Featuring classics from Faron Young, Elvis Presley, Ferlin Husky, and more, the humble jukebox is a national treasure. But ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. In the late ’50s, “Don Owens’s TV Jamboree” was a must-see every Saturday for country music fans across the Washington metro area.
Released during a period of mourning, the collection helped ensure that her voice and the timeless songs she recorded would continue to captivate audiences for generations.
A 1957 television appearance on a groundbreaking country music show helped set one of the genre’s most iconic voices on the ...
On this day (February 11) in 1957, Patsy Cline released “Walkin’ After Midnight” as a single. Later that year, it would become her first single to reach the charts. It was also her first crossover hit ...
In terms of other country icons, Johnny Cash had the qualities Patsy Cline liked, according to Loretta Lynn. The “Coal Miner’s Daughter” was candid about her friendship with Cline and how it impacted ...
She knew her time on earth was short. When you think of the legends of country music, Patsy Cline has to be close to the top of the list. With classics like "Crazy” (which was written by Willie Nelson ...
Fifty-four years ago this month, three Grand Ole Opry members, including rising star Patsy Cline, were killed in a plane crash near Camden, Tennessee. The March 5th, 1963, tragedy also took the lives ...
Loretta Lynn — the “Coal Miner’s Daughter” who died at 90 Tuesday — had a special bond with another female country legend: Patsy Cline. The two singers — who were born just five months apart in 1932 — ...
The story of country music icon Patsy Cline‘s short career is filled with tragedy. When she flew to Kansas to participate in a memorial concert, her plane never made it back home to Nashville. She and ...
Country western music icon Patsy Cline was born just one year after the birth of my own mom Peggy. Patsy was born Sept. 8, 1932, and mom Peggy, Aug. 17, 1931. Tragically, Patsy died at age 30 in March ...