FolkandCountryMusic
Beyoncé has hit a new high with her new country song “Texas Hold ‘Em.” Although much hay has been made about the single, it debuted in the No. 1 position on Billboard’s Hot Country Songs chart — which tallies streaming, airplay and sales. According to Rolling Stone, the former Destiny’s Child frontwoman holds the distinction as “the first Black woman artist ever to top [the chart] in the modern history of country music.” “16 Carriages,” which also dropped after the premiere of Beyoncé’s Verizon commercial during Super Bowl LVIII — entered the ranking at No. 9. As buzz builds for the March 29 r...
New York Daily News
Dolly Parton is taking the high road when it comes to Elle King‘s “horrible” and “profane” tribute that angered fans last month. The country music great broke her silence about the eyebrow-raising incident that led the Grand Ole Opry to issue a public apology. “Elle is really a great artist,” Parton told Extra about the birthday concert at the storied Nashville, Tennessee, venue. “She’s a great girl, and she’s been going through a lot of hard things lately. And she just had a little too much to drink. So, let’s just forgive that and forget it and move on, ’cause she felt worse than anybody eve...
New York Daily News
SEATTLE — Warmer months may seem a lifetime away, with water pipes in Seattle still thawing, but summer concert announcement season is already underway. Washington’s premier country music festival, Watershed, is set to return to the Gorge Amphitheatre on Aug. 2-4 and on Wednesday, the Live Nation-backed fest revealed its 2024 lineup. After abruptly canceling his appearance last year due to an illness, heavyweight country star Luke Bryan is set to return this summer as this year’s biggest name. Bryan is joined by breezy country-pop troupe Old Dominion and Hardy as headliners. Having first broke...
The Seattle Times
SAN DIEGO — Tom Smothers, who died Tuesday from cancer at the age of 86, was a folk music-playing comedian, not a rock 'n' roll star. But the CBS TV show he and his brother Dick co-hosted from 1967 to 1969, "The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour," hosted such top rock acts as the Doors, Cream, Jefferson Airplane and the Who, whose infamous 1967 performance on the show was capped by a pyrotechnic mishap that saw Who guitarist Pete Townshend's hair catch fire and part of Keith Moon's drum set explode. In June 1969, Tom Smothers and music author Paul Williams — the founder of the pioneering rock-musi...
The San Diego Union-Tribune
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