Bob Wills: Hubbin’ It

By Ruth Sheldon Hubbin’ It: The Life of Bob Wills was written by a fan, Ruth Sheldon, and privately published in 1938. It is one of four books recently republished in a cooperative effort by the Country Music Foundation Press and University of Illinois Press. The new title is Bob Wills: Hubbin’ It. Wills biographer […]

Never Broken: Songs Are Only Half the Story

By Jewel Kilcher While I was working on Faron Young’s biography, sister Kayo and I visited steel player Ben Keith at his farm in 2000. He told us he’d just returned from California, where he’d produced his second album on Jewel. We’d heard of her, of course, but she was a pop singer, and I’ve […]

DeFord Bailey: A Black Star in Early Country Music

By David C. Morton The Country Music Foundation Press recently partnered with The University of Illinois Press to reissue its out-of-print 1991 biography, DeFord Bailey: A Black Star in Early Country Music. The author, David C. Morton, first met Bailey when he went to the “Harmonica Wizard’s” apartment for an interview in 1973. They became […]

Stringbean: The Life And Murder Of A Country Music Legend

By Taylor Hagood Stringbean was the stage name of David Akeman, a star of the Grand Ole Opry and the television show Hee Haw. Wearing a long nightshirt and pair of pants belted together below his thighs, the embodiment of a human string bean, he worked his way into the hearts of fans around the […]

Western Edge: The Roots And Reverberations Of Los Angeles Country-Rock

By the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum staff “What Was the First Country-Rock Record?” That is the title of one essay in Western Edge: The Roots and Reverberations of Los Angeles Country-Rock, the companion book to a multi-year exhibition currently at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville, Tennessee. In […]

Buddy Emmons: Steel Guitar Icon

By Steve Fishell Buddy Emmons is known as the world’s foremost steel guitarist from the latter half of the twentieth century. His musical and technological innovations revolutionized the pedal steel guitar, a console-type instrument with knee levers and foot pedals to alter the pitch of the strings. Brought to Nashville by singer Little Jimmy Dickens […]

The Hank Snow Story

By Hank Snow, with Jack Ownbey and Bob Burris One of the famous singers from my youth who seems to be forgotten today is Hank Snow. I don’t hear his name mentioned or his songs played on classic country stations. He was Mom’s favorite singer. I can remember her singing “Let me go, let me […]

Little Miss Dynamite: The Life and Times of Brenda Lee

By Brenda Lee with Robert Oermann and Julie Clay When Brenda Lee published her autobiography in 2002, I purchased a copy to use as source material for my Faron Young biography. Little Miss Dynamite: The Life and Times of Brenda Lee was co-written with Robert Oermann and Julie Clay. Her first-person story is interspersed throughout […]

Iceland’s Secret: The Untold Story Of The World’s Biggest Con

By Jared Bibler During the global financial crisis of 2008, the three largest banks in Iceland failed within days of each other: Glitner on October 6, Landsbanki on October 7, and Kaupping on October 9. Iceland’s Secret: The Untold Story of the World’s Biggest Con—part memoir, part investigative journalism—chronicles the financial collapse, the history of […]

The Music Of The Statler Brothers: An Anthology

By Don Reid The Statler Brothers spent almost four decades touring and recording as one of the top draws in country music. Brothers Harold and Don Reid, along with Phil Balsley and Lew DeWitt, two boyhood friends from their hometown of Staunton, Virginia, joined the Johnny Cash show as the Statler Brothers in 1964. While […]