Bill Monroe’s Estate Is For Sale, Including Cabin, Fiddle and Name Rights

Bill Monroe’s Estate Is For Sale, Including Cabin, Fiddle and Name Rights

Bill Monroe’s estate is for sale, including name, image and likeness rights.

Bill, who died in 1996, popularized traditional bluegrass music in the U.S. as a singer, instrumentalist and influential bandleader. The “Father of Bluegrass,” as he was known, scored hits on the country charts during the 1940s and 1950s, including “Kentucky Waltz,” “Wicked Path of Sin” and “Gotta Travel On.” He is one of the few artists inducted into the International Bluegrass Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Some of the items included in the estate sale:

  • Uncle Pen’s Cabin, where Bill lived with his uncle from 1927–1929 after his parents died
  • BillMonroe.com
  • Name, image and likeness rights
  • Last will and testament
  • Personal record collection
  • Fiddle, with Bill’s initials inscribed

Interested parties should contact Tony Conway, Conway Entertainment Group, at 615-724-1818 for more information.

photos courtesy of Monroe Enterprises

Watch Luke Combs Perform His No. 1 Hit, “Hurricane,” & New Single, “When It Rains It Pours,” on “Today”

Watch Luke Combs Perform His No. 1 Hit, “Hurricane,” & New Single, “When It Rains It Pours,” on “Today”

Tuning up for his CMA Fest and Bonnaroo performances this week in Tennessee, Luke Combs dropped by the Today show studio in NYC this morning (June 4) to perform his debut No. 1 single, “Hurricane,” as well as his new single, “When It Rains It Pours.”

Luke released his debut album, This One’s For You, on June 2. The 12-song offering, which was recorded in March 2016, features a dozen songs that Luke co-wrote.

“I think it’s a good synopsis of who I am,” says Luke to Nash Country Daily. “I don’t think there’s one track that sounds the same as another. It’s not in one lane. From track to track, it’s different every time. I wrote some of these songs over two years ago, so it’s been a long journey for these songs, and I’m excited for people to finally get their hands on them. We’ve got folks who have been to 30-something shows at this point. And they’ve heard stuff on the album a bunch of times, and they’re ready to be able to listen to it in their car or at home.”

Watch Luke perform “Hurricane” and “When It Rains It Pours” below.

Jimmy’s blog: Currie still hasn’t made decision on Lady Vols issue

Jimmy’s blog: Currie still hasn’t made decision on Lady Vols issue

Tennessee athletic director John Currie has been on the job since April 1.

He was hired Feb. 28.

One of the most polarizing issues he inherits is whether to restore the Lady Vols nickname and logo to all women’s sports, rather than have it apply to just women’s basketball.

Former Tennessee AD Dave Hart probably angered more people with his decision to implement “One Tennessee’’ than any verdict he rendered.

Currie has had two months on the job, three months overall, to digest the issue.

His thoughts now?

“I don’t have a full answer to all those questions, although I have been really appreciative of the way people have expressed their opinion on the Lady Vols brand and the Lady Vols logo,’’ Currie said.

“I personally have a tremendous sense of appreciation of the history of what women’s athletics at the University of Tennessee has been and meant to for all of college athletics. I appreciate that very, very much.

“It’s a really interesting issue and I know it is one that has caused pain and a feeling of disrespect among some of our constituents and I don’t like that. I don’t like pain and disrespect. So part of what we’re trying to do is be as respectful as possible in considering the different aspects and nuances of the issue.’’

With the start of classes and some women’s sports at UT just a few months away, Currie was asked when he would make a decision.

“I think it’s tough to put a timetable on something like that,’’ Currie said. “Part of my obligation, and I think the chancellor would concur, is to really listen. There’s lots of different folks. Most of our student-athletes are not on campus now. I think we need to be deliberate in that process. I also think it’s important to show a commitment to all of our athletes.’’

To that end, Currrie has attended a number of sporting events in the past few months – baseball, softball, tennis, track meets.

Currie said the commitment to women’s sports isn’t just with a logo but with “actions and words and hearts, and how we care about both men’s and women’s student athletes at the University of Tennessee.’’

But if Currie reinstates Lady Vols, that would be commitment enough for many women’s sports followers.


Sponsored by Big Kahuna Wings: the wings that changed it all

 

Five Vols Enshrined in Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame

Five Vols Enshrined in Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame

Tennessee football VFLs at the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame’s 51st Annual Induction Banquet at the Omni-Nashville Hotel / Credit: UT Athletics

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Five Tennessee football VFLs were among those enshrined at the Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame’s 51st Annual Induction Banquet Saturday at the Omni-Nashville Hotel.

The 11-member 2017 induction class featured former Tennessee football stars Chad Clifton, Willie Gault, Haskel Stanback, Graham Vowell (posthumous) and Al Wilson.

A pair of Tennessee track national champions and Olympians also were “honored” by the Hall of Fame Saturday, as Justin Gatlin was named the Male Professional Athlete of the Year and current Vols sophomore Christian Coleman was the organization’s Male Amateur Athlete of the Year for the second consecutive year.

Former Southeastern Conference Commissioner Roy Kramer, a graduate of Maryville College, also was honored Saturday as the 2017 recipient of the Pat Summitt Lifetime Achievement Award.

The Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame, which held its first induction banquet in 1966, has as its goal to enshrine successful teams and individuals who display sportsmanship, good character and success, creating a legacy for others to follow. The Tennessee Sports Hall of Fame Museum is housed in Bridgestone Arena in Nashville.

Clifton, who is from Martin, Tennessee, enjoyed an All-SEC career at Tennessee from 1995-2000. After using his redshirt in 1995, he emerged as a fixture on the Vols’ offensive line, earning All-SEC honors in 1997 and 1998 and Sporting News All-American honors as a senior in 1999. UT went 43-7 with two SEC titles (1997, 1998) and one national title (1998) during Clifton’s four-year playing career at Rocky Top. This past summer, Clifton was inducted into the Green Bay Packers Hall of Fame in honor of his outstanding 12-year, 165-game NFL career with the Packers, who selected him the second round of the 2000 NFL Draft with the 44th overall pick. He was a two-time Pro Bowl selection (2007, 2010) and a member of the Packers’ Super Bowl XLV champion team.

Gault was a two-sport standout for the Vols, starring both on the football team and the track and field team. He earned All-America honors as a senior in 1982, hauling in 50 receptions for 668 yards and four touchdowns. In 1980, he led the NCAA with three kickoff returns for touchdowns. Gault finished his UT career with 89 receptions for 1,482 yards and 10 touchdowns, 78 kick returns for 1,854 yards (23.8-yard average) and four touchdowns and 78 punt returns for 659 yards (8.4-yard average) and one touchdown. He was a prolific hurdler as well, setting 12 school track records, and was an 11-time All-American and a six-time SEC Champion from 1981 to 1983. Gault was the 1983 NCAA indoor champion in both the 60-yard dash (6.18) and 60-yard hurdles (6.98) and ran on Tennessee’s 1983 NCAA outdoor champion 4×100.

Stanback was a running back for the Vols from 1971 to 1973, earning AP Second Team All-SEC honors in 1972 and 1973. He played in 33 games and had 391 career carries for 1,730 yards and 20 touchdowns. He enjoyed his best season in 1972 when he ran for 890 yards and 13 touchdowns (tied for sixth-most in a single season in UT history) on 183 carries, averaging 4.9 yards per carry. Stanbeck was drafted by the Cincinnati Bengals in the fifth round (114th overall pick) of the 1974 NFL Draft and played for the Atlanta Falcons from 1974 to 1979, totaling 2,662 rushing yards and 25 touchdowns on 728 carries and 786 receiving yards and one score on 98 receptions.

Vowell owns the distinction of being Tennessee’s first football All-American. He earned Walter Camp, Collier’s Magazine Third Team All-American honors and All-Southern honors in 1916. Vowell played mostly at end, was a member of Tennessee’s 1914 SIAA champion team and was the team captain for UT’s 8-0-1 team in 1916. Vowell died on Nov. 17, 1963, at the age of 68.

Wilson played for the Vols from 1996 to 1998 and was an All-America selection from Tennessee’s 1998 undefeated national championship team and a two-time All-SEC honoree (1997, 1998). He finished his collegiate career with 272 tackles (188 solo), 11.0 sacks, eight fumbles forced, two fumbles recovered and two interceptions. Wilson was drafted by the Denver Broncos in the first round of the 1999 NFL Draft (31st overall selection) and played his entire eight-year career (1999 to 2006) for the Broncos. He was a five-time Pro Bowl selection (2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006) and finished his NFL career with 712 combined tackles (554 solo), 21.5 sacks, eight forced fumbles and seven fumbles recovered.

-UT Athletics

 

Huge Turnout for Chattanooga Caravan; Next Stop: Memphis

Huge Turnout for Chattanooga Caravan; Next Stop: Memphis

Holly Warlick, Bob Kesling, Butch Jones and Rick Barnes – UT / Credit: UT Athletics

CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — Chattanooga’s First Tennessee Pavilion hosted the University of Tennessee’s first Big Orange Caravan stop of 2017 Saturday, with nearly 1,000 passionate UT fans enjoying more than two hours of family-friendly fun with a collection of Tennessee coaches, administrators and Spirit Squad members. The caravan rolls into Memphis next Saturday.

Special guests from Tennessee Athletics Saturday in Chattanooga included Smokey, Vice Chancellor/Director of Athletics John Currie, Director of Broadcasting Bob Kesling, head basketball coaches Rick Barnes and Holly Warlick, head football coach Butch Jones and assistant football coaches Larry ScottBob ShoopRobert GillespieTommy Thigpen and Walt Wells.

As part of the new-look Caravan this year, Shelby Guthrie, a rising UT freshman from Chattanooga and graduate of Lookout Valley High School received a scholarship awarded by the Chattanooga UT Knoxville Alumni Chapter.

The next stop on this summer’s Big Orange Caravan summer outreach tour takes place next Sunday, June 11, from 6-8 p.m. CT at the Expo Center at Agricenter International/West Pavilion. Fans are encouraged to pre-register.

The Nashville stop coincides with the 51st annual UT All-Sports Picnic at The Barn at Sycamore Farms on Monday, July 10 (6-8 p.m. CT). Pricing and registration information for that event are forthcoming.

A Tri-Cities event is in the planning stages, and details will be forthcoming when a date and venue is finalized and secured.

Overheard: BOC Chattanooga

John Currie
(Opening remarks)
“This is awesome. A lot of times during the year, you all get in cars and drive up I-75 for two hours to come and see us in Knoxville. It was about time we came down here to see you. We appreciate your loyal support. I want to thank our coaches who came down today. There are a lot of staffs around the country that are sitting at the beach right now. Our coaches are working hard on behalf of the University of Tennessee.”

(On the Big Orange Caravan admission donation)
“The admissions fee that you all paid to get in today doesn’t go to us; it’s going to students in the Chattanooga area for scholarships. We have one of the best classes coming into Knoxville this year.”

Butch Jones
(On the Big Orange Caravan turnout)
”It’s all about Vol Nation. Even when we were coaching in the (nearby) camp this morning, you could kind of see the streets of Chattanooga being lined in orange. We’re very proud of it, and Vol Nation is very strong.”

(On his plans for the summer)
“Were going to go through military training with the United States military. This morning, we boarded a bus from Knoxville and drove over here to Chattanooga and did a camp and we’re here now with the greatest fans in America.”

Rick Barnes
(On what he’s been doing this summer)
“I’m waiting for football season! We have a couple new additions to our team, and we’re back at it. We’re all back in summer school right now.”

Holly Warlick
(On the Lady Vols’ incoming freshmen)
“We are excited to get our freshman class in. We have four kids that will bring a lot to the team. It’s really great to have them on campus wearing orange and being excited to be Lady Vols.”

(On Diamond DeShields and Mercedes Russell returning for their senior seasons)
“Diamond and Mercedes had a chance to go to the (WNBA) Draft, but they both decided to come back and take care of business. Obviously, I was thrilled by their decisions.”

-UT Athletics

 

Disco Party! Brad Paisley, Hunter Hayes, Charles Esten, Lindsay Ell & More Groove to the Sounds of the ’70s & ’80s [Exclusive Photo Gallery]

Disco Party! Brad Paisley, Hunter Hayes, Charles Esten, Lindsay Ell & More Groove to the Sounds of the ’70s & ’80s [Exclusive Photo Gallery]

Hosted by Kimberly Williams-Paisley and Blair Garner, the inaugural Disco Party to benefit the Alzheimer’s Association kicked off CMA Fest week on June 4 at Nashville’s Wildhorse Saloon.

Brad Paisley, Hunter Hayes, Charles Esten, Lindsay Ell, Chuck Wicks, Jerrod Niemann, Jamie O’Neal, High Valley, Ryan Kinder, Todd O’Neill and CJ Solar donned their best disco-era duds and hit the stage to perform tunes from the 1970s and ’80s.

In addition to raising awareness in the fight to end Alzheimer’s disease, the event raised more than $300,000 through a silent auction.

Performance highlights from the night include Jamie O’Neal’s “Lady Marmalade,” Hunter Hayes’ “September” and Charles Esten’s “Play That Funky Music” with Brad Paisley on guitar.

Check out the NCD photo gallery below, including red carpet and performance photos.

photos by Jason Simanek

Hank Williams Jr.’s “All My Rowdy Friends” Is Returning to ESPN’s “Monday Night Football”

Hank Williams Jr.’s “All My Rowdy Friends” Is Returning to ESPN’s “Monday Night Football”

Are you ready for some football? Hank Williams Jr. and all his rowdy friends are.

USA Today is reporting that Hank is coming back to ESPN’s Monday Night Football this fall with a new version of “All My Rowdy Friends Are Here on Monday Night.” Hank’s new version of the tune, which will feature two other artists to be revealed this week, will debut before the New Orleans Saints play the Minnesota Vikings on Sept. 11.

Hank, who began performing the opening tune for Monday Night Football in 1989, was canned from the gig in 2011 after making comments about President Obama and then-Republican House Speaker John Boehner.

Apparently, six years has healed any wounds that remained between Hank and ESPN.

“I never said, ‘Are you ready for some football’ on stage one time the last five or six years, but I will now,” said Hank to USA Today. “I’m feeling at home and it’s a real good thing . . . It’s kind of like the Nashville Predators playing for the Stanley Cup, it’s like ‘Wow.’”

Take a blast to the past and watch ABC’s 1990 version of Hank and his rowdy friends in action.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=718swIfZKtY

photo courtesy Webster PR

Watch Scotty McCreery Perform New Single, “Five More Minutes,” on “Fox and Friends”

Watch Scotty McCreery Perform New Single, “Five More Minutes,” on “Fox and Friends”

Scotty McCreery stopped by Fox and Friends on June 2 to chat with the hosts and perform his new single, “Five More Minutes,” which is currently No. 57 on Billboard’s Country Airplay chart after one week.

Scotty co-penned the deeply personal tune with Frank Rogers and Monty Criswell two weeks after the death of his grandfather in 2015.

“I wrote this song in early 2015, and the day that I wrote it, I tweeted that I thought I just wrote my favorite song I’ve ever written, and that still holds true today,” says Scotty to Nash Country Daily. “It was just a couple weeks after I lost my Granddaddy Bill, so I was just talking to [Frank and Monty] about that and where I was in my head space. Anytime you lose somebody, everybody thinks about things you wish you could’ve said to them before they passed or something you wish you could do again. For me, it would’ve been golfing with him. Just chatting about that and Monty had the idea for ‘Five More Minutes,’ and we rolled with it.”

Watch Scotty perform “Five More Minutes” below.

Watch Martina McBride Sing the National Anthem Before Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final

Watch Martina McBride Sing the National Anthem Before Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final

The NHL’s Nashville Predators were back in action against the Pittsburgh Penguins for Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Saturday night (June 3).

Like the Preds eight previous home playoff games, the performance of the national anthem was a star-studded affair—this time Martina McBride had the honor.

In Round 1 of the playoffs against the Chicago Blackhawks, Carrie Underwood (April 17) and Luke Bryan (April 20) sang the national anthem before Games 3 and 4, respectively.

In Round 2 against the St. Louis Blues, Little Big Town (April 30), Vince Gill (May 2) and Lady Antebellum (May 7) had the honors before Games 3, 4 and 6, respectively.

In the Western Conference Finals against the Anaheim Ducks, Keith Urban (May 16) delighted the crowd with an a cappella performance before Game 3, while Kelly Clarkson sang the anthem before Game 4 (May 18) and Trisha Yearwood got the nod before Game 6 (May 22).

Tonight, Martina McBride got the call to perform the anthem before the Preds’ first home game of the Stanley Cup Final. Watch Martina sing the anthem in front of the sellout crowd.

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