Posts Tagged ‘Johnny Cash’

Opry Love Connections

Tuesday, February 1st, 2011

By Katrina Maddox, Marketing and Sales Assistant for the Opry

Put a little love in your heart! In honor of Valentine’s Day, here’s a list of my all-time favorite Opry love connections. Enjoy, and watch out for Cupid’s arrow!

10.  Music City Millennium Marryathon

More than 100 country music fan couples were wed on Valentine’s Day 2000 during the Music City Millennium Marryathon on the Opry stage. The couples were serenaded by the Opry’s Connie Smith plus Bryan White and John Berry, who offered his signature “Your Love Amazes Me.”

8.  Jimmy and Mona Dickens

My favorite Opry member is also Mona Dickens’ favorite, her husband, Jimmy. Mona was a big fan of Jimmy’s  music when they first met after a show on one of his tours. Years later, the couple celebrated their 25th Wedding Anniversary on the Opry stage. The two marked 40 years of marriage last December.

 

8. Blake Shelton and Miranda Lambert

The Opry’s newest addition, Blake Shelton, has on occasion surprised Opry audiences by inviting fiancé Miranda Lambert out for a song. Following Blake’s Opry induction, Miranda posted on Twitter, “I’m engaged to an official Opry member!!!!”

7.  Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood

Opry members and power couple Garth Brooks and Trisha Yearwood have collaborated on dozens of songs including “In Another’s Eyes.” In September of 1997 he shocked fans when he joined Trisha on the Opry stage unannounced during a performance of that very song.

6.  Vince Gill and Amy Grant

Vince Gill wed Amy Grant during a quiet ceremony in Nashville. Six weeks later, Vince brought Amy to the Grand Ole Opry and joined her on stage for her debut performance, singing “How Great Thou Art.”

5.  Ricky Skaggs and Sharon White

For Ricky Skaggs and Sharon White (of The Whites), it was their love of bluegrass that brought them together. The two were wed in 1981, and both became members of the Grand Ole Opry within the next five years.

 

4.  George Jones and Tammy Wynette

As with many other country artists, Tammy Wynette idolized Opry artists such as Hank Williams, Patsy Cline, and George Jones. Little did she know that she would one day marry Jones or that she’d earn the title “The First Lady of Country Music.” Though the Jones/Wynette marriage didn’t last, their recorded collaborations can still be heard nearly everyday on 650 WSM. One of my favorites is “Golden Ring.”

3.  Trace Adkins and Rhonda Forlaw

After his debut performance on the Grand Ole Opry, Trace Adkins got down on one knee and proposed to then-girlfriend Rhonda Forlaw who was sitting in the audience. She accepted.

2.  Marty Stuart and Connie Smith

Marty Stuart met Connie Smith when he was 12 years old and proclaimed to his mother later in the night that he was going to marry Ms. Smith someday. In July of 1997 he proved this to be true when the two were wed. The couple continues to wow fans with frequent duet performances on the nights they both appear on the Opry.

1.  Johnny Cash and June Carter

Johnny Cash met the love of his life June Carter backstage at the Grand Ole Opry. 13 years later during a live performance in Ontario, Canada, Johnny asked June to marry him. The rest is history.

Ten Greatest Country Story Songs

Thursday, June 24th, 2010

The List on opry.com
By Dan Rogers, Grand Ole Opry Senior Marketing Manager. Dan says he likes a great story and a great song, but he loves a great story song.

10. Where’ve You Been (written by Jon Vezner and Don Henry and recorded by Kathy Mattea)
I’ve watched grown men cry when listening to this song sung by its writers at Nashville’s Bluebird Café. This one isn’t just a story song, it’s a true story song, inspired by Vezner’s real-life grandparents.

9. Three Wooden Crosses (written by Doug Johnson and Kim Williams and recorded by Randy Travis)
The first of two songs on my list that would have made the local traffic report. You know the story is going to be compelling when you’re introduced to its characters in the first line: “a farmer and a teacher, and hooker and a preacher…” One of my favorite word groupings on which to sing along of the past ten years: “And that preacher whispered ‘Cant’ you see the Promised Land?’ as he laid his blood-stained Bible in that hooker’s hand.”

8. A Boy Named Sue (written by Shel Silverstein and recorded by Johnny Cash)
If you tried to sell other musical genres on a tune about a son meeting his biological father and introducing himself with the line, “My name is Sue! How do you do?” you’d be shown the door. Country fans and Johnny Cash aficionados said, “bring it on.”

7. What’s Your Mamma’s Name
(written by Dallas Frazier and Earl Montgomery and recorded by Tanya Tucker)
Yes, the old man in a ragged coat did offer a little green eyed girl a question and offered her a nickel’s worth of candy if she’d tell, but only because he hoped the girl might be his long-lost daughter.

6. El Paso (written and recorded by Marty Robbins)
My dad’s favorite country song tells quite a long, winding tale, and without repeating a chorus. I’ve heard several try this one on for size on the Opry stage, but no one did it like Hall of Famer Robbins.

5. Coat of Many Colors (written and recorded by Dolly Parton)
The country music genius that is Dolly Parton tells an autobiographical tale from her childhood and shares a poignant life lesson all in less than four minutes. I’d like to take a look at Dolly’s bank account today vs. the accounts of the bullies who made fun of her homemade coat years ago. She who has the last laugh laughs hardest, Miss Dolly.

4. Ol Red (written by James “Bo” Bohman, Don Goodman, and Mark Sherrill and recorded by Blake Shelton)
A prison break, dogs in heat, and perhaps the best closing lyric in story song history, “Now there’s red haired blue ticks all in the South, love got me in here and love got me out.”

3. Ode To Billie Joe (written and recorded by Bobbie Gentry)
We might all have a better idea of what in the world drove Billie Joe McCallister to jump off the Tallahatchie bridge to his assumed death had Bobbie Gentry’s song not been cut nearly in half by record executives hoping to make its length more palatable for radio programmers. Then again, a longer “Ode to Billie Joe” might also have been a less mystical “Ode.” Still shrouded in mystery, some truths we know about the composition are that to this day Gentry swears there is nothing autobiographical about it and that the bridge in question can be said to have committed suicide, itself, having collapsed in 1972.

2. Carroll County Accident (written by Bob Ferguson and recorded by Porter Wagoner)
What a genius of an idea for a song! Since people can’t take their eyes off at an automobile accident when they drive by
one on the roadway, it stands to reason those same folks wouldn’t be able to keep from listening to this classic about
“the bloody seats, the broken glass, the tangled mess.” Add in a little adultery and a family secret told only to the listener and you have one of the most compelling stories ever set to a country beat.

1. Harper Valley, PTA (written by Tom T. Hall and recorded by Jeannie C. Riley)
If you have to debate whether or not a song is a story song, it’s not a story song. No question here, literally, as the first line of the song begins “I wanna tell you all a STORY ‘bout a Harper Valley widowed wife…” It’s the kind of story all of us who have ever wanted to tell some holier-than-thou blowhard where to go loves every single time we hear it.