panther Burns. Co-produced John Prineâs 1979 LP Pink Cadillac and recordings by Jerry Lee Lewis released in 2014 as Jerry Lee Lewis: The Knox Phillips Sessions. Also worked with pop/rock groups Randy & Radiants, Gentrys. Son of Sun Records founder Sam Phillips (1923-2003), providing invaluable assistance to Peter Guralnickâs biography Sam Phillips: The Man Who Invented Rock ânâ Roll (2014). Also helped organize Country Music Hall of Fame exhibit âFlying Saucers Rock & Roll: The Cosmic Genius of Sam Phillipsâ (2015-16).
TOM LESTER, 81, died April 20.
Nashville-based actor and evangelist, best known as âEb Dawsonâ on TV series Green Acres 1965-71. In films Gordy (1994), Benji (1974).
HAROLD REID, 80, died April 24.
Statler Brothers bass singer, songwriter, comedian. Country Music Hall of Fame 2008. Gospel Music Hall of Fame 2007. CMA Group of Year 1972-77, â79, â80, â84. Earned 48 Music City News Awards. Act hosted own TNN cable series 1991-98 as networkâs top-rated program. Harold wrote Statlers 1970 smash âBed of Roseâs.â He and brother Don Reid co-wrote 1970s hits âDo You Remember Theseâ (1972), Grammy-winning âClass of â57â (1972), âCarry Me Backâ (1973), âWhatever Happened to Randolph Scottâ (1973), âSome I Wroteâ (1978), âDo You Know You Are My Sunshineâ (1978), âThe Official Historian on Shirley Jean Burrellâ (1978), âHow to Be a Country Starâ (1979). Reid brothers also co-wrote â80s hits âBetter Than I Did Thenâ (1980), âDonât Wait on Meâ (1981), âWhateverâ (1982), âGuiltyâ (1983), âSweeter and Sweeterâ (1986), âLetâs Get Started If Weâre Gonna Break My Heartâ (1988). Haroldâs comedic alter ego led parody group, Lester âRoadhogâ Moran & Cadillac Cowboys. Statlers discovered by Cash & performed in his roadshow 1964-71 also on Cash network TV series 1969-71. Group recorded 50+ albums, garnering 13 Gold & 8 Platinum. Statlers placed 66 titles on charts, 33 Top 10 hits. Hosted huge âHappy Birthday U.S.A.â July 4th celebrations in Staunton, Virginia hometown 1970-95. Act retired 2002. Don & Harold Reid co-authored history of group Random Memories (2008).
ERNIE HARRIS, 67, died April 24.
Music Row session drummer. Formerly in 1970s Nashville frat-party show band Glory.
THOM KING, 65, died April 24.
Nashville journalist, photographer, video maker, publishing entrepreneur, music maven. In mid-1970s opened one of first recording studios in Franklin, Tennessee. In 1977-80 launched Take One, Nashvilleâs first alternative magazine, next The Metro paper. Writer for Nashville Scene. Wrote or co-wrote 53 books including Danny Davis memoir Guess Who I Met Today. Independent filmmaker. Music videos for Amy Grant, Morgan Heritage, others.
RICHARD PRYOR, 57, died April 24.
Drummer for Drivinâ N Cryin, Concrete Blonde who relocated to Nashville and drummed for Willie Heath Neal, Lillie Mae, Travis Stephens, Kenneth Brian, Ether Dogs, Brian N. Hooks, Floyd the Barber, Escape Goats, Uncle Slim, Shadow 15, Peace Cry both live and on records.
JIM LUSK, 80, died April 25.
Indie country artist, songwriter, publisher with 2011 CD Rockinâ Away the Blues as Jim Lusk & Counterfeit Cowboys. Co-wrote âIt Started All Over Againâ (Vern Gosdin, David Houston 1978), âI Can Almost Touch the Feelinââ (LeGardes 1979), âI Rememberâ (Four Guys theme song). Songs also recorded by Dorsey Burnette, R.W. Blackwood, Jay Lee Webb, Gary S. Paxton. Atlanta Country Music Hall of Fame 2009.
CADY GROVES, 30, died May 2.
Nashville pop and country artist with EPs A Month of Sundays (2009), The Life of a Pirate (2010), This Little Girl (2012), Dreams (2015). Singles âThis Little Girl,â âWeâre the Shit,â âLove Actually,â âForget You,â âCrying Game,â âOil and Water,â âDreams.â Signed to RCA, Vel, Thirty Tigers.
SUE ARMSTRONG THOMPSON, 79, died May 4.
Known as âSuzabelle,â the hoop-skirted Southern greeter at Opryland USA. Preserver/restorer of historic propertiesâThe Lotz House (Franklin), Moreland Plantation (Brentwood), Longview Mansion (Caldwell Lane, Nashville), Clover Bottom (Donelson), Belmont Mansion (Nashville). Antique appraiser known as âThe One-Woman Road Show.â
BENNY GARCIA, 64, died May 7.
Vince Gillâs guitar tech and best friend for 30 years. Also worked with The Chicks, Reba, Yearwood, Mary Chapin-Carpenter, CSN.
LITTLE RICHARD, 87, died May 9.
Rock & Roll Hall of Fame member who began and ended career in Music City. Rose to local fame in Macon, Gearogia early 1950s, then thrived in clubs of North Nashville, which became his second home. Summoned from club in Fayetteville, Tennessee to record for Specialty Records in New Orleans. Resulting âTutti Fruttiâ launched to stardom by Nashvilleâs 50,000-watt WLAC 1955. âLong Tall Sally,â âSlippinâ and Slidin,ââ âRip It Up,â âReady Teddyâ ensued in 1956. By 1957, starred on national & international rock ânâ roll tours and appeared in early rock films The Girl Canât Help It, Donât Knock the Rock, Mister Rock ânâ Roll. Hits âLucille,â âSend Me Some Lovin,ââ âThe Girl Canât Help It,â âJenny, Jenny,â âKeep a Knockin,âââ âGood Golly Miss Molly,â âOooh My Soulâ 1957-58. Charismatic showmanship with frenetic piano pounding, hoarsely shouted vocals, onstage prancing, flashy costuming, wild gyrations, bug-eyed facial contortions, ebullient outbursts. Pioneered male rock stars wearing mascara & heavy makeup, exhibiting fluid sexuality. Also one of early rockers who broke down barriers attracting both black & white people to shows. Nashvilleâs Pat Boone infamously toned down Richardâs outrageous personality on cover of âTutti Frutti.â But other Nashville-related artists saluted himâElvis, Everlys, Bill Haley, Gene Vincent, Buddy Holly, Jerry Lee. Recorded gospel LP 1958. Returned to rock via 1964 comeback âBama Lama Bama Loo.â Worked in Nashville with Jimi Hendrix & hired him for his band The Upsetters 1964-65. âGreenwood Mississippiâ 1970 single made some regional country charts. Returned to Music City to re-record hits for K-Tel Records 1976. Gospel LP Godâs Beautiful City recorded in Nashville 1979. Rock superstars cited Little Richard as influenceâBeatles, Stones, James Brown, Michael Jackson, Prince, Stevie Wonder, Otis, Bowie, Dylan, Fogerty, plus piano-playing showman Elton, Milsap, Billy Joel, Ray Charles, Michael McDonald, Billy Preston, Leon Russell. Autobiography 1984. Reemerged on charts 1986 with âGreat Gosh A-Mightyâ from movie Down & Out in Beverly Hills, which featured him, as did TV series Full House, Columbo, Miami Vice, Baywatch, etc. Inaugural inductee into Rock & Roll Hall of Fame 1986. Star on Hollywood Walk of Fame 1990. Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award 1993. âLong Tall Sally,â âTutti Frutti,â âLucilleâ & 1957 debut LP Hereâs Little Richard all in Grammy Hall of Fame. Reconnected with Nashville 1994 by recording âSomethinâ Elseâ with Tanya on all-star CD Rhythm, Country & Blues. Performed it on CMA Awards. Moved to Nashville area c.2005, resided in downtown Hilton & in Tullahoma, Tennessee. Inducted into Songwriters Hall of Fame 2003. Star on Music City Walk of Fame 2008. Also saluted in Nashville by National Museum of African American Music 2015 & via Tennessee Governorâs Arts Award. 2019. (Birth name: Richard Penniman).
FUZZY OWEN, 91, died May 11.
Bakersfield Sound entrepreneur. Originated âA Dear John Letterâ as 1952 duet with Bonnie Owens. Took co-writer credit, published & played steel on cover version by Ferlin Husky & Jean Shepard, which became first Bakersfield national hit 1953. Co-founded cityâs first recording studio, cutting Buck Owens âHot Dogâ (as âCorky Jonesâ), Wally Lewis âKathleen.â Formed Tally Records with cousin Lewis Talley. Label launched Merle Haggard, whom Owen managed throughout the rest of his life. Tally Records had original 1966 version of âApartment No. 9â by Bobby Austin (written by Owen/Austin/Johnny Paycheck), a major hit for Wynette 1967. Label also recorded solo singles by Bonnie Owens, plus Harlan Howard, Cousin Herb Henson, Cliff Crofford, Bill Carter, George Rich, Abe Mulkey, etc. Owen also wrote 1959 Ray Price hit âThe Same Old Me.â Steel guitarist at Blackboard & Lucky Spot Bakersfield venues & on TV show Trading Post. (real name: Charles Owen).
FAITH BAILEY MORFORD, 81, died May 13.
Formerly âMiss Maryâ on Nashville childrenâs TV show Romper Room in 1960s.
DICK THRALL, 90, died May 14.
Formerly Snr. VP of Operations at TV syndicator Multimedia Entertainment, Inc. in Nashville. Distributed several syndicated country series. Also worked at broadcast TV stations in Pittsburgh, Columbus, Cincinnati. Longtime Emmy Awards chair for the Television Academy. (full name: Richard C. Thrall Jr.)
CY SCARBOROUGH, 93, died May 19.
Founder of The Bar D Wranglers, the cowboy band at the Bar D Chuckwagon Supper attraction near Durango, Colardo since 1969. Group recorded songs with Charlie Daniels and made guest appearances on the Opry. Began career in 1953 entertaining at the similar Flying W Ranch in Colorado Springs.
BUD SOESBEE JR., 82, died May 20.
Banjo maker who created instruments for David Holt, Marc Pruett, others. Also an Appalachian banjo player and banjo historian.
TONY de BOER, 81, died May 20.
Regarded as the âGrandfather of Canadian Bluegrass.â Promoter who launched festivals and tours in Ontario. Founded River Valley Music Park 1984, began River Valley Bluegrass Jamboree 1985, started Country & Bluegrass Gathering 1988. Park continues as major bluegrass destination today.
STAN BYRD, 77, died May 23.
Veteran country record promoter & Music Row businessman. CBS Records 1970-76 (George Jones, Marty, Tammy, Cash, Ray Price, Lynn Anderson, Joe Stampley, Charlie Rich, Tanya, Gatlin, Coe etc.). National director of country promotion at Warners 1976-83 (Emmylou, Margo Smith, John Anderson, T.G., Frizzell & West, Hank Jr., Gail Davies, Bellamys etc.). Own firm Chart Attack 1984-97 (promoting B.J. Thomas, Ricky Van, Diffie, Earl Thomas, etc.). Promotion VP Asylum 1997-2001 (Bryan White, Kevin Sharp, George Jones, Lila McCann, Mark Nesler, Monte Warden etc.). Also real-estate entrepreneur with Music Row properties. Owner BDM Management (Mark Chesnutt). Formerly regional promo for Capitol in Houston.
BUCKY BAXTER, 65, died May 25.
Longtime steel guitarist for Bob Dylan. Founding member of Steve Earleâs band The Dukes, on LPs Guitar Town (1986), Exit 0 (1987), Copperhead Road (1988), The Hard Way (1989). Also backed R.E.M., Suzy Bogguss, Sara Evans. With Dylan 1992-99 on road & many albums, including Grammy winner Time Out of Mind (1997). Resumed session work via Los Lobos, Ben Folds, Joe Henry, Webb Wilder, Shawn Camp, Kathy Chiavola, Ryan Adams, Jim Lauderdale. Solo album Most Likely No Problem (1999). Since 2010, sessions with Will Hoge, Billy Ray, Greta Gaines, Old Crow, Kacey Musgraves, others. Father of singer-songwriter Rayland Baxter. Played on his albums Imaginary Man (2015), Wide Awake (2018).
JIMMY CAPPS, 81, died June 2.
Guitar player in Opry staff band for 60+ years, the showâs longest tenured musician. Also prolific studio musician performing on standards âHe Stopped Loving Her Today,â âThe Gambler,â âStand By Your Man,â âI Was Country When Country Wasnât Cool,â âElvira,â âAmarillo By Morning,â etc. Member Musicians Hall of Fame. Began career in Louvin Brothers band 1958. Former member of Ferlin Huskyâs band. Studio career playing more than 500 sessions a year. Skilled on both acoustic & electric guitar, played both lead & rhythm. Known as âthe master of smoothnessâ for making intricate picking appear effortless. Sessions in 1970s for Moe Bandy, Mickey Newbury, Freddie Hart (âEasy Lovinââ), J.J. Cale, Dolly (âMy Tennessee Mountain Homeâ), Waylon, soundtrack of movie Nashville, Milsap (âIt Was Almost Like a Song,â âSmoky Mountain Rainâ), Cash, Tubb. In 1980s, Amy Grant, John Denver, Strait, Tom Jones, Reba (âHow Blueâ), K.D. Lang, Whites, Alan (âHere in the Real Worldâ), Wayne Newton, Vern Gosdin, Dean Martin, Andy Williams, B.J. (âTwo Car Garageâ), Keith Whitley, Lacy J. Dalton, David Allan Coe, Charlie Rich. In 1990s, Lorrie Morgan, Gene Watson, Florida Boys, John Conlee, Ed Bruce, Ray Charles, Hank Locklin, Riders in the Sky, T. Graham Brown, etc.. Heard on discs by Hall of Famers George Jones, Kenny Rogers, Connie, Dottie, Conway, Loretta, Barbara, Roy Clark, Jean Shepard, Eddy Arnold, Ray Price, Porter, Pride, Faron, Oaks, Statlers, Don Gibson, Bill Anderson, Charlie McCoy. At annual NARAS Super Picker Awards in 1970s & 1980s repeatedly honored as âMost Valuable Acoustic Player.â Joined Opry band 1967, rose to become bandleader. Performed on more Opry shows than anyone in history. On 60th anniversary, rehearsal space backstage at Opry christened The Jimmy Capps Music Room. Performed in âhouse bandâ for CMA Awards for 20+ years. Regular on RFD-TVâs Larryâs Country Diner since 2009, billed as âThe Sheriff.â Autobiography, The Man in Back, 2018.
BONNIE POINTER, 69, died June 8.
Member of pop vocal group Pointer Sisters. Act won country Grammy with her co-written âFairytaleâ single 1974. Sister Anita later Nashville duet partner with Earl Thomas Conley. Bonnie left group for successful disco & soul solo career on Motown (1979âs âHeaven Must Have Sent You,â etc.).
GLENN RAY, 82, died June 11.
Hit country songwriter with âI Just Came Home to Count the Memoriesâ (Bobby Wright No. 75, 1975; Cal Smith No. 15, 1977; John Anderson No. 7, 1982; Tim Barrett, 1984; Jack Scott, 2015). Also âHold Meâ (Barbara Mandrell No. 12, 1977). Others include ââTil a Better Memory Comes Alongâ (Shelby Lynne, 1990; Mark Chesnutt, 1993; Gene Watson, 2009) and âYesterday Will Come Again Tonightâ (Leroy Van Dyke, 1972; Loretta Lynn, 1973). (full name: Glenn Ray McGuirt)
LARRY W. JOHNSON, 69, died June 12.
Co-writer of âDonât Take the Girl,â breakthrough No. 1 hit for Tim McGraw, sold 2 million, BMI Award. More than 50 other titles registered with BMI, including âIf You Think Youâre Lonelyâ (Ray Price, 2002).
KATHERINE WILLIAMS-DUNNING, 27, died June 13.
Hank Williams Jr.âs daughter, the 27-year-old was killed in a one-car crash in Henry County, Tennessee.
JANE DORRIS BILLINGSLEY, 75, died June 15.
Singer-songwriter, publicist, event planner who founded Nashville venue The Chapel 1991. Space used by Ben Folds, Taylor, Martina, Cash, Waylon, Sheryl, Rascal Flatts etc. as video/film location and/or backdrop for photo shoots.
RANDY FRAZIER, 60, died June 19.
Nashville singer, songwriter, musician. Began in Nashville rock band Munchkin. Bass player in McBride & The Ride (âSacred Ground,â âGoing Out of My Mind,â âJust One Night,â âLove on the Loose Heart on the Run,â âHurry Sundownâ 1992-93). Founding member Palomino Road (âWhy Baby Whyâ 1993). Also in Sammy Kershawâs band. Solo CCM singer-songwriter. (full name: Randall Wayne Frazier).
ABBE DeMONTBREUN-STROUD, 64, died June 19.
Longtime executive assistant to producer/label exec Jimmy Bowen. Formerly a performer.
ALAN SCHULMAN, 66, died June 24.
Grammy winning Muscle Shoals studio engineer on records by Shanandoah, Mac McMcAnally, John Prine, Ricky Skaggs, Alabama, Widespread Panic, T.G. Sheppard, Vern Gosdin, Mac Davis, Roy Orbison, Thelma Houston, others.
PETE CARR, 70, died June 27.
Musicians Hall of Fame inductee as member of Muscle Shoals Rhythm Section. Lead guitarist on â70s & â80s records by Bob Seger (âMain Streetâ), Joan Baez, Paul Simon (âKodachromeâ), Rod Stewart (âTonightâs the Nightâ), Staple Singers, Wilson Pickett, Joe Cocker, Barbra Streisand & Barry Gibb (âGuiltyâ), Paul Anka, Kim Carnes, Luther Ingram (â[If Loving You Is Wrong] I Donât Want to be Rightâ), Mary MacGregor âTorn Between Two Loversâ). Also backed Nashville artists Hank Jr., Becky Hobbs, Dobie Gray, Willie, Paul Davis, Billy Swan, Narvel Felts, Russell Smith, Marie Osmond. Produced Sailcat (âMotorcycle Mamaâ). Member LeBlanc & Carr (âFallingâ) and of Boatz. Two solo albums 1975 & 1978. Previously in Hour Glass & Allman Joys 1968.
ED IRWIN, 82, died June 28.
Gospel songwriter with cuts by Speer Family, Jimmy Snow, Dignity Quartet, Chuck Wagon Gang, Imperials, Trevecca Choir, others. Also Nazarene minister.
SONNY LONAS, 81, died June 30.
Drummer for Patsy Cline, Ernest Tubb, etc. Well known to Nashvillians as member of Music Meister Band playing at Gerst Haus restaurant. (full name: Maurice Lonas)
CRAIG MARTIN, 52, died July 3.
Country singer-songwriter. Co-wrote Tim McGrawâs 1994 breakthrough No. 1 hit âDonât Take the Girl.â Usually billed as âCraig J. Martin,â he entertained at Nashville Shores, Listening Room CafĂ©, Maxwell House Hotel, etc, & released singles âI Have a Dream,â âLet Him Walk You Home,â âIâm a Kid in Trouble.â Wrote songs for George Jones, Southern Comfort, Rod Stewart, Backstreet Boys, others. Clinton Gregory recorded several Martin songs, including music-video fan favorite âShe Did.â Western Flyer hit top-40 country with his âWhat Will You Do with M-Eâ 1996. (full name: Craig Matthew Martin Sr.)
CHARLIE DANIELS, 83, died July 6.
Member Country Music Hall of Fame, Grand Ole Opry cast. Mainstay of Southern rock music, Sold more than 13 million albums, won Grammy, Dove, CMA, BMI, ACM awards. Charted more than 35 titles. Host of famed multi-act, multi-genre Volunteer Jam events. First recorded with own band The Rockets, 1959âs âJaguarâ rock instrumental. Co-wrote 1964 Elvis hit âIt Hurts Me.â Moved to Nashville 1967 to works as session musician for Marty Robbins, Claude King, Johnny Cash, Pete Seeger, Leonard Cohen, Al Kooper, Ringo Starr. Famously played on Dylan Nashville LPs Nashville Skyline, New Morning, Self Portrait 1969-70. Produced Youngbloods 1969-70 LPs Elephant Mountain, Ride the Wind. Own solo disc debut with self-titled LP 1970. Formed Charlie Daniels Band & scored Top 10 1973 pop hit âUneasy Rider.â Began Volunteer Jam 1974. Southern-rock anthems âThe Southâs Gonna Do It,â âLong Haired Country Boyâ 1975. First top-40 country hit âTexasâ 1976. Breakthrough LP Million Mile Reflections contained huge 1979 pop and country hit âThe Devil Went Down to Georgia,â which won Grammy & CMA awards. Song & band featured in movie Urban Cowboy. âIn Americaâ groupâs second major crossover hit 1980. âThe Legend of Wooly Swampâ (1980), âCarolinaâ (1981), âSweet Home Alabamaâ (1981) on both rock and country playlists. âStill in Saigonâ (1982) bandâs final big pop hit. Subsequent big country hits âAmerican Farmerâ (1985), âStill Hurtinâ Meâ (1986), âDrinkinâ My Baby Goodbyeâ (1986), âBoogie Woogie Fiddle Country Bluesâ (1988), âSimple Manâ (1989), âMister DJâ (1990), â(What This World Needs Is) A Few More Rednecksâ (1990), âAll Night Longâ (with Montgomery Gentry, 2000), âThis Ainât No Rag Itâs the Flagâ (2001). Nine Gold, Platinum or multi-Platinum albums; Super HitsâŻdouble Platinum, Million Mile Reflection triple Platinum, A Decade of Hits quadruple Platinum. âThe Devil Went Down To Georgiaâ CMA Single of Year 1979 & Grammy for Best Country Vocal Performance by Duo or Group. Daniels also CMA Instrumentalist of the Year in 1979, while CDB won CMA Instrumental Group of the Year 1979, 1980. Philanthropist for cancer research, muscular dystrophy research, farmers aid, military causes. Founded Journey Home Project 2014 to benefit veterans. Dove Awards from GMA 1995, 1997. Won BMI Icon honor 2005, Spirit of America Free Speech Award from Americana Music Association 2006. Joined Opry cast 2008, inducted into Country Music Hall of Fame 2016. Books: The Devil Went Down to Georgia (2005), Never Look at the Empty Seats (2017), Letâs All Make the Day Count (2018).
TOMMY QUINN, 69, died July 8.
Crystal Gayleâs store manager. For 20+ years managed Crystalâs Fine Gifts & Jewelry in Belle Meade, which also sold her CDs & tour merchandise. Photographer. Art collector.
GARY WALKER, 87, died July 8.
Best known as founder of used-record & comics retail chain The Great Escape. Earlier careers as hit songwriter, recording artist, manager, publisher, record producer, song plugger, record-label executive, studio owner. Began music-biz career in Missouri by co-writing âThatâs Itâ for Porter Wagoner 1953. Wrote Top 10 hits âTrademarkâ Carl Smith (1953), âAccording to My Heartâ Jim Reeves (1956), âRepentingâ by Kitty Wells (1957). Also wrote songs covered by George Morgan (âLook What Followed Me Home Tonightâ), Webb Pierce (âOne Week Later,â with Kitty Wells), pre-teen Brenda Lee (âDoodle Bug Ragâ), others. Own singles on MGM 1957-58. Co-owned Reevis Studio, which became Fidelity Recording. Pioneered the profession of Nashville song plugger. Represented Atlantaâs Lowery Music songwriting stable including Jerry Reed, Joe South, Ray Stevens, Freddy Weller, Mac Davis. Successfully plugged songs âMisery Loves Companyâ (Porter Wagoner), âThatâs All You Gotta Doâ (Brenda Lee), âWalk On Byâ (Leroy VanDyke). Branched out into record production 1960s via sides for Sonny James, Bill Carlisle, Bobby Russell, Lynn Anderson, more. Founded Chart Records 1964. Roster eventually included Anderson, Johnny Bush, Billy âCrashâ Craddock, Managed singer Sandy Posey with her big pop hits 1966-67 âBorn a Woman,â âSingle Girl,â âWhat a Woman in Love Wonât Do,â âI Take It Back.â Continued to work as song plugger 1970s, repping Painted Desert Music, Don Wayne. Screen Gems. Opened Great Escape 1977 on Broadway near Vanderbilt. Headquarters now on Charlotte with branches in Madison and Murfreesboro, plus Bowling Green, Kentucky and Louisville, Kentucky. Sold stores 2017 to focus on The Great Escape Music Group, including three publishing companies and Great Escape Records, which has had some success in bluegrass.
SAM HOWARD, 81, died July 10.
Owner/operator of Nashvilleâs Black radio stations WVOL and WQQK (â92 Qâ). First African-American chairman of Nashville Chamber of Commerce. Former v.p. at Meharry, HCA. Honored with Image Award for Lifetime Achievement by Nashville NAACP.
HELEN OWEN, 68, died July 13.
Dimpled, curly-headed blonde âLittle Miss Sunshineâ child mascot of Sunbeam Bread. Later lead singer in local rock and country groups, notably one of Nashvilleâs first âall-girlâ bands.
JAMIE OLDAKER, 68, died July 16.
Drummer in country-rock band The Tractors with hits âBaby Likes to Rock Itâ (1994), âThe Santa Claus Boogieâ (1994), âThe Last Timeâ (1997), âShortninâ Breadâ (1998). Groupâs debut CD sold a million. Regarded as a founder of âThe Tulsa Sound.â Member of Oklahoma Hall of Fame. Began career in The Rogues Five with 1966 local hit âToo Good for Love.â Member of Bob Segerâs band 1971-73. In Eric Claptonâs band 1974-80, playing on hits âI Shot the Sherriffâ (1974), âWonderful Tonightâ (1978),âLay Down Sallyâ (1978). In rock band Frehleyâs Comet 1983. Returned to Clapton 1983-86. Tulsa session musician backing Leon Russell, New Grass Revival, Bee Gees, Bellamy Brothers, Stephen Stills, Asleep at the Wheel, Freddie King, Peter Frampton, John Arthur Martinez, Phil Collins, Peter Rowan, etc. Produced all-star 2005 album Mad Dogs & Okies including Clapton, Vince Gill, J.J. Cale, Taj Mahal, Willie Nelson, Tony Joe White, Bonnie Bramlett, others.
JOHN DENNY, 79, died July 21.
Former v.p. Cedarwood Publishing. Produced artists for Cedarwood spin-off label Dollie Records, notably Carl Perkins on 1966-67 charting singles âCountry Boyâs Dreamâ & âShine, Shine, Shine.â Also wrote songs for Cedarwood. Formed own Denny Music Group 1965 including JED Records. Label issued singles by Kent Westbury, Bobby Sykes, Scotty Stoneman, Rusty Adams, Chris Gantry, Jimmy Smart, Max D. Barnes, Ruthie Steele, Audie Ashworth, etc. Lifetime Achievement award from R.O.P.E. (Reunion of Professional Entertainers) 2004. Son of Country Hall of Famer Jim Denny (1911-1963), brother of former music exec Bill Denny.
BOBBY JONZ, 84, died July 21.
Soul & blues artist who recorded his Bobby Jonz Sings Country LP in 1998. A victim of the coronavirus pandemic. (real name: Bob Willy Jones).
DAN KELLY, 54, died July 22.
Fiddler who won Grand Masters Fiddling Championship in Nashville 1983 as teenager, joined Roy Acuffâs Smoky Mountain Boys. On the road with Alan, Clint, Faith, Wariner, SheDaisy, Pam Tillis, others. Later longtime entertainer at Opryland & member of popular Tennessee Mafia Jug Band.
MEMARIE, 48, died July 22.
Singer-songwriter & indie country recording artist with 2003 self-titled CD & âI Need a Changeâ single. Both on Cupit Records, label founded by father Jerry Cupit (1954-2014). As âMemarie Gayleâ author of 2020âs Journey Back to the Soul recounting music career & ovarian cancer fight. Book included music CD. Part of âUnstoppableâ womenâs ministry tour 2019-20. Designer of âFearless Memoriesâ jewelry line. (Full name: Memarie Gayle Cupit Jobe).
ALAN ROWE, 66, died July 23.
Music director at WAKG and a MusicRow radio reporter.
CHARLES EDWARD CATHEY, 84, died July 24.
Beloved Nashville vocalist whose Ed Cathey Singers were heard by many at annual concerts. Perhaps Nashvilleâs most ethnically and ecumenically diverse events these benefited the homeless, released prisoners and others. Also with the Nashville Symphony Chorus.
EDWARD âFELIXâ McTEIGUE, 48, died July 24.
Songwriter and record producer whose credits include Florida Georgia Lineâs âAnything Goesâ and Lori McKennaâs âWreck You.â
JOHN SAXON, 83, died July 25.
Murfreesboro resident with extensive Hollywood acting credits. More than 200 roles included teen-idol films Running Wild (195), Rock Pretty Baby (1956); A-list comedies This Happy Feeling (1958), The Reluctant Debutante (1958); westerns The Unforgiven (1960), Death of a Gunfighter (1969); martial-arts flicks Enter the Dragon (1973) etc.; horror features A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984) etc. Golden Globe Award as Best New Star (1958). (real name: Carmine Orrico).
THOMAS PRINCE, 67, died July 25.
Bass player for country artist Johnny Carver for 14 years.
KENNY INGRAM, 67, died July 26.
Bluegrass banjo virtuoso. Band member for Lester Flatt, Jimmy Martin, James Monroe, Rhonda Vincent, Nashville Grass, Larry Stephenson, Curly Seckler. Banjo and/or vocals on more than 200 reccordings.
BOB RICKER, 65, died July 27.
Multi-instrumentalist, producer, founder of Ricker Music Group & Waltzing Bear Productions.
BILL MACK, 91, died July 31.
Grammy winning songwriter & legendary deejay. Elected to Country Music Disc Jockey Hall of Fame 1982, Texas Music Hall of Fame 1995, Texas Country Music Hall of Fame 1999. Famed for all-night broadcasts from Ft. Worth, Texas over WBAP Bill Mack Trucking Show 1969-2001. Singer-songwriter on Imperial, Starday, United Artists, Hickory, MGM, Phillips, others, Starday rockabilly classics âKitty Catâ and âThe Cat Just Got Into Town.â Regional hit âLadonnaâ on Hickory. Successful songwriter with âDrinking Champagneâ for Cal Smith 1968 & George Strait 1990. Also wrote âBlueâ recorded by LeAnn Rimes 1996 which won Best Country Song Grammy Award, ACM Song of the Year. His gospel tune âClinging to a Saving Handâ recorded by Rimes, Connie, Conway, Bill Monroe, Chuck Wagon Gang, George Hamilton IV, John Conlee, Dale Ann Bradley, etc. Songs also recorded by George Jones, Ray Price, Jerry Lee, Dean Martin, Waylon, Boxcar Willie, Hank Thompson, Don Gibson, Jim Ed, Cash and more. Trucking show continued on Sirius/XM 2001-2011. Also hosted nationally syndicated Country Crossroads gospel show and Overtime Top Ten Countdown show. TV emcee of The Buck Owens Show, The Bob Wills Show, Cowtown Jambore and cable series Country Crossroads. Autobiography Spins and Needles 1971. A victim of the coronavirus pandemic. (full name: Bill Mack Smith Jr.)
COLLIER ROBERT WOODS JR., 64, died Aug. 1.
Murfreesboro native and U.T. Speech/Theater grad who became a top lighting designer & stage technician. Designed for Dance Theatre of Harlem, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, national tour of The Color Purple, Gil Scott-Heron, Branford Marsalis, Bruce Springsteen, Albert King, Pennsylvania Opera Theater, Seattle Repertory Theater plus Broadway tours of Phantom of the Opera, Showboat, Hairspray, West Side Story, Anything Goes, Beautiful: The Carole King Musical, The Full Monty, Spring Awakening, etc.
HAROLD MITCHELL, 82, died Aug. 5.
Country radio personality. Master of ceremonies for 44 years at Galax Old Time Fiddlers Convention. Stints at WHHV Hillsdale, Virginia; WBOB Galax, Virginia; WZYD Dobson, North Carolina; WMEV Marion, Virginia; WBRF Galax, Virginia; WYVE Wytheville, Virginia.
WAYNE CHANDLER, 54, died Aug. 7.
Gaylord Entertainment Director of Sales. Formerly in Pigeon Forge hospitality industry, at Opryland Hotel and with Kitty Wells organization. Also formerly co-owner of Nashville Nightlife Dinner Theater.
TOM ANNASTAS, 67, died Aug. 13.
Former BMI Vice President, General Licensing. Board member T.J. Martell Foundation. Leadership Music class 2008.
HERRIETTE DEW, died Aug. 16.
Accounting manager of the Americana Music Association. Mother of Americana festival producer and marketing manager Sarah Comardelle.
STEVE GULLEY, 57, died Aug. 18.
Award-winning bluegrass guitarist, songwriter, tenor vocalist. Noted for his work at Kentuckyâs Renfro Valley Barn Dance and in groups Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver, Mountain Heart, Grasstowne and own band Steve Gulley & New Pinnacle, Formed last named in 2014.
Groupâs CD Aim High led to 2016 IBMA nomination as Emerging Artist of the Year. Other albums included Time Wonât Wait, Steve Gulley & New Pinnacle, High Peaks and New Ground, Family, Friends & Fellowship. Songs recorded by Kenny & Amanda Smith, Blue Highway, Doyle Lawson, others. His âThrough the Window of a Trainâ named IBMA Song of the Year 2008. Appeared more than 90 times on Grand Ole Opry. Worked as DJ on WDVX in Knoxville. Co-owner of Curve recording studio in East Tennessee.
EDDIE HOOVER, 84, died Aug. 20.
Georgia Country Music Hall of Fame member. Fiddler & luthier who toured with bluegrass bands then had career building and repairing guitars, fiddles and cellos for clients of Randy Wood Guitars.
BUDDY KING, 79, died Aug. 21.
Country disc jockey, program director and longtime record promoter. Worked with indie hit maker C.J. Solar, plus Bobby Wills, Rachael Turner, others. Unique character did not own a computer or a cell phone, but worked âold schoolâ with pen, paper and a home phone.
PANDORA DENNY, 74, died Aug. 23.
Administrative assistant at Denny Music Publishing. Owned by husband John Denny, who died one month earlier.
JUSTIN TOWNES EARLE, 38, died Aug. 23.
Singer-songwriter with eight albums and awards from Americana Music Association. Debut EP Yuma 2007. Full length album debut The Good Life 2008. Second CD 2009âs Midnight at the Movies, led to his being named Emerging Artist of the Year at the 2010 Americana Music Awards & nomination for AMA Album of the Year. Title tune of Harlem River Blues 2010 CD named Song of the Year at AMAâs 2011 awards show. Performed on Late Night with David Letterman, Bonnaroo, MerleFest, Grand Ole Opry. Produced Wanda Jackson 2012 album Unfinished Business and sang with her on it. Own disc output continued with 2012âs Nothingâs Gonna Change the Way You Feel About Me Now, 2014âs Single Mothers, 2015âs Absent Fathers, 2017âs Kids in the Street, 2019âs The Saint of Lost Causes. Son of Steve Earle.
MERCER TRAPP, 82, died Aug. 31.
Stage and TV actor, notably on TNNâs I-40 Paradise series and with Tennessee Rep in Hot L. Baltimore. Also formerly a secretary at the CMA.
BILL PURSELL, 94, died Sept. 3.
Belmont University professor known Music Row sessions, pop instrumental hits and classical works as pianist/composer. Studied at Peabody Conservatory, Eastman School of Music. Toured as R&B and jazz musician 1950s. Arrived Nashville 1960. Became studio sideman as keyboardist on records by Cash, Patsy, Jim Reeves, Dylan, Willie, Atkins, Joan Baez, Robbins, Fogelberg, Paycheck, etc. Easy-listening piano piece âOur Winter Loveâ a hit 1963. LPs for Columbia 1963âs Bill Pursell, 1964âs Chasing a Dream, 1965âs A Remembered Love. Then Bill Pursell at the Piano: The âInâ Sound of Country and Western Music for Spar Records. Regular soloist with Nashville Symphony. Composed piano sonatas, overtures, symphonies, preludes, concertos, tone poems, opera, plus theme music for Six Flags Over Georgia, Cypress Gardens, Circus World, as well as ad jingles and incidental music for film & TV. Work as an arranger led to Grammy nominations 1974, 1978. Reemerged on disc with 1976 pop LP Bill Pursell and The Nashville Sweat Band and its British disco hit âNow.â Joined Belmont faculty 1980. Students included Paisley, Yearwood. Belmont premiered his opera, Crooked River City 2016. Biography Crooked River City: The Musical Life of Nashvilleâs William Pursell 2018. Death due to COVID-19-related pneumonia.
LUCILLE STARR, 82, died Sept. 4.
First female Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame inductee. Rockabilly pioneer with ex husband Bob Regan billed as âThe Canadian Sweethearts.â In addition to rockabilly classics like âEenie Meenie Miney Mo,â duoâs Canadian hits included âHootenanny Express,â âFreight Train,â âDonât Let the Stars Get in Your Eyes,â âIâm Leaving It All Up to You,â âLooking Back to See,â âDonât Knock on My Door,â âLetâs Wait a Little Longer,â âDream Baby.â Yodeling singing voice of âCousin Pearl Bodineâ character on top-rated network comedy The Beverly Hillbillies in 1962-63. International pop hit with bi-lingual âThe French Songâ 1964. Originated country standard âToo Far Goneâ 1967. Solo Canadian hits with âCrazy Arms,â âIs It Love?â âCajun Love,â âBonjour Tristesse,â âSend Me No Roses,â âYours,â âColinda,â âJolie Jacqueline,â âHere Come More Roses,â âThe First Time Iâve Been in Love,â âBack to You.â Gold and Platinum record awards in Canada, Holland and South Africa. Also tours and hits in Belgium, England, Mexico, Guam, Philippines, Japan, Korea, China.
BARRY SCOTT, 65, died Sept. 10.
Actor, director, writer, producer and voice-over artist. Noted for his annual recitations at Nashvilleâs âLet Freedom Singâ Fourth of July celebrations. Founder and artistic director of the American Negro Playwright Theatre at TSU. Signature voice-over work for the NBA, ESPN and TNA Wrestling. Many commercials and PSAs, including Discovery Channel, ABC, Kentucky Fried Chicken, Burger King, CBS, SPIKE-TV, McDonaldâs, American Heart Association, NBC, Disney. Nashville Repertory Theater stage roles in Othello, Macbeth, Taming of the Shrew, Camelot, Man of La Mancha, Jesus Christ Superstar, Prates of Penzance, Evita, Ainât Misbehavin,â Big River, The Piano Lesson, Blood Knot, etc. TV parts on In the Heat of the Night, Iâll Fly Away, etc.
TROY JONES, 64, died Sept. 11
Songwriter, was known for penning songs including Billy Curringtonâs âPeople Are Crazyâ and âPretty Good at Drinkinâ Beer.”
FREEMAN RAMSEY JR., 76, died Sept. 12.
Former Tennessean newspaper photographer with much Nashville concert documentation.
ELLEN REEVES, 87, died Sept. 15.
Country-music lyricist. Co-wrote with husband Del Reeves (1932-2007). BMI Award for âSing a Little Song of Heartacheâ (Rose Maddox, 1962). Del Reeves singles âThis Must Be the Bottomâ (1966), âThe Only Girl I Canât Forgetâ (1963). Songs also cut by Loretta, Conway, Tubb, Carl Smith, etc.
DOAK SNEAD, 70, died Sept. 16.
Texas singer-songwriter a favorite at The Armadillo in Austin and Kerrville Folk Festival. Albums Think of Me Sometimes (1977), Powderhorn (1978). Moved to Nasvhille 1989. Hosted songwriter nights at Douglas Corner, Bluebird, billed as âWriterâs Wrodeo.â Signed to Starstruck as writer 1993. Cuts with Lari White (âJohn Wayne Walking Awayâ), Avalon (âOnly For the Weakâ), Mark W. Winchester, Lanie Marsh, Lisa Daggs, Jamie Slocum, etc. Further solo albums Inside, After 33 1/3 Years, Catalogue, A Welcome Affair in 2000-18. Widower of recording artist Kellee Sallee-Snead (Roses and Tumbleweeds).
ROY HEAD, 79, died Sept. 21.
Country-rocker best known for 1965 pop hit âTreat Her Right.â Wild, gymnastic showman. Between 1974 & 1986 placed 24 singles on country charts. âMost Wanted Woman in Town,â âCome to Me,â âNow You See âEm Now You Donâtâ top-20 hits. Country versions of Rod Stewartâs âTonightâs the Nightâ (1978), Loggins & Messinaâs âYour Mama Donât Danceâ (1983). Self-penned âTreat Her Rightâ became big country hit for Barbara Mandrell 1971. Also covered by Jerry Lee, Billy âCrashâ Craddock, Springsteen, Bon Jovi, Mae West, Robert Plant, Tom Jones, Otis, Thorogood, Box Tops, Doug Sahm, Sandy Nelson, Joe Stampley, Los Straighjackets, etc. Father of country singer Sundance Head, who won on TVâs The Voice 2016.
BONNIE LOU MOORE, 93, died Sept. 21.
Longtime country guitarist-singer with husband Buster Moore (1919-1996) in duo Bonnie Lou & Buster, formed 1945. Stints at WRVAâs Old Dominion Barn Dance & WCYBâs Farm & Home Time in Virginia. Also KWKHâs Louisiana Hayride, WNOX Knoxville, WWNC Asheville, WPTF Raleigh, WROL Knoxville. Appearances on Opry, Renfro Valley, etc. TV stars on WJHL-TV in Johnson City, TN 1953-1985. Featured entertainers at Smokey Mountain Hayride in Pigeon Forge, TN 1972-1995. Recoded for Mercury 1949, Waterfall 1960s, & other labels. (real name: Margaret Louise Bell Moore).
W.S. âFLUKEâ HOLLAND, 85, died Sept. 23.
Rockabilly Hall of Fame member. Drummer in Johnny Cash band The Tennessee Three 1960-1979 on the road and on hit records. Sometimes called the most important drummer in country history. Also on records by Dylan, Dale Watson, Waylon, Johnny Western, Marty Stuart, Johnny Horton, Steve Goodman, George Jones.
BILL McEUEN, 79. Died Sept. 24.
Record, film & TV producer. Best known as producer/mastermind behind Nitty Gritty Dirt Bandâs landmark 1971 album Will the Circle Be Unbroken. Also produced Dirt Bandâs 1970 hit âMr. Bojanglesâ and groupâs other early recordings. Managed group and arranged for it to become first American band to tour Soviet Union (1977). Other clients included Pee Wee Herman, Steve Martin, LeRoux, Robert Shimmel, Sunshine Company, John McEuen, Hourglass. Produced four comedy albums for Martin, selling an estimated 10 million units. Also produced comedianâs million-selling 1978 hit single âKing Tut,â as well as movies The Jerk, Dead Men Donât Wear Plaid, The Man With Two Brains, The Lonely Guy, etc. Also produced films Pee Weeâs Big Adventure, Big Top Pee Wee, Cold Dog Soup, The Big Picture, plus a number of TV specials. Owned Aspen Recording Society studio. Brother of John McEuen.
MAC DAVIS, 78, died Sept. 29.
Country and pop songwriter, recording artist, film actor, Vegas headliner, Broadway musical star, television personality, music publisher. Wrote âIn the Ghetto,â âBaby Donât Get Hooked on Me,â âStop and Smell the Roses,â âA Little Less Conversation,â âI Believe in Music,â âSomethingâs Burning,â âItâs Hard to Be Humble,â more. Issued 20 albums, charted 40+ singles, five Gold Records & two Platinum. Into national Songwriters Hall of Fame 2006. Previously in Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame (2000), star on Hollywood Walk of Fame (1998). Also in Texas Country Music Hall of Fame, Georgia Music Hall of Fame & BMI Icon honoree. Worked for Vee Jay, Liberty labels & as songwriter for Nancy Sinatra publishing. Early songs in L.A. recorded by Sinatra, Glen Campbell, Lou Rawls, Sam the Sham & The Pharaohs, etc. Elvis recorded his âA Little Less Conversation,â âMemories,â âIn the Ghetto,â âDonât Cry Daddyâ 1968-70. O.C. Smith Top 10 R&B hit with Davis song âDaddyâs Little Manâ 1969. In 1970-71, Campbell hit with âEverything a Man Could Ever Need,â Kenny Rogers hit with âSomethingâs Burning,â Bobby Goldsboro hit with âWatching Scotty Grow.â Songs also recorded by Cash, Conway, Tammy, Merle, Andy Williams, Tom Jones, Bobby Blue Bland etc. Davis signed with Columbia 1970 & scored Grammy-nominated 1972 No. 1 pop hit âBaby Donât Get Hooked on Me.â Gallery hit with his âI Believe in Musicâ 1972. In country 1972, Campbell hit with âOklahoma Sunday Morningâ & Ray Price hit with âLonesomest Lonesome,â Davis next pop hits 1974-75 âOne Hell of a Woman,â âStop and Smell the Roses,â âRock N Roll (I Gave You the Best Years of My Life).â Own NBC-TV variety series 1974-76. Numerous TV specials thereafter. ACM Entertainer of Year 1974. Starred in movies North Dallas Forty (1979), Cheaper to Keep Her (1981), The Sting II (1983). More than a dozen TV movies. Guest-starred on TVâs Murder She Wrote, Muppets, Lois & Clark: New Adventures of Superman, The Client, Webster, Oswald (voice over) Johnny Bravo, King of the Hill (voice over), Rodney, Freaks and Geeks, Fargo. First top-20 country hit as artist âForever Loversâ 1976. Signed with Casablanca 1979, leading to hits âItâs Hard to Be Humbleâ (1980), âLetâs Keeo It That Wayâ (1980), âTexas in My Rear View Mirrorâ (1980), âHooked on Musicâ (1981), âYouâre My Bestest Friendâ (1982), âI Never Made Love â (1985). Co-hosted CMA Awards Show 1980, 1981, 1982. Co-wrote 1990 hit âWhite Limozeenâ with Dolly, plus other Dolly songs. Other co-writers Doc Severinsen, Billy Strange, Mark James, Delaney Bramlett, Shel Silverstein (âTequila Sheilaâ by Bobby Bare 1980), etc. In 1992-91, Davis starred on Broadway in The Will Rogers Follies. Co-wrote Weezerâs âTime Fliesâ (2010), Aviciiâs âAddicted to Youâ (2013) Bruno Marsâ âYoung Girlsâ (2016).
PHYLLIS UNGER HILLER, 93, died Oct. 1.
Nashville songwriter, schoolteacher, pianist, therapist. Cuts by Kiki Dee (âLucky High Heelsâ), Arthur Prysock (âFunny Worldâ). Wrote popular 1971 childrenâs musical Ramo the Elephant. One-woman show My Name Is Fibby.
RICK DURRETT, 75, died Oct. 6.
Keyboardist for Crystal Gayle (When I Dream 1978), James Talley (Got No Bread 1975, Tryinâ Like the Devil 1976, Blackjack Chain 1977), Johnny Rodriguez, Michael Brown, Davis Daniel (Fighting Fire with Fire 1991), Odetta, Greg Shires, Mason Proffit (Wanted 1969), Billy Stone, etc. Previously in rock bands Coven, Pacific Gas & Electric, Yancey Street Band, others. Produced Rosemarie (DeHerrera) in 2017. Local performances at âPlay it Again Jam,â âRecovery Fest,â 2011-13.
RAY PENNINGTON, 86, died Oct. 7.
Country songwriter, producer, label exec, singer. Wrote Waylon Jennings âIâm a Ramblinâ Manâ (1974), Ricky Skaggs âDonât Cheat in Our Home Townâ (1984), Roy Drusky âThree Hearts in a Tangleâ (1961), Billy Walker âDonât Stop in My Worldâ (1976), more. Kenny Price back-to-back Top 10 hits 1966-67 with Pennington songs âWalking on New Grass,â âHappy Tracks.â Songs also recorded by Browns, Grandpa, Ferlin, George Morgan, Jean Shepard, Mel Tillis, Wagoner, Eric Church, Leona Williams, James Brown, Johnny Bush, Montgomery Gentry, Paycheck, Wanda, Wilburns, Lorrie Morgan, Etta James, Jim & Jesse, Dave Dudley, Jack Greene, others. Pennington recording artist on King, Capitol, Monument, MRC, Step One labels. Co-founded Step One Records 1984. Produced 12 Ray Price charted singles on label, plus Gene Watson LPs Uncharted Mind (1993), The Good Ole Days (1996), Jesus Is All I Need (1997), A Way to Survive (1997). Also produced Clinton Gregory hits â(If it Werenât for Country Music) Iâd Go Crazyâ (1991), âPlay Ruby Playâ (1992). Others on Step One roster Faron, Charlie McCoy, Western Flyer, Kendalls, Kitty, Cal Smith, Celinda Pink, Terry McMillan, Hank Thompson, Geezinslaws, Curtis Potter, etc. Formed Swing Shift Band with steel guitarist Buddy Emmons. Its Step One LPs Swinginâ (1984), In the Mood for Swinginâ (1986), Swing & Other Things (1988), Swinginâ Our Way (1990) Swinginâ By Request (1992), Itâs All In the Swing (1995), Goinâ Out Swinginâ (1997).
KATHY SMARDAK, 60, died Oct. 11.
Co-founder in 1997 of Nashville independent concert-promotion business Outback Concerts with husband Mike Smardak.
DAVID ALFRED FRYER, 94, Oct. 11.
Gospel singer in quartets, with evangelists Pat Robertson & Billy Graham, solo show on KTIS in Minneapolis, produced âTwo Rivers Baptist Church Hourâ in Nashville.
JAMES A. LEWIS, 75, died Oct. 13.
Known as âJukebox Jimmy,â an entrepreneur in coin-operated amusement business. Founded restaurants Boundâry and South Street. Developed Young Executive Building with Faron Young.
JOE MEADOR, 73, died Oct. 21.
Nashville music entrepreneur in management, songwriting, film making, concert promotion, publishing. Managed Ronnie McDowell for 25 years. Co-wrote McDowellâs singles âAll Tied Upâ (No. 6 1986), âLovinâ That Crazy Feelinââ (1987), âIâm Still Missing Youâ (1988), âNever Too Old to Rock & Rollâ (1989). Songs also recoded by Ricky Godfrey, George Strait, Sugarbees, Jeff Hunt. Business partner with Buddy Killen in Killen Entertainment Group managing McDowell, Six Shooter. Later CEO of Grand Entertainment Group & three publishing companies. Co-produced 2007 movie Dixie Rose. Co-authored 2009 book The Genuine Elvis: Photos and Untold Stories. Formerly in Nashville rock band Glass Hammer, co-owned Sumner County Music Center, worked at Hewgleyâs Music Shop.
BRYAN WAYNE, 53, died Oct. 22.
Hit country songwriter via Chris Cagleâs âCountry By the Grace of Godâ (2002) and Tommy Shane Steinerâs âWhat If Sheâs an Angelâ (2002). Cuts by Big & Rich, Emerson Drive, Clay Walker, Jason Blaine, John Rich, Rodney Carrington, others. Solo CD While You Wait in 2018 with guests Shannon Lawson, Joana Janet, James Otto, Big Kenny. Convinced major-league baseball to honor National Lou Gehrig Day for ALS awareness. (full name: Bryan Wayne Galentine).
JERRY JEFF WALKER, 78, died Oct. 23.
Texas music legend with 40+ albums. Co-founder of Austinâs âprogressive countryâ scene. Host TNN series The Texas Connection (1991-92). Writer of standard âMr. Bojanglesâ (1968) covered by hundreds including Nitty Gritty Dirt Band (1970, in Grammy Hall of Fame), Belafonte, Nina Simone, John Denver, Neil Diamond, Dylan, Frankie Laine, Paycheck, Bobbie Gentry, Tom T., Nilsson, Sammi Smith, Nancy Wilson, David Bromberg, Sammy Davis Jr. etc. Co-wrote Lefty Frizzellâs âRailroad Ladyâ (1974) with Jimmy Buffett. Other songs included âSangria Wine,â âGettinâ By,â âGypsy Songman,â âHairy Ass Hillbillies,â âPissinâ in the Wind,â âHill Country Rain,â âLeavinâ Texas,â âNolan Ryan.â Song connoisseur of othersâ works, popularizing such Texas classics as âUp Against the Wall Redneck Mother,â âOld Five and Dimers Like Me,â âL.A. Freeway,â âDesperados Waiting for a Train,â âMississippi Youâre on My Mind,â âPick Uo the Tempo,â âLondon Homesick Blues (Home with the Armadillo),â âBacksliders Wine,â âDonât It Make You Wanna Dance.â Gold Record for 1972 LP Viva Terlingua. Formed own Tried and True label 1986, becoming model of do-it-yourself career control. Autobiography: Gypsy Songman: A Life in Music (1999).
J.T. CORENFLOS, 56, died Oct. 24.
Top Nashville session guitarist, backing a mulitude of stars. ACMâs 2013 Guitar Player of the Year. Multiple citations in MuscRowâs annual rankings. Solo CD 2015âs Somewhere Under the Radar.
SHAWN SCRUGGS, 37, died Oct. 25.
Lower Broadway bass player at Tootsieâs Orchid Lounge, Kid Rockâs Honky Tonk and other venues backing John Stone, Melanie Torres, more.
STAN KESLER, 92, died Oct. 26.
Memphis musician, songwriter, engineer, producer who was a key figure at Sun Records. Played bass, guitar, mandolin, steel guitar. On records by Jerry Lee, Orbison, Carl Perkins, Miller Sisters, etc. Member of country band Clyde Leoppard & Snearly Ranch Boys, also on Sun. Wrote Elvis songs âI Forgot to Remember to Forget,â âPlaying for Keeps,â âIâm Left, Youâre Right, Sheâs Gone,â plus Jerry Leeâs âOne Minute Past Eternity,â âSometimes a Memory Ainât Enough.â Songs also recorded by Robbins, Cash, Prine, Wanda. Produced Sam the Sham & The Pharaohâs âWooly Bullyâ & other hits.
DEZ ZAMEK, 68, died Oct. 28.
Couturier, master tailor, costume designer for Nashville stars & society women. Wife of international music entrepreneur Paul Zamek. (full name: Desray Anne Zamek).
BILLY JOE SHAVER, 81, died Oct. 28.
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame member noted for âIâm Just an Old Chunk of Coal,â âRide Me Down Easy,â âOld Five and Dimers Like Me,â âYou Asked Me To,â âI Couldnât Be Me Without You.â Performer and recording artist who was a key figure in countryâs âoutlawâ movement. Discovered by Bobby Bare & signed to his publishing company. Championed by Waylon Jennings, who dedicated most of 1973âs Honky Tonk Heroes LP to Shaver songs. Cuts by Cash, Kristofferson, Willie (âI Been to Georgia on a Fast Trainâ), Elvis, Patty Loveless, George Jones, Tex Ritter, Tennessee Ernie, Bare (âRide Me Down Easyâ), Waylon (âHonky Tonk Heroes,â âBlack Rose,â âYou Asked Me Toâ), Mark Chesnutt, Jerry Lee, Confederate Railroad, BRr-49, Commander Cody, Rodriguez (âI Couldnât Be Me Without Youâ), John Anderson (âIâm Just an Old Chunk of Coalâ), Stonewall Jackson, Lewis Family, Marty Stuart, Tom Jones, Widespread Panic, David Allan Coe, Tom T. (âWilly the Wandering Gypsy and Meâ), Allmans, Alison Krauss, etc. Recorded 20+ solo albums 1973-2014 for Monument, Capricorn, Columbia, New West, Compadre, Sugar Hill, others, some billed as Shaver partnered with guitar-ace son Eddy Shaver (1962-2000). Americana Music Association Lifetime Achievement award for songwriting 2002, ACM Poetâs Award 2019.
NAN KEENAN, 91, died Oct. 30.
Actor, director, teacher. Appeared and/or directed almost all productions of Murfreesboro Little Theater 1970s & 1980s. Taught speech and theater at MTSU. Moved to Franklin & acted in many Nashville theatrical productions thereafter.
TEDDY IRWIN, 77, died Nov. 5.
Guitarist, arranger, composer. Session player on hits by Randy Travis (“Old 8×10”), Buffett (âMargaritavilleâ), Neil Young (âHeart of Goldâ). Also on records by Cash, Ray Stevens, B.J., Earl Scruggs Revue, Juice Newton, Joan Baez, John Lennon (âHappy Christmas War Is Overâ), Jermaine Jackson, Neil Diamond, Richie Havens, Pat Boone, David Soul, more. Composed & produced music for soaps As the World Turns, Guiding Light, Another World. Toured with Petula Clark, Four Seasons, Bette Midler, Pozo Seco Singers, Doc Severinsen, etc. Played lead guitar in original Broadway production of Hair. Recorded 22 albums with partner CC Couch. Three solo guitar albums Music From My Guitar to You, Babies, Three Guitars-A Guitar Christmas.
JUDY KENDALL FRYE, 73, died Nov. 6.
Hostess at Grand Ole Opry for 39 years. Nashville tour guide. Dresser for Broadway shows at TPAC. Hair stylist. Supervisor at CMA Fest.
GENEVA ANN SMITH, 81, died Nov. 10.
Columbia Recording Studio employee for 12 years in the 1950s & 1960s. Later with Davidson County Registrar of Deeds office.
ANDREW WHITE III, 78, died Nov. 11.
Nashville multi-instrumentalist who became sideman for Stevie Wonder, Weather Report, Fifth Dimension, McCoy Tyner, Supremes, etc. Publisher, producer, 40+ solo albums.
DOUG SUPERNAW, 60, died Nov. 13.
Texas singer-songwriter best known for big country hits âRenoâ (1993), âI Donât Call Him Daddyâ (1993) and âNot Enough Hours in the Nightâ (1996). Also had charted singles with Steve Goodmanâs âYou Never Even Call Me By My Name,â Dennis Lindeâs âWhatâll You Do About Me,â Jim Lauderdale/Frank Dycusâ âShe Never Looks Back.â Nominated ACM 1994 New Male Artist of the Year. Also nominated for awards by TNN/Music City News, MusicRow, Billboard. Gold Record for Red and Rio Grande album 1994. Noted as colorful showman, outspoken personality. On soundtrack The Beverly Hillbillies singing Buck Owens classic âTogether Again.â Collaboration with Beach Boys on 1996 novelty âLong Tall Texan.â Texas Country Music Hall of Fame inductee 2016. At CMA Music Fest & all-star Ralph Stanley tribute 2017.
WALTER C. MILLER, 94, died Nov. 13.
Produced/directed CMA Awards 1970-2004. Created multiple Cash TV specials, Opry anniversary specials, plus shows devoted to Dolly, John Denver, Acuff, Tennessee Ernie, Donny & Marie, Minnie Pearl, Mac Davis, Vince, more. Brought Perry Como & George Burns to Nashville for all-star country specials. Became the definitive director of award show/live event television genre. Wrote the book when it came to multi-camera coverage of events. In addition to country specials, directed Grammy Awards 15 times, directed Tony Awards 1987-97, also orchestrated TV coverage of Emmys, Peopleâs Choice Awards, Comic Relief. TV career began with the birth of the medium in 1940s & 1950s: Horn & Hardart Childrenâs Hour, Bell Telephone Hour, Startime, Sing Along with Mitch, etc. Began directing specials 1960s: Streisand, Sinatra, Stevie Wonder, Kathie Lee Gifford, Andy Williams, Bobby Rydell, Sammy Davis Jr., Irving Berlin, Sha Na Na, Al Green, Justin Timberlake, Doug Henning, others. Particularly noted for comedy specials: Rodney Dangerfield, Steve Martin, Sam Kinison, Bill Cosby, Rich Little, Rosie OâDonnell, Alan King, Bob Hope. Directed televised musicals Youâre a Good Man, Charlie Brown, Dames at Sea, The Will Rogers Follies, George M! In 1995 created Soul Train 25th Anniversary TV celebration. In 1989 directed Presidential Inaugural Gala. Appeared in 1991 Bette Midler movie For the Boys. Nominated for 19 Emmys & won five. Three-time Directors Guild of America award winner. CMA Presidentâs Award 2007, CMA Irving Waugh Award 2009, Grammy Trustees Award 2010. Father of TV director Paul Miller, who is also a veteran of CMA telecasts, as well as Saturday Night Live, In Living Color, A Capitol Fourth, two Super Bowl halftime shows & more.
BOB LOFLIN, 91, died Nov. 16.
WSM radio newsman & Opry announcer 1960s. Interviewer on syndicated Country Crossroads radio series 1970s. Formerly cabaret entertainer in Birmingham, TV cowboy & CBS radio announcer in Hollywood. In retirement, volunteer at Frist Museum of Art & Nashville Public Library. Volunteer of the Year 2012 Country Music Hall of Fame. (full name: Clyde Thompson Loflin Jr.)
SUSAN KEEL, 58, died Nov. 20.
Publicist whose clients included Conway Twitty, Ray Stevens, Opry Mills, Ryman Auditorium, TPAC, Tennessee Titans. Worked for CashBox, Bullet Recording Studio, Top Billing, Sen. Jim Sasser, Tennessean, Andrews Agency, Fletcher Rowley Inc., own Keel PR. Daughter of Nashville Banner editor Pinckney Keel, sister of MTSU Dean Beverly Keel (formerly a label exec, music journalist & Music Row publicist).
HAL KETCHUM, 67, died Nov. 23.
Singer-songwriter, country hit maker and Grand Ole Opry star. Seventeen charted titles in 1991-06 with nine top-20 hitsââSmall Town Saturday Nightâ (1991), âI Know Where Love Livesâ (1991), âPast the Point of Rescueâ (1992), âFive OâClock Worldâ (1992), âSure Loveâ (1992), âMama Knows the Highwayâ (1993), âHearts Are Gonna Rollâ (1993), âFall in Love Againâ (1994), âStay Foreverâ (1995). Ten albums, Gold Record for 1992âs Past the Point of Rescue. CMA Horizon Award nominee.
LYNSEY McDONALD, 58, died Nov. 23.
Americana artist manager who helped guide careers of Jason & Scorchers, Todd Snider, Deanna Carter, Georgia Satellites, Robbie Fulks, Jay Joyce. Helped launch live-performance series âMusic City Rootsâ and venue Loveless Barn. Worked at Praxis International, Vector Management, Rising Tide Records, Thirty Tigers, TomKats catering, CMT and own Magnolia Way Management firm.
MAC ALLEN, 79, died Nov. 30.
Radio vet Nashvillian with both on-air and programming credits. (full name: Joseph Mcdermott Allen)
CHARLEY PRIDE, 86, died Dec. 12.
Country Music Hall of Fame inductee, Grand Ole Opry member. CMA Entertainer of the Year 1971, Male Vocalist of the Year 1971 & 1972. Placed 67 titles on country charts, including 52 Top 10 hits & 29 No. 1âs, 12 Gold Records, 35 million sold. Classics include âKiss an Angel Good Morning,â âAll I Have to Offer You Is Me,â âIs Anybody Goinâ to San Antone,â âMountain of Loveâ and âWe Could.â Countryâs first Black superstar. Following failed baseball career, turned to country music 1965. Broke through on country charts with Jack Clement compositions âJust Between You and Meâ (1966) and âI Know Oneâ (1967). Hank Williamsâ âKaw-Ligaâ hit in 1969, followed by Prideâs first No. 1, âAll I Have to Offer You Is Me.â His 1971 âDid You Think to Prayâ won gospel Grammy & âKiss an Angel Good Morningâ Grammy for Country Song of the Year. Prideâs 1972 hit âAll His Childrenâ theme song for Paul Newman movie Sometimes a Great Notion nominated for an Oscar & Pride sang it on Academy Awards. Charley Pride Sings Heart Songs won 1973 Grammy. First Black artist to co-host CMA Awards (with Glen Campbell 1975). Hits continued with âAmazing Loveâ (1973), âWe Couldâ (1974), âHope Youâre Feelinâ Me (Like Iâm Feelinâ You)â (1975), âMy Eyes Can Only See as Far as Youâ (1976), âSheâs Just an Old Love Turned Memoryâ (1977), âSomeone Loves You Honeyâ (1978), Grammy nominated âBurgers and Friesâ (1978), âWhere Do I Put Her Memoryâ (1979). In 1980, Thereâs a Little Bit of Hank in Me, tribute album to Hank Williams spawned back-to-back No. 1âs âHonky Tonk Blues,â âYou Win Again.â Also revived Johnny Rivers hit âMountain of Loveâ (1982), George Jones hit âWhy Baby Whyâ (1982), Webb Pierce hit âMore and Moreâ (1983). Pride 1981 hit âRoll On, Mississippiâ later became a state song. Other hits included âI Donât Think Sheâs in Love Anymoreâ (1982), âYouâre So Good When Youâre Badâ (1982), âNight Gamesâ (1983), âShouldnât It Be Easier Than Thisâ (1988). Formed Music Row song publishing company Pi-Gem Music with producer Tom Collins. Formed Dallas management & booking company Chardon, which helped launch careers of Dave & Sugar, Janie Fricke, Neal McCoy. Also heavily invested in Dallas real estate, banking. In 1973, joined Opry, opened own theater in Branson, published autobiography, Pride. Tritt, Diffie, Ketchum, Marty Stuart joined him on 1994 CD. In 1996, performed for Clintons in White House & accepted Trumpet Award from Turner Broadcasting. Inducted into Country Music Hall of Fame 2000. Neal McCoy 2013 tribute album Pride. Other stars who received career boosts from Pride include Milsap, Trini Triggs, Exile, Janie Fricke, Paisley, Wariner. Some recorded with Pride, as did Oaks, Tanya, Garth, Dolly. Pride included in 2016 No. 1 country single/video âForever Countryâ which won Video of the Year and Gold Record. Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award & NATD Career Achievement honor 2017. PBS American Masters bio-documentary, Charley Pride: Iâm Just Me, narrated by Tanya 2019. CMAâs Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. A COVID pandemic victim.
WANDA WHITE, 87, died Dec. 15.
Country & gospel singer. Notable in East Tennessee in Carlton Scruggs & The Home Folks on Mid-Day Merry-Go-Round, WNOX Tennessee Barn Dance, WSMâs Opry, Ernest Tubb Midnight Jamboree, etc. Background singer for country artists in 1940s & 1950s. Great grandmother and mentor of teen country/Americana performer EmiSunshine. (married name: Wanda White Matthews).
CARL MANN, 78, died Dec. 15.
Rockabilly star in Sun Records stable with 1958 hit âMona Lisa,â plus âPretend,â âSouth of the Border,â âToo Youngâ as rocked-up pop ballads. Also: âUbangi Stomp,â âFoolish One,â âBaby I Donât Care,â âRockinâ Love,â âIâm Coming Home,â etc. Later a country act on Monument, ABC/Dot. Popularity endured in Europe for decades.
KIRKE MARTIN, 70, died Dec. 16.
Music Row business manager with clients including Dirt Band, Tammy, T. Graham, Keith Whitley, many CCM artists.
K.T. OSLIN, 78, died Dec. 21.
Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame. Famed for country hits â80s Ladies,â âHold Me,â âDo Ya,â âIâll Always Come Back,â âHey Bobby,â âThis Woman,â âCome Next Monday.â Songs recorded by Dusty Springfield, Anne Murray, Gail Davies (âRound the Clock Lovingâ), The Judds, Pam Tillis & Lorrie Morgan, Sissy Spacek (âLonely But Only For Youâ), Dottie West, Dan Seals, Dorothy Moore, Forester Sisters etc. CMA Female Vocalist of the Year 1988. First woman to win CMA Song of the Year (â80s Ladiesâ). First woman to become country star at age 45. Three Grammys, four ACMs, Texas Songwriters Hall of Fame. Gold/Platinum awards for â80s Ladies (1987), This Woman (1988), Love in a Small Town (1990), plus music-video compilation. Other albums Greatest Hits: Songs From an Aging Sex Bomb (1993), My Roots Are Showing (1996), Live Close By, Visit Often (2001), Simply (2015). Actor in TV series Evening Shade, Paradise, and films The Thing Called Love, Poisoned by Love. Favorite personality on TV shows of Carol Burnett, Johnny Carson, Joan Rivers, Oprah Winfrey, Arsenio Hall, Ralph Emery. Starred on 20/20 and own 1992 TNN special USO Celebrity Tour. Raised in Houston folk-music scene. Chorus girl in musicals Hello Dolly, West Side Story, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Darling of the Day, Promises, Promises. In addition to Broadway work, acted in TV commercials, sang ad jingles during 1970s & 1980s.
JOE JOHNSON, 93, died Dec. 22.
Label executive, record producer, song publisher. Affiliated with Columbia Records, Gene Autry, Challenge Records, 4 Star Records, Golden West Melodies, JAT Publishing, others. Produced, published and/or promoted more than 150 hits. Produced Marty Robbins, Jimmy Dickens, Jerry Wallace, etc. Behind such successes as âTequilaâ by The Champs (1958), âThatâs All Rightâ by Robbins (1955), âJust Walkin’ in the Rainâ by Johnny Ray (1956), âWishful Thinkingâ by Wynn Stewart (1960), âThe One You Slip Around Withâ by Jan Howard (1960), âTravelinâ Manâ by Ricky Nelson (1961), âLimbo Rockâ by Chubby Checker (1962), âLiesâ by The Knickerbockers (1966), âRelease Meâ by Englebert Humperdinck (1967), âSignsâ by The Five Man Electrical Band (1971). Co-founder of the ACM. Built the Music Row office building that has housed GAC and RFD-TV.
BERK BRYANT, 90, died Dec. 24, 2020.
Long-running host of Louisville bluegrass radio show âSunday Bluegrassâ on WFPK-FM (1989-2018). Writer of monthly bluegrass column in Louisville Music News. Formerly at WWOD & WBRG in Lynchburg, VA. (full name: Berkley Olin Bryant).
TONY RICE, 69, died Dec. 25.
A virtuoso guitarist and bluegrass musician. Influential acoustic guitar player in bluegrass, progressive bluegrass, newgrass and acoustic jazz. He was inducted into the International Bluegrass Music Hall of Fame in 2013.
SILVER ANN HAAS, 55, died Dec. 28, 2020.
Owner Platinum Artist Music Group & Silver Dream Promotions in Nashville.
HUGH X. LEWIS, 90, died Dec. 29, 2020.
Country singer-songwriter. Charted 15 titles on charts 1964-79.
Top 40 entries: âWhat I Need Mostâ (1965), âOut Where the Ocean Meets the Skyâ (1965), âIâd Better Call the Law on Meâ (1966), âYouâre So Cold (Iâm Turning Blue)â (1967), âEvolution and the Bibleâ (1968). âAll Heaven Broke Looseâ (1969) a top-20 hit in Canada. LPs The Hugh X. Lewis Album (1965), Just Before Dawn (1965), My Kind of Country (1966), Just a Prayer Away (1967), Country Fever (1968). Wrote hits for Stonewall Jackson âB.J. the D.J.â (No. 1, 1964), âAngry Wordsâ (No. 16, 1968), âShip in the Bottleâ (No. 19, 1969). Also wrote Carl Smithâs âTake My Ring Off Your Fingerâ (1964), Carl Butler & Pearlâs âJust Thought Iâd Let You Knowâ (1965), Del Reeves & Bobby Goldsboro duet âI Just Wasted the Restâ (1968) plus songs for Ray Pillow, Mac Wiseman, Jimmy C. Newman, George Morgan, Pride, Dickens, Kitty, Lynn Anderson, Jim Ed, more. Hosted syndicated weekly TV series Hugh X. Lewis Country Club c.1968-72. Own Printerâs Alley nightclub 1970s. In country movies Forty Acre Feud (1966), Gold Guitar (1967), Cotton Pickinâ Chicken Pickers (1967), plus Christian childrenâs movie Summer of Courage (2005). Later a poet, speaker, gospel recording artist, radio host (âThe Christian Country Story Showâ on WSGS/WKIC in Hazard, KY). Kentucky Colonel honoree, Atlanta Country Music Hall of Fame, Walkway of Stars inductee at Country Music Hall of Fame. (full name: Hubert Bradley Lewis).
GLEN THOMPSON, 75, died Dec. 29, 2020.
President of the Grand Ole Opry Fan Club, 1987-2010. A familiar face on the front row of Opry shows. Singer-guitarist who performed on Junior Grand Ole Opry 1955 at age 9. Burial planned next to Uncle Jimmy Thompson, Opryâs first performer.
DEV TREANOR DAVIS, 85, died Dec. 30, 2020.
Nashville tourism booster for 30+ years. Owner Tennessee Trail Blazers Bus Company & tour businesses. President of United Bus Owners of America 1983. (full name: Christine Devereaux Treanor Davis).
Index:
Adam, Biff â 3/7
Allen, Mac â 11/30
Annastas, Tom â 8/13
Austin, Quay â 3/9
Baxter, Bucky â 5/25
Benford, Mac â 2/15
Bryant, Berk â 12/24
Bey, Anon â 3/1
Billingsley, Jane Dorris â 6/15
Blaydes, Keith â 2/6
Burton, Patricia Maxwell â 3/19
Byrd, Stan â 5/23
Cage, Buddy â 2/4
Capps, Jimmy â 6/2
Carr, Pete â 6/27
Cathcart, Kent – 4/7
Cathey, Charles Edward â 7/24
Chandler, Wayne â 8/7
Connor, Arthur â 4/13
Corenflos, J.T. â 10/24
Currey, Browlee â 3/18
Cymbala, Zenon B. â 3/31
Daniels, Charlie â 7/6
Darrow, Chris â 1/15
Davis, Dev Treanor – 12/30
Davis, Mac â 9/29
DeBoer, Tony â 5/20
Delozier, Jimmie â 1/31
DeMontbreun-Stroud, Abbe â 6/19
Denny, John â 7/21
Denny, Pandora â 8/23
Dew, Harriet – 8/16
Diffie, Joe â 3/29
Dobkins, Carl â 4/8
Durrett, Rick â 10/6
Earle, Justin Townes â 8/23
English, Paul â 2/12
Frazier, Randy â 6/19
Freeman, Barry â 1/10
Frye, Judy Kendall â 11/6
Fryer, David Alfred â 10/11
Garcia, Benny â 5/7
Groves, Cady â 5/2
Gudis, Stephen â 1/6
Gulley, Steve â 8/18
Haas, Silver Ann â 12/28
Halterman, Joe â 2/11
Harris, Ernie â 4/24
Harvey, Alex â 4/4
Head, Roy â 9/21
Henley, Jimmy â 3/22
Hildebrand, Donald â 4/14
Hiller, Phyllis Unger â 10/1
Hludzik, Jerry – 4/12
Holland, W.S. “Fluke” â 9/23
Hoover, Eddie â 8/20.
Houston, Robb â 3/16
Howard, Jan â 3/28
Howard, Sam â 7/10
Ingram, Kenny â 7/26
Irwin, Ed â 6/28
Irwin, Teddy â 11/5
Jackson, Wade â 1/14
Jay, Jimmie – 4/6
Johnson, Joe â 12/22
Johnson, Larry â 6/12
Jones, Troy â 9/11
Jonz, Bobby â 7/21
Kaparakis, John B. â 4/12
Kayser, Hans â 3/20
Kearney, Ramsey â 3/14
Keel, Susan â 11/20
Keenan, Nan â 10/30
Kelly, Dan â 7/22
Kesler, Stan â 10/26
Ketchum, Hal â 11/23
King, Buddy â 8/21
King, Thom â 4/24
Lester, Tom â 4/20
Lewis, Hugh X. â 12/29
Lewis, James A. â 10/13
Lilly, Michael â 2/12
Little Richard â 5/9
Loflin, Bob â 11/16
Lonas, Sonny â 6/30
Lunn, Eddie â 1/29
Lusk, Jim â 4/25
McDonald, Lynsey â 11/23
McEuen, Bill â 9/24
McSpadden, Gary â 4/15
McTeigue, Edward âFelixâ â 7/24
Mack, Bill â 7/31
Mann, Carl â 12/15
Martel, Marty â 3/29
Martin, Craig â 7/3
Martin, Kirke â 12/16
Martin, Daniel Lee â 2/14
Meador, Joe â 10/21
Memarie â 7/22
Miller, Walter C. â 11/13
Mitchell, Harold â 8/5
Moore, Bonnie Lou â 9/21
Morford, Faith Bailey â 5/13
Oldaker, Jamie â 7/16
Olney, David â 1/18
Oslin, K.T. â 12/21
Owen, Fuzzy â 5/11
Owen, Helen â 7/13
Parker, Ira â 1/24
Pennington, Ray â 10/7
Phillips, Knox â 4/15
Pointer, Bonnie â 6/8
Powell, Tom — 1/21
Pride, Charley â 12/12
Prince, Thomas â 7/25
Prine, John – 4/7
Pryor, Richard â 4/24
Pursell, Bill â 9/3
Pyatt, Dale â 4/15
Quinn, Tommy â 7/8
Ragsdale, John â 3/25
Ramsey, Freeman â 9/12
Ray, Glenn â 6/11
Reeves, Ellen â 9/15
Reid, Harold â 4/24
Rice, Tony â 12/25
Ricker, Bob â 7/27
Roberts, H.G. â 3/22
Rogers, Kenny â 3/20
Rowe, Alan â 7/23
Saxon, John â 7/25
Scarborough, Cy â 5/19
Schulman, Alan â 6/24
Scott, Barry, 9/10
Scruggs, Shawn â 10/25
Setser, Eddie â 1/27
Shane, Bob â 1/26
Shaver, Billy Joe â 10/28
Smardak, Kathy â 10/11
Smith, Geneva Ann – 11/10
Smith, Robin â 3/13
Snead, Doak â 9/16
Soesbee, Bud â 5/20
Starr, Lucille â 9/4
Supernaw, Doug â 11/13
Thompson, Glen – 12/29
Thompson, Sue Armstrong â 5/4
Thrall, Dick â 5/14
Trapp, Mercer â 8/31
Walker, Gary â 7/8
Walker, Jerry Jeff â 10/23
Wayne, Bryan â 10/22
Weissberg, Eric â 3/22
White, Andrew â 11/11
White, Wanda â 12/15
Whitehouse, Dick â 1/14
Williams-Dunning, Katherine â 6/13
Williamson, Jim â 2/26
Woods, Collier Robert â 8/1
Yates, Helen Hunley Glaser â 2/3
Zamek, Dez â 10/28
The Academy of Country Music’s Damon Whiteside And Lyndsay Cruz Recount 2020 [Interview]
/by LB CantrellLyndsay Cruz, Damon Whiteside. Photos: Courtesy The Academy of Country Music
In a challenging year for all, the Academy of Country Music, like most companies, worked hard to pivot.
Just two weeks after postponing the original April 18th show date for the 55th ACM Awards from the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas, the Academy produced ACM Presents: Our Country, an at-home special that reached nearly 11 million viewers after airing on CBS and on CMT. In addition to the special, the Academy produced a pre-show that aired across Academy social platforms and Twitch, to which nearly 400,000 people live streamed.
During the showâs broadcast ACM Lifting Lives, the charitable arm of the Academy of Country Music, announced the launch of ACM Lifting Lives COVID- 19 Response Fund, created to assist those in the country music industry who lost their jobs due to the pandemic. Since then, ACM Lifting Lives has raised and distributed $3.5 million. They reopened the fund on Giving Tuesday, in time to help more in need during this holiday season.
While gearing up for the first live awards show during the pandemic, ACM released its first single, âOn The Road Again (ACM Lifting Lives Edition),â a collaboration featuring this yearâs ACM New Artist nomineesâincluding Ingrid Andress, Gabby Barrett, Jordan Davis, Russell Dickerson, Lindsay Ell, Caylee Hammack, Cody Johnson, and Morgan Wallenâand joined by the legendary Willie Nelson on the remake of his original hit.
Then, for the first time ever, the 55th ACM Awards took place in Nashville, Tennessee on Sept. 16 at three iconic locations including the Grand Ole Opry House, Ryman Auditorium and Bluebird Cafe. The 55th ACM Awards was the first live awards show during COVID-19, bringing a total of 7.63 million viewers, reaching the No. 1 driver of social videos online for the day. The Academy worked diligently to make sure safety protocols on-site including testing, sanitizing and health screenings were enforced leading up to and onsite. With all protocols in place, a virtual Radio Row and virtual Press Room was created in order to keep radio, media, press and artists safe during this time.
The Academy also launched a consumer-facing site to help promote label priorities and artists through summer and fall, ACM: The Hub. The Hub included virtual events such as Wine Down Wednesday, a happy hour series featuring rising female country music artists. On behalf of each artist, the Academy’s partner, 1000 StoriesÂź Bourbon Barrel-Aged Wine, contributed a $2,000 donation towards the ACM Lifting Lives COVID-19 Response Fund, bringing in a total of $18,000 from the series. The Academy also launched the ACM: The Weekly, a live concert-like experience on ACM social platforms, on The Hub. The ACM Weekly features 3-4 artists each week.
The ACM’s CEO, Damon Whiteside, and ACM Lifting Lives Executive Director, Lyndsay Cruz, spoke with MusicRow recently about 2020, and what challenges and accomplishments the year entailed.
MusicRow: The start of the lockdown in the U.S. was so close to the ACM awards in April. You guys pivoted to the Our Country special in two weeks. Tell me about making that decision and how you guys were able to pull that together so quickly.
Whiteside: It was a pretty quick turnaround, but we felt like we already had that date secured on CBS and we knew that the fans were looking forward to an award show. So we were just so in that mode and, obviously, the artists were planning to perform and they wanted to be promoting their latest music. Of course, at the time, we thought maybe tours would be coming back in the summer, at that point we didn’t know. It just seemed like a really good opportunity for us to still utilize that date and a great opportunity to bring some comfort to the fans and just bring music to the fans. The [ACM Presents: Our Country] special was just an idea that was brought up between RAC Clark, our executive producer, myself, and our team Dick Clark Productions.
We just got on the phone one day and said, ‘Can we really pull this off?’ And at that point, too, there really hadn’t been any of the virtual shows yet. After our show aired, there were several after that. But we were about the first to do one of those. So we just jumped in; we took it to CBS and they really liked the idea, too. Within a day, we got it all approved and started reaching out to artists’ managers. It just all really came together. And of course, we gave direction to the artists, but we really had the artists shoot it themselves in their own homes or locations. It was an interesting flip of where they sort of put it together creatively themselves, where they were at. We just worked with them on all of that, and it obviously turned out really fantastic.
Eric Church performs on ACM Presents: Our Country
When it came time for the ACM Awards in September, you guys were really first out of the gate with a truly live awards show. What were the guiding posts of what was most important to you in planning that event?
Whiteside: It was the first true live awards show back, meaning that we had a lot of live elements in it, including the awards, which was really the first time that had been done where we had winners in the room, coming out on stage to accept awards. It was all live-hosted as well, Keith [Ubran] was there, live doing the hosting and several of the performances were all done live, too. So it was a lot of coordination. Our priority was that we really wanted to have as much live element to it as we possibly could, while being cognizant of the artist safety. That was a major part, ensuring that the artists felt safe, but that we could still be true to the award ceremony component of it by giving away the awards live.
We were able to accomplish that by being able to have artists essentially quarantine back on their buses and then as they needed to be on stage, then they were brought in. It was all very meticulously choreographed so that no artist would ever actually see each other, which would then cause them to go off and want to hug or talk to each other. We were really meticulous about that to make sure that an artist that came in to accept their award and then to do press, they would literally never see other artists. It was all staged that way so they were completely safe.
From the awards show perspective, it was all new for us, not only because of COVID, but it was the first time in Nashville in our history. We were in the three most iconic venues in Nashville, and going live to three different venues was something we had never done. So there were all of these elements that just were a first time thing for us. What was important was we wanted to really just honor the industry, of course, but also really honor the fact that we were in Nashville for the first time at these iconic venues and the fact that, artists had all been quarantined for so many months and we hadn’t seen them perform for so long. We just wanted to bring a really exciting show but also make sure that we were being really respectful of what was going on in the world and bringing some comfort, joy and music to the fans. It’s been dragging on so long that people feel disconnected from live events and disconnected from being able to see their favorite artists on a big stage, so it was important that we brought a full-sized show to them, but in a very safe way.
Taylor Swiftâs live debut performance of âbettyâ at the 2020 ACM Awards. Photo: Getty Images | Courtesy of the Academy of Country Music
The ACM has given back $3.5 million in COVID relief aid and plans to continue to give back in 2021. Lyndsay, what does it mean to you for ACM Lifting Lives to have such an impact during this time?
Cruz: Oh gosh, don’t make me cry. We had a really ambitious slate of events and initiatives planned for 2020, for just the general fund of ACM Lifting Lives because [Taylor Wolf] the manager of ACM Lifting LivesâI call her my partnerâwe spent 2019 really trying to refine the mission of Lifting Lives. Not necessarily a rebrand, but just getting laser focused on what we do. So we’re excited about 2020 and all of the things we were going to accomplish. Of course, that all came to a screeching halt. We had always been operating a disaster relief fund, very quietly, called the Diane Holcomb Emergency Relief Fund. And that is for folks who are in the industry, who face the financial hardship or a personal disaster, whether that be a medical issue or something that happens to their home. So we had been set up to do that. And then when COVID hit, we realized we’re actually in a position to give back more. We have smart investment managers that sit on the board of Lifting Lives, we have some reserves. So we thought, ‘This is an opportunity to help people that the government wasn’t helping yet.’ We knew there was going to be a stimulus package, but we thought, ‘We can do this. We have the resources.’ So we created the application and then we started the process. We approved and allocated about a $1 million in approximately a week and a half, and these were small grants. These were $2,000, $1,000 grants based on need and criteria. Then the funds were gone.
From that point on, it was just any sort of fundraising opportunity we could grab onto, we did. We just completely focused on this fund because Stimulus checks ran out, PPP ran out, and there was no getting back on the road in sight. So we just continued to say, ‘We’ve got to keep on fundraising for this.’
[Through the fundraising efforts], we just kept banking the money and saying, ‘We know we’re going to reopen this fund. We don’t know how much, but we we’ve got to do it because the need is still so great.’ We had to close our fund, obviously, but we had a wait list. So people were just sort of waiting until we had funds to distribute.
We had about $500,000, in cash and from fundraising around September. We wanted to reopen the fund before the end of the year and we want to get money into people’s pockets before the holidays. So my awesome partner, Damon Whiteside at the ACM, and I crafted a plan to just start knocking on doors of companies that were under more financially stable footing, and the first were labels and DSPs. We got an amazing $500,000 gift from Amazon and we basically hit up every label and they all came in with a cash donation. So we raised about another $900,000, and then we made up with our reserves that difference to reopen the fund with $2 million. [As of this interview], we will have given out the $2 million. Taylor and I looked at the number today and I think we had about $75,000 left to give.
We’re so grateful that we’re in a position that we can do that, but we have a feeling that this is going to continue on for a bit longer, and so we’re trying to get ahead of it for 2021 to think about a third round.
Whiteside: I just want to give credit and kudos to Lyndsay and Taylor and their dedication this whole year. I’ve been at ACM almost a year, but I’m so impressed with Lifting Lives and the fact that it can be so nimble and it can be so many things to so many people in need. I’ve seen it just firsthand, them pivot this year from one need to another. I mean, we started the year with a tornado in Nashville and our team was out doing volunteer work and Lyndsay was working to get funds to people that needed it. And then it pivoted to COVID, and all the other things that we do on a daily basis. To me, it’s just been so powerful to see, as soon as there’s a need, Lifting Lives can identify the need and then address that need. I can’t underline enough the fact that yes, there is MusiCares out there, which was a huge fund that did great work, however, that was across the entire music industry. We’re the only ones that are doing this for country music, that’s literally serving the country music community directly with funding. So I have to applaud Lyndsay and the Lifting Lives team again on that. That’s pretty miraculous.
Damon, this was your first year at the ACM. Tell me what tackling such a difficult year was like during your first year.
Whiteside: I’ll have a better answer in January. I went into it really excited obviously, and there was a lot of major things to really tackle this year. A big part of that, too, is me just living in two cities. I was going to be half the time in L.A. and half in Nashville, so that was going to certainly be a challenge. Coming into it, I literally was just focused on the Vegas show in April and making that the best we can make it. There’s a lot of feedback I’d had from past years and I just had a lot of ideas and a lot of feedback from the staff and the board on a lot of things that we wanted to accomplish this year.
I wasn’t really [as focused on] introducing a bunch of new ideas, I really wanted to elevate what we do as an organization and elevate how we serve the industry. That would be a big win for year one. And then obviously, a couple of months in, everything started to change. I’ve said this a lot to our staff, too, that I feel like, in a strange way, the pandemic really forced us to be more innovative than we probably could have ever been. Our Country really proved it to us, where we could pivot from canceling an awards show in Vegas to immediately flipping and doing a two hour CBS special, plus the livestream. All of that was just learning, you know, there’s really no rules here. If we have a really strong idea and we have the support of the board, let’s go for it and make it happen. I think it really showed all of us that we could do things differently and we didn’t have to do things based on how we’d done them in the past. It was almost like, everything is up for discussion this year.
Is there any update on the Nashville office space?
Whiteside: Not at the moment. We’re still researching. Nothing has been decided as of yet, a lot of that being just because of the year. Hopefully early next year we’ll be able to make some decisions and determine what that’s going to look like for us. Nothing has been confirmed yet.
Of all the successes and resilience that the Academy has shown this year, what are each of you most proud of?
Cruz: All the arrows point to the COVID fund and how many people we’ve been able to help. To date, we’ve been able to help about 2,000 people. Again, these are small grants that we’re helping people just put food on the table or pay their rent or mortgage. Hearing from the folks and what a significant impact that made for them; we had people say, ‘Wow, we didn’t think anyone cared,’ and also, ‘When I’m in a better place, I’d really love to come back and help you all in some way.’ That’s incredibly powerful for us.
[I’m also proud of] the amazing partnership with Vanderbilt in Nashville. This year we had our 11th annual ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp, which is a research educational camp for people with a developmental disease called Williams Syndrome. It brings together these campers from around the country to do songwriting with the amazing Ross Copperman, and Runaway June sat in and helped write the song. We were still able to do that, even though it was virtual, and we had other artists like Tenille Townes, Michael Ray and Frankie Ballard. So we were able to still pull that off, and we expanded our partnership with Vanderbilt and were able to announce a $750,000 endowment to expand our work with people living with autism. So we’re able to create the ACM Lifting Lives Autism Lab at Vanderbilt, and it’s going to establish autism as one of our signature initiatives.
Frankie Ballard, Tenille Townes, and Michael Ray participate in ACM Lifting Lives Music Camp.
Whiteside: Obviously I want to echo everything she said, I don’t think there’s anything bigger we can point out than the COVID response. That’s just hands down, obviously our proudest moment or accomplishment of the year. But, on the ACM side, I feel like we’ve really elevated the ACM brand this year and what it means to the industry and the fans. We’ve been able to really serve the industry more than we have in a lot of years, if not ever, just in terms of having the Our Country special right at the moment our artists needed it most. It was right at the beginning of the pandemic, when people were more scared, and we got such a great response about what comfort that brought the fans. And then, I couldn’t be more proud of the show in Nashville. We started out the year thinking that we were going to be country’s party of the year, which is our normal positioning for the show, and then ended up doing a night of hurt and hits with a new host and with being the first live show back. I’m proud we were able to pay respect to the Nashville community. So between those things, it just made ACM able to really support our industry and in a huge way.
‘An Evening Of Thanksgiving With CeCe Winans’ Set For February 21st
/by Lorie HollabaughCeCe Winans is hosting the virtual Evening of Thanksgiving with Compassion International on Feb. 21, 2021 with some surprise special guests to help bring some joy and encouragement to those needing it. The event was originally slated to take place in November but was postponed due to the pandemic.
An Evening of Thanksgiving with CeCe Winans! worship live stream concert will feature praise and worship music as well as many favorites with a full band performance. Those sponsoring a child through Compassion International will receive a ticket into An Evening of Thanksgiving plus access to a separate VIP event that includes exclusive performances, a special conversation with CeCe Winans and family members, and a few additional surprises. Tickets are available here.
Helping a Heroâs Lee Greenwood Patriot Awards Gala Raises Over $500,000 For Wounded Vets
/by Lorie HollabaughPictured (L-R): GOYA Foods CEO Bob Unanue, former NFL player Jack Brewer, South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem, Lee Greenwood, NASCAR legend Richard Childress, and U.S. Congressman Bill Flores
The Lee Greenwood Patriot Awards Gala at The Woodlands Waterway Marriott in Houston was held earlier this month, and raised over $500,000 for the Helping a Hero organization.
This year, Helping a Hero honored five trailblazers with The Lee Greenwood Patriot Award for their leadership and commitment to our wounded warriors: NASCAR Legend Richard Childress; GOYA Foods CEO Robert âBobâ Unanue; South Dakota Governor Kristi Noem; U.S. Congressman Bill Flores (TX-17) who championed veteran reforms while in Congress; and multi-Platinum artist Michael W. Smith.
Funds raised from the evening will enable Helping a Hero serve post-9/11 severely wounded warriors through their Wounded Hero Home Program, emergency needs program, and other support programs. Plans are underway to build homes for deserving wounded warriors desperately needing specially adapted homes in Florida, Louisiana, Nebraska, North Carolina, and Texas, as well as a special project in South Carolina. Notable attendees at the event included Bass Pro Founder and CEO Johnny Morris, Kalahari Resorts Founder and CEO Todd Nelson, Woodforest National Bank President Jay Dreibelbis, Latina Voices Co-Host Sofia Adrogue, Stewart Builder’s Mark Stewart, and Herbster Angus Farms CEO Charles Herbster.
âI have been supporting Helping a Hero for a decade and Iâm humbled by the work they continue to do to help our wounded warriors,â said Greenwood, who hosted the Annual Helping a Hero Gala and presented the Lee Greenwood Patriot Awards. âThis year proves that there is nothing that can stand in the way of our love and support for our nationâs heroes. It is an honor to partner with Helping a Hero and help with giving back to our wounded warriors who sacrifice so much for our nation.â
âWe extend our deepest thanks and appreciation to Lee Greenwood, our sponsors, supporters, honorees, board members, advisory board members, and staff for making the event a huge success,â said Helping a Hero Chairman of the Board of Directors Hector Villareal. âI am honored to serve those that have served and sacrificed protecting our freedom. God bless the USA.â
DISClaimer Single Reviews: Jimmie Allen, Lee Brice, Lady A, Tim McGraw, Shy Carter, More
/by Robert K OermannThe Big Week is here. Is your shopping done? Have you wrapped everything? If not, hereâs a sampling of Nashville holiday music to get you in the mood.
Itâs been a bonanza year for this kind of record in Music City. By my count, there are 109 new Yuletide releases by Nashville artists great and small. I canât get to them all, but here are 13 selections.
Lee Brice has the Disc of the Day. The Shindellas, who collaborate with Jimmie Allen and Louis York on his debut Christmas single, win the DisCovery Award.
LADY A / “Christmas Through Your Eyes”
Writers: Charles Kelley/Dave Haywood/Hillary Scott; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Dann Huff; Label: BMLG Records
â As sweet as a sugarplum fairy. The gentle acoustic textures, lilting pace and soft soprano lead create a twinkling holiday mood.
NICK LOWE & LOS STRAITJACKETS / “Winter Wonderland”
Writers: Felix Bernard/Richard Smith; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Nick Lowe; Label: Yep Roc
â File this under âstocking rocking.â Loweâs wry, droll delivery carries the arrangement with Nashvilleâs favorite masked band romping and twanging merrily in accompaniment. Highly recommended, as well as their equally zesty take on âLet It Snow.â
LEE BRICE / “Go Tell It On the Mountain”
Writers: none listed; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Lee Brice/Cody LaBelle; Label: Curb Records
â Turn it up. Brice is in rare form here, delivering an intense, fiery vocal performance that raises the rafters. Stacked harmonies and cascading instruments pile on the emotional ride. A fabulous sound.
THE OAK RIDGE BOYS / “Down Home Christmas”
Writers: Aaron Raitiere/Mando Saenz; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Dave Cobb; Label: Lightning Rod/Thirty Tigers
â As the feature attraction at the Opryland Resort, the Oaks are the âofficialâ Nashville spokesmen for the season. This bopping ditty is a toe tapping treat, sung in full four-part harmony throughout. Itâs the title tune to a green-vinyl LP.
MITCHELL TENPENNY / “Neon Christmas”
Writers: Mitchell Tenpenny/Lindsay Rimes/Matt Rogers; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Lindsay Rimes; Label: RiverHouse/Columbia
â Hey, baby, letâs head to the neighborhood dive bar, drink beer and dance to the jukebox to celebrate the season. A rollicking good time, and the title tune to Tenpennyâs new Yule-themed EP.
FLORIDA GEORGIA LINE / “Lit This Year”
Writers: Brian Kelley/Tyler Hubbard/Corey Crowder; Publishers: none listed; Producer: FGL & Corey Crowder; Label: Big Machine
â âThat Christmas tree ainât the only thing thatâs lit this year.â This light-hearted stomper is as country as grits, what with the drawled vocals, banjo notes and deep-twang guitar work. A very hillbilly good time is had by all.
SHY CARTER / “All I Want for Christmas Is You”
Writers: Mariah Carey/Walter Afanasieff; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Byron Gallimore; Label: Warner
â It starts out spare, then gradually adds rhythm elements. I takes a little while to stop missing Mariah Careyâs rocking arrangement, but if you let this roll, it will get under your skin as a slow-burn jam. Carterâs soulful voice stays in the spotlight all the while. Definitely the best R&B Nashville release of the season.
DAN + SHAY / “Take Me Home for Christmas”
Writers: Andy Albert/Dan Smyers/Jordan Reynolds/Jordan Schmidt/Mitchell Tenpenny/Shay Mooney; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Dan Smyers; Label: Warner
â Wafting, rolling pop country with a winning tune and a shuffling, jaunty rhythm track. Pleasant and listenable.
ROB THOMAS & ABBY ANDERSON / “I Believe in Santa Claus”
Writers: Dolly Parton; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Marshall Altman; Label: Emblem/Atlantic
â The Matchbox Twenty rock great and the country newcomer sound terrific harmonizing together on this Kenny & Dolly favorite. I missed the tempo and bounce of the original, although this slower-paced rendition does bring out the wistfulness of the lyric. Ear opening.
JIMMIE ALLEN, LOUIS YORK & THE SHINDELLAS / “What Does Christmas Mean”
Writers: Charles T Harmon/Claude Kelly; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Louis York; Label: Stoney Creek
â Allenâs first Christmas single is a collaboration with the songwriting/production duo Louis York plus the Nashville female R&B trio The Shindellas. It has a delightful retro, doo-wop soul/pop groove with plenty of shooby-dooby-doos and a snappy beat. This one is fun, fun, fun.
TIM McGRAW / “It Wasnât His Child”
Writers: Skip Ewing; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Danny Hemingson/Steve Gibson/Byron Gallimore; Label: Big Machine Records
â This is one of the most expressive vocals of McGrawâs distinguished career. The durable Nashville ballad has always been unusual as a version of the Christmas story thatâs told from the point of view of Joseph. The superstar more than does it justice.
T.G. SHEPPARD & KELLY LANG / “Christmas in Mexico”
Writers: T.G. Sheppard/Kelly Lang; Publishers: none listed; Producer: none listed; Label: WMG/Time Life
â Kellyâs lustrous alto takes the lead with T.G. providing expert vocal harmony support here. The lively track features steel drums, mariachi trumpets, gut-string guitar and audio joy. Highly recommended.
BRETT YOUNG / “Silver Bells”
Writers: Jay Livingston/Ray Evans; Publishers: none listed; Producer: Keaton Simons/Noah Needleman; Label: BMLG Records
â This familiar holiday staple gets a highly imaginative arrangement in this release. Brettâs distinctive phrasing is accompanied by hip-hop beats, jazzy guitar work, steel accents and softly sighed backup voices. Well worth your attention.
Cage The Elephant To Play Bread And Roses’ Winter Benefit
/by Lorie HollabaughCage The Elephant is set to perform a full band and electric virtual concert for Bread & Rosesâ Winter Benefit on Jan. 30. The special show will be broadcast from Blackbird Studio in Nashville, and will be available to watch exclusively on Nugs.net.
The night will consist of music, fundraising and celebration to support the essential work of Bread & Roses. The fundraiser will generate critical support for the nonprofit arts organization which produces free, live music and entertainment for Bay Area children, teens, adults, and elders who donât have the ability to easily experience the power of the arts any other way. Tickets are available here, and previously purchased Eventbrite tickets will be honored for the new broadcast event.
The band won their second Grammy Award for 2020âs Best Rock Album with Social Cues, and has released four additional studio albums âtheir self-titled debut, 2011âs Thank You, Happy Birthday, the Gold-certified Melophobia, and the Grammy-winning Tell Me Iâm Pretty.
Veteran Music Mogul Joe Johnson Passes
/by Robert K OermannPictured (L-R): Randy Rayburn, Joe Johnson, David Bennett at Johnson 89th birthday party.
Joe Johnson, who made his mark as label executive, record producer and the publisher of dozens of hit songs, has died at age 93.
Johnson produced, published and/or promoted more than 150 hits. He was behind such successes as âTequilaâ by The Champs (1958), âWishful Thinkingâ by Wynn Stewart (1960), âThe One You Slip Around Withâ by Jan Howard (1960), âLiesâ by The Knickerbockers (1966) and âSignsâ by The Five Man Electrical Band (1971). He built the Music Row office building that has housed GAC and RFD-TV.
His career as a music executive touched the lives of Willie Nelson, Lorrie Morgan, Jan and Dean, Marty Robbins, Gene Autry, Ricky Nelson, Chubby Checker, Harlan Howard, Glen Campbell and dozens more.
âHe was one of the last survivors of those charismatic record men who shaped this business,â said his friend and admirer Rick Sanjek. âI found his energy, demeanor and vision inspirational.â
Johnson suffered a stroke in 2018 and had been in an assisted-living facility in Hendersonville since then. He died there on Tuesday (Dec. 22).
Joe Johnson was born in 1927 in Cookeville, Tennessee. He attended Vanderbilt University law school. He went to work for Columbia Records in the early 1950s.
He was initially charged with promoting the discs of the companyâs pop stars, including Tony Bennett (âRags to Riches,â 1953), Doris Day (âSecret Love,â 1954), Frankie Laine, Johnnie Ray, Roy Hamilton, The Four Lads and Guy Mitchell.
Johnson was sent to Texas to investigate the emerging rockabilly style. He saw Elvis Presley there and urged his label to sign âThe Hillbilly Cat.â Instead, he was instructed to replicate the then-unknown artistâs songs. So he took âThatâs All Rightâ to Marty Robbins, who had a big country hit with it in 1955. Johnson also produced the 1954 Jimmy Dickens favorite âYâAll Come.â
He promoted the labelâs entire country roster of that era, including Carl Smith, George Morgan, Gene Autry, Lefty Frizzell and Ray Price, as well as Robbins and Dickens. He formed a particular attachment with Autry, who hired Johnson to be the âadvance manâ for his road show. When Autry quit touring, he chose Johnson to run his music companies in L.A.
On an Autry recording visit to Nashville, he took the superstar to The Tennessee State Prison. They heard the incarcerated group The Prisonaires singing their composition âJust Walkinâ In the Rain.â He arranged for Autryâs Golden West Melodies to buy the publishing to âJust Walkinâ in the Rainâ and then pitched the song to Columbiaâs Johnnie Ray. It became a massive pop hit for the singer in 1956.
In 1957, Autry, Johnson and businessman Johnny Thompson used the profits from âJust Walkinâ in the Rainâ to found Challenge Records and JAT Music. In October 1958, Autry sold his share to his two partners so that he could invest in hotel properties and the California Angels baseball team. Thompson became the Challenge general manager. Johnson handled A&R musical responsibilities.
Initially, the companies prospered thanks to Johnson publishing such tunes as âIâm Availableâ (Margie Rayburn, 1957) and âIâll Be Thereâ (Ray Price, 1957). Challengeâs first recording success was âSo Toughâ by the r&b vocal group The Kuf-Linx in 1958.
The backup band on that record was The Champs, who had a massive hit with âTequilaâ later that year. Published by JAT, âTequilaâ was at No. 1 on the pop charts for five weeks, became an international smash and won a Grammy Award. Among the future stars who performed as members of The Champs were Glen Campbell and the hit pop duo Seals & Crofts.
Produced by Joe Johnson, Jerry Wallace had a string of pop hits on Challenge. These included âPrimrose Laneâ (1959), âShutters and Boardsâ (1962) and âIn the Misty Moonlightâ (1964).
In 1961, Joe Johnson bought out partner Johnny Thompson. He also bought 4 Star Records and its publishing company that year. This brought him the income from such evergreen copyrights as âRelease Me,â âLonely Street,â âStop the World and Let Me Off,â âHot Rod Lincoln,â âJust Out of Reachâ and âAm I That Easy to Forget.â 4 Starâs recording artists had included Hank Locklin, Patsy Cline, Webb Pierce, The Maddox Brothers & Rose, Stuart Hamblen, Jimmy Dean, T. Texas Tyler and Roy Clark. So Johnson instantly had many options for repackaging.
Meanwhile, on Challenge, Jan and Deanâs âHeart and Soulâ charted in 1961. The Blossoms (including Darlene Love) answered the big hit âMother in Lawâ with âSon in Lawâ on Challenge that same year. Marty Balin, later of Jefferson Airplane, was a Challenge artist in 1962. Wayne Newton, Gene Vincent and future Monkees member Mickey Dolenz were among the other pop acts who were on Challenge Records.
Johnson acquired âLimbo Rockâ as an instrumental for The Champs in 1962. Chubby Checkerâs people added lyrics, and the âTwistâ star scored a big hit with it later that year.
Challenge singer-songwriter Jerry Fuller provided Ricky Nelson with major hits including âTravelinâ Manâ (1961), âA Wonder Like Youâ (1961), âYoung Worldâ (1962) and âItâs Up to Youâ (1963). The teen superstar also recorded 21 songs written by Challenge Records artist Baker Knight.
Golden West Melodies songwriter Dave Burgessâthe leader of The Champs and the author of the Price hit âIâll Be There ââdid his part by providing Nelson with several more successes. As a result of all these connections, Joe Johnson tried to sign Ricky Nelson to Challenge, but failed.
Johnson co-published the first 15 songs written by Harlan Howard. This led to Johnsonâs re-entry into country music. He produced Wynn Stewartâs breakthrough hits on Challenge, including âWishful Thinkingâ (1960) and âBig Big Loveâ (1962). Challenge also helped launch the careers of country artists Jeannie Seely, Jan Howard, Justin Tubb, Bobby Bare and Donna Fargo, among others.
In 1964, Joe Johnson became a co-founder of the Academy of Country Music (ACM). He also helped provide the seed money to produce the pilot of its annual awards show.
The Knickerbockers brought his label into the rock era with its Beatles-styled 1966 hit âLies.â The following year, Johnson pitched âRelease Meâ to Englebert Humperdinck and reaped the benefits of a worldwide pop smash by the song. He next scored by publishing âSignsâ by the Canadian group Five Man Electrical Band in 1971. It earned a Gold Record.
Joe Johnson moved back to Nashville in 1972. He got Jerry Wallace signed as a country artist to Decca and produced the starâs comeback hits, including the CMA Award nominated âTo Get to Youâ (1972), plus âIf You Leave Me Tonight Iâll Cryâ (1972), âDo You Know What Itâs Like to Be Lonesomeâ (1973) and âDonât Give Up on Meâ (1973).
Johnson reactivated 4 Star Records in 1975. He built the 4 Star Building across from the United Artists Tower on Music Row with the intention of housing the label, a song publishing company, a recording studio, a video soundstage and a manufacturing plant under one roof.
He reissued Patsy Clineâs 1959 recording of âLifeâs Railway to Heaven” on 4 Star, and it made the charts in 1978. Despite this and 4 Star discs by Lorrie Morgan, The LeGarde Twins, George Morgan, Bonnie Guitar and others, Johnson was forced to sell the building and his publishing catalog in 1980.
He retained the Challenge and 4 Star recordings. He recorded Willie Nelson singing âduetsâ with Patsy Cline on âJust a Closer Walk with Theeâ and âLifeâs Railway to Heaven.â Johnson had Sony-ATV administer the licenses for his master recordings, since thatâs where his song-publishing copyrights also reside. There have been legal entanglements over his former holdings for decades.
The 4 Star Building at 49 Music Square West has housed the offices of the GAC cable TV channel, the Bullet TV production complex and Quad Recording Studios. More recent tenants include RFD-TV, Trey Turner artist management and Hippie Radio 94.5.
Joe Johnsonâs other business interests included the management company Advance Artists and a background-music production firm in partnership with the 3M Company to compete with Muzak.
An avid golfer, he launched a Nashville pro-celebrity golf tournament. Joe Johnson continued to play until age 85.
He is survived by his children Elizabeth Jane Johnson Donoho, Margaret Lane Johnson Palubicki, Joseph âBeauâ Burgess Johnson and Charles Martin Johnson, plus four grandchildren. His memory is also cherished by his ex-wife, Marianne Rippey.
Funeral arrangements are being handled by Taylor Funeral Home in Dickson, Tennessee. Joe Johnson will be buried at the Burgess Family cemetery at Upper Cherry Creek Cemetery in Sparta, Tennessee.
Brett Young Plans Caliville Getaway With Fans In Palm Springs In June
/by Lorie HollabaughBrett Young is heading to the desert next year for his first-ever âCaliville Weekendâ in Palm Springs, California on June 18-21, 2021. The experience, presented by Pollen and curated by Young, will feature daily live performances, wellness activities, pool parties, plenty of surprises and more.
âBringing us all together for a weekend in one of my favorite places in the world is definitely a dream come true for me,â Young said. âI canât wait for everyone to see what we have planned for them next summer!â
Ticket packages are available now here. All event packages include hotel accommodations, payment plans available and only $25 deposit to reserve your spot.
Young’s latest single, âLady,â a heart-bending love letter to his daughter and wife written with Ross Copperman and Jon Nite shortly before his first daughter Presleyâs birth in October 2019, is currently rising up the charts. While touring is on hold, Young has been tapped for several high-profile, all-genre live streams in an effort to bring music and relief to fans across the world including Live at The Ryman, Leviâs 5:01 Music Series, Visibleâs Red Rocks Unpaused, Pepsiâs Unmute Your Voice Concert and Camping Worldâs Taking The Highways Across America series.
Scott And Sandi Borchetta Announce First Five Grant Recipients Awarded Through The Music Has Value Fund
/by Alex ParryJust over fifteen years ago, Scott Borchetta opened the doors of a small office on Music Row for a start-up label he named Big Machine Records. To celebrate the labelâs historic 15-year successes, BMLG President/CEO Scott and his wife Sandi Borchetta, who is BMLGâs Senior Vice President of Creative, announced the launch of a grant fund for 501c3 non-profit music schools and organizations, awarding fifteen recipients with $10,000 grants through the Music Has Value fund.
The first five organizations to receive a grant have been announced including during a ZOOM call with the Borchettaâs. The organizations are as follows:
Chattanooga, Tennesseeâs Chattanooga Boys Choir
Tacoma, Washingtonâs Ted Brown Music Outreach
Higley, Arizonaâs United Sound
Bostonâs Education Through Music
Oklahoma Cityâs El Sistema Oklahoma
âWhen we set out on this journey a little over 15 years ago, the mission was the same then as it is nowâfind great artists and make great music,â said Borchetta. âMusic comes at us from all corners in all shapes and all sizes. Sandi and I feel the responsibility to continue to enable opportunities for all students to experience music-making, whether itâs the sheer joy of just doing it… all the way to successful recording artist. These first five recipients of MHV grants all have a unique take, and challenge, to carry out this mission. We applaud them and proudly support them.â
The Borchettasâ Music Has Value Fund is a fund they created in 2015 to provide financial support to organizations which support those who make music, aspire to make music, and access and appreciate music.
New License For U.S. Digital Audio Mechanicals Available January 1st
/by Lorie HollabaughThe new blanket mechanical license covering the use of musical works in the U.S. by eligible digital audio services established by The Music Modernization Act of 2018 will be available beginning January 1, 2021. The arrival of this new licensing system will mark the beginning of a new era of greater efficiency and transparency in mechanical licensing for musical works in the U.S.
For most digital service providers operating digital audio services in the U.S. that offer interactive streaming or digital downloads to consumers, the MMA imposes several new obligations that they will be required by law to fulfill. Some require immediate action, while others must be completed no later than February 15, 2021. The MMA created two new organizations to help DSPs fulfill their new responsibilities: The Mechanical Licensing Collective, which is responsible for administering this new blanket license, and the Digital Licensee Coordinator, which is responsible for representing the digital audio services that will be operating under the new blanket license.
The new blanket license offers a host of benefits to DSPs that opt to secure it, including helping to make the administration and payment of mechanical royalties much easier and more effective and providing services with a way to ensure that they are properly licensed to use all of the musical works that they make available on their services. DSPs that secure the blanket will also avoid the costly liability that would arise from using works that were not properly licensed. Finally, even if a service elected not to secure the blanket despite its many benefits, the MMA still imposes a number of reporting obligations on all but the smallest of those services. For this reason, The MLC and DLC hope that any service eligible to operate under the new blanket license will choose to do so.
âThe MLC has engaged with more than 50 DSPs so far, both to make sure they aware of their new legal responsibilities and to preview the resources weâve created for them, including reporting specifications and the templates for notices to The MLC,â said Kris Ahrend, CEO of The MLC. âThese resources are all on The MLCâs website, and our DSP Relations Team is available to answer any questions about them that DSPs might have. All of this should ensure that currently-operating DSPs are in a position to begin operating under the new blanket license starting on January 1, 2021.â