Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam Celebrates a Night of Great Music for a Worthy Cause [Photo Gallery]

Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam Celebrates a Night of Great Music for a Worthy Cause [Photo Gallery]

Overshadowed by the hubbub surrounding the Luke Bryan incident, the Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam on Nov. 30 was a tremendous night of music that benefited The Journey Home Project, an organization that supports U.S. military veterans.

In addition to a surprise appearance by Randy Travis to help present Charlie with a humanitarian award, the 15,784 capacity crowd at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena enjoyed a number of standout performances from the all-star cast that included 3 Doors Down, Larry the Cable Guy, Luke Bryan, Kid Rock, Travis Tritt, Chris Stapleton and Charlie.

Highlights of the show included Travis Tritt’s “Here’s a Quarter (Call Someone Who Cares), Chris Stapleton’s “Whiskey and You,” Kid Rock’s “All Summer Long,” Luke Bryan’s “Play It Again” and Charlie Daniels’ “The Devil Went Down to Georgia.”

“Looking back over my 50-plus-year career, this is among the top five shows I have ever done in my entire life, Volunteer Jam 2016,” said Charlie.

Check out a photo gallery of the night’s performances.

Dolly Parton and Jennifer Nettles Talk “Christmas of Many Colors” and Their Own Christmas Traditions

Dolly Parton and Jennifer Nettles Talk “Christmas of Many Colors” and Their Own Christmas Traditions

Dolly Parton and Jennifer Nettles returned to television Wednesday night (Nov. 30) in the highly anticipated holiday sequel, Dolly Parton’s Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love, on NBC. The sequel was a follow-up to Dolly’s original family story, Coat of Many Colors, which aired to rave reviews earlier this year.

Dolly Parton’s Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love continued with the story of young Dolly Parton as the Parton Family experienced a true Christmas miracle, drawing the Partons closer together than ever. Jennifer Nettles returned with a stellar performance as Dolly’s mother, Avie Lee Parton, and Ricky Schroder, Gerald McRaney and Alyvia Alyn Lind, who plays a young Dolly, reprised their roles.

Jennifer and Dolly sat down at a recent press conference to talk about the movie and the experience they had on set.

Can you give some insight to the casting for the movies, Coat of Many Colors and Christmas of Many Colors?

Dolly: You always take a lot of time when you are trying to put a movie together especially when it has to do with your family—with people you love. It was so important to me that all the people really represent my brothers and sisters, my mom and my dad. Ricky reminded me so much of my brothers and my dad and my dads people. So when we got ready to find daddy, I thought Ricky was the perfect person.

Jennifer had sent in a tape and she had darkened her hair—I didn’t even realize it was her. We were just looking and I said ‘that’s mama, that’s mama!” They said ‘do you know who that is?’ and I said, ‘It’s mama!’ The rest is history because I thought Jennifer was so perfect. Jennifer was the perfect person and I’m so proud of you and mom, who I know is watching, would be so proud.

Dolly Parton's Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love - Season 2016

How much is the sequel based on real life events?

Dolly: The sequel is other true stories from my life. It’s called Circle of Love and the circle of love represents, of course, the family circle and the halo and the crown of thorns and Jesus’ birthday but one of the stories in this is when we as children and my dad all made up money one Christmas to buy mama a wedding ring—she had a house full of kids and never had a wedding ring—that also represents the circle of love. All the stories about Coat of Many Colors, and if we wind up doing a sequel —which we might— it will be called Life of Many Colors, but it will all be based on different stories that really happened to us at some point along the way.

What was your relationship with Dolly before the audition?

Jennifer: I had met you, Dolly, a couple of times, but just in passing. One year we did a VH1 tribute to Reba, I met you there. One time at CMAfest I met you there, but this was just in passing and obviously as a fan. Having the opportunity to get to know you a bit more through these movies, not only in the times we spent together, but when you play a role like that—I was super excited for this sequel I will be honest. Not only in the opportunity as a process to get to make the movie but to learn more about your story as a little girl—to get to hear those stories continued because we see in you a women that everybody knows and we have these ideas about you, but to get to know the person from your story and your childhood, I think it makes it so much more intimate.

What was something that surprised you to learn about Dolly’s story through this experience?

Jennifer: I think some of the intimacies in the details are what you get more of. Obviously we know Judy, we have seen Judy in Dolly’s life—Judy Ogle—for all these years. But to get to know that story of that friendship, to get to know how that developed, to get to know how protective they were of each other and still are today. Those moments are what makes this movie that much more special because we get to know her as a person. When you get to know someone as a child, as children we are who we are in the purest sense, they have no filter—not that you have a filter now (laughs)—the authenticity that you have is what we love about you and what we love about Dolly so much, but to get to know that child is so special.

Dolly Parton's Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love - Season 2016

Is there one scene in the movie that means more to you when watching it?

Dolly: Yes, because I am executive producer, I had to go in to watch because we were trying to decide where the music should be and what songs we wanted to play over certain things. In the movie, when we are freezing to death and dying—we were so cold, we were trapped in our house, the snow had trapped us in because we boarded up the windows because of the wind and the cold, not knowing it was coming a blizzard. We were trapped in the house, we couldn’t get out, so when we got into that part when mama was praying and the tears were froze on our little faces (choking up)—when I was watching that I just can’t hardly bare it. It’s a good kind of pain though. It’s a sweet sorrow but I guess Parton is such sweet sorrow (laughs).

What’s one of the biggest things you want viewers to take away from this movie?

Dolly: I want people to feel better about themselves. I want them to feel in the Christmas spirit. I want them to feel closer as a family. I want them to feel closer to God because it really is like a faith based movie. We just want families to feel closer together because we are just kind of scattered so much as a family because of all the new technology —which is wonderful to have all these great things available to us—but we lose a lot about family. More than anything I just want people to feel the joy of Christmas and what Christmas is really about—which is Jesus—and about that love of family and just feeling happy.

Jennifer: I think I would love for people to feel connected and be reminded of their own stories. That’s what all art in it’s highest function and form does, is it connects and reminds us of our own stories. I hope that this story connects us more to ourselves and to each other.

What are some of your own Christmas traditions?

Jennifer: I have a son who is almost four years old and for me it has become all about that. It’s always been about family and food and those things are usually the traditions that we really celebrate. But now, getting to see the holiday through his eyes and getting to celebrate that tradition with him is pretty special for me.

Dolly: We just do what we always do, we get together with family. I’m like a child at Christmas. Christmas I love. I’ve got all these little nieces and nephews that I love and they love me. They call me GiGi. I have all these little nieces and nephews that come to my house—we do cookie night every year, we have for years and years and years. I dress up like Santa Claus, like Granny Claus we call it. I have an elevator in my house and I have it painted like a chimney with fire. I go up and get presents from upstairs and I come down the chimney in my suit with all the stuff. That has become such a special tradition. We call it cookie night. To me I can’t wait to do that with them. We have fun. We have little ones that get to be my elves. I come down and get a load of kids and go back up and get some more presents and they help me load it up. So that’s a fun thing.

christmas-of-many-colors-dvd-coverAfter making the movie Dolly, is there anything you’d go back and say to your younger self?

Dolly: I’d just say, you’d better buckle up, because we are in for the ride of our lives.

If you missed Wednesday night’s airing, Dolly Parton’s Christmas of Many Colors: Circle of Love will be available Dec. 20 on DVD and will include featurettes, deleted scenes and more.

Photo by © Curtis Hilbun / AFF-USA.COM

We Consult a Nashville Lawyer About the Luke Bryan “Striking” Incident—Stupid Hilarity Ensues

We Consult a Nashville Lawyer About the Luke Bryan “Striking” Incident—Stupid Hilarity Ensues

In light of the Luke Bryan incident last night at the Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam, I decided to contact a lawyer for a quick Q&A regarding the legal ramifications of Luke striking a concertgoer.

In full disclosure, the lawyer, Kevin Baltz, Esq., is my old college roommate who is a partner at a law firm in Nashville . . . and he has a pretty good sense of humor. In no way, shape or form should this be considered actual legal advice. This is satire, people—just two old friends shooting the breeze to pass the time.

Don’t got time to read the interview? Listen to the actual conversation on our podcast!

Nash Country Daily: Kevin, thanks for coming in. First of all, you’re doing this interview for free. But how much do you normally charge per hour for your legal expertise?

Kevin: More than you can afford.

NCD: Good to know. I called you about an hour ago and I said, “Do you know who Luke Bryan is?” And what did you say?

Kevin: The guy who slapped someone last night?

NCD: So you know of Luke, but you don’t really know much about him or follow his music.

Kevin: That’s fair to say.

NCD: After watching the video, what’s your initial reaction as a man of the law?

Kevin: To quote Billy Madison [Adam Sandler]: “That’s assault brother.”

NCD: Luke slaps the guy in the face for flipping him off. Any law against flipping off someone like I’m doing to you right now?

NCD managing editor Jim Casey (left) and NAshville attorney Kevin Baltz, Esq.
NCD managing editor Jim Casey (left) and Nashville attorney Kevin Baltz, Esq.

Kevin: On December 15, 1791, the Bill of Rights was adopted, which included the First Amendment to the Constitution. It grants everyone—from Luke’s meatheaded harasser to you, a hack writer—the right to free speech. It does not, however, grant someone the right to avoid a beating, as Luke aptly demonstrates.

NCD: Could the guy sue Luke for pain and suffering? Not for the strike, but because of his music?

Kevin: You find me a jury of 12 reasonable people that don’t LOVE Luke Bryan’s sweet tunes. No one is taking that case.

NCD: Another guy in the crowd was holding a sign that read “We can see your camel toe.” Is that actionable?

Kevin: This is where things get tricky. Luke could potentially sue this gentleman for defamation—the legal claim arising from a person making a false statement which damages another person’s reputation. Here is the catch: in a defamation action, the truth is always a defense. Meaning, if what you said about someone is true, you cannot be held liable for saying it. A very brief Google image search indicates to me that Luke is better off leaving this one alone.

NCD: Any chance this can be considered a hate crime? The guy obviously hates Luke’s music.

Kevin: Interesting theory here. Hate crimes are generally limited to specific social groups, such as gender, ethnicity, nationality, disability, religion and sexual orientation. To date, neither the Supreme Court of the United States nor any lower courts of record have recognized “Bro-Country” as a protected class. Although every single one of us may view this action as “deplorable,” it is unlikely that Luke would succeed on this theory.

NCD: Thanks for stopping by, you’ve been a wealth of information.

Kevin: Anytime.

Luke Bryan’s Team Makes No Mention of Him Striking Concertgoer in Newly Released Statement Regarding Fan Altercation at Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Jam

Luke Bryan’s Team Makes No Mention of Him Striking Concertgoer in Newly Released Statement Regarding Fan Altercation at Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Jam

As we reported earlier today (Dec. 1), Luke Bryan struck a concertgoer during Charlie Daniels 80th Birthday Volunteer Jam last night (Nov. 30).

Luke’s team issued the following statement today (Dec. 1) regarding the altercation: “A man in [the] front row was making crude hand gestures toward Luke during his performance. It was insulting not only to him, but more importantly to the men, women and families sitting around him who were there to support and celebrate Charlie Daniels and the efforts of raising money for the military veterans–some of who were in the audience. The concert security personnel saw the man’s disruptive actions of the event and he was escorted out.”

While Luke makes no mention of striking the concertgoer, it’s evident from multiple video angels that he does come into contact with the non-fan, who was reportedly taunting Luke and flipping him the bird during his 20-minute set.

Thomas Rhett Joins Mariah Carey, DNCE and Gloria Estefan for “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve With Ryan Seacrest 2017”

Thomas Rhett Joins Mariah Carey, DNCE and Gloria Estefan for “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve With Ryan Seacrest 2017”

new-years-rockin-eve-logoLive from New York . . . it’s Thomas Rhett.

Ringing in the New Year with a bang, the “Die a Happy Man” singer is set to be a part of Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve With Ryan Seacrest live from Times Square beginning at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

The country star will join pop superstar Mariah Carey, who will perform right before the ball drops, pop band DNCE and superstar Gloria Estefan—along with the cast of her Broadway musical, On Your Feet!—for performances throughout the night to help close out 2016.

In addition to these performances, actress Jenny McCarthy will be returning this year to report live from Times Square and superstar Fergie returns to host the Billboard Hollywood Party.

The television event will include five and a half hours of special performances as Ryan Seacrest leads the countdown to midnight from Times Square in New York City. 2016, we bid you adieu. Happy New Year!

Photo by Joseph Llanes

High Valley’s New Album, “Dear Life,” Inspired by Family and Fans

High Valley’s New Album, “Dear Life,” Inspired by Family and Fans

high-valley-album-coverWith a successful run in their home country of Canada, sibling duo High Valley set out to make their mark on the States this year. Their current single, “Make You Mine,” reached the Top 20 on the Billboard Country Airplay chart and the brothers—Brad and Curtis Rempel—are hitting on all cylinders with their new album, Dear Life.

“We liken it to an illustration of a target. You have the bulls-eye, and ‘Make You Mine’ is our bulls-eye. Everything fits on the same target, but there’s stuff that leans a little more bluegrass and there’s stuff that leans a little more pop,” Brad tells Nash Country Daily about the album. “Every song on the record, you can hear it and say, ‘That makes sense. That sounds like High Valley. That sounds like the same guys that recorded ‘Make You Mine.’ I love people who are real. I think Miranda Lambert recording ‘The House That Built Me’ was such a real thing for her to do. I think Florida-Georgia Line singing the big party songs is very real and authentic for them. I think High Valley singing songs about bluegrassy acoustic things, about family and farming and faith and all that stuff is very real for us. As long as people think our record sounds real, then we’ve accomplished what we were trying to do.”

Two of six children, Brad and Curtis grew up in a farm town in Canada 500 miles from the nearest airport. Wheat fields as far as the eye could see, the Rempel family was secluded from pretty much everything. With no TV and no radio, the siblings relied on records—they practically wore out—to fill their home with music.

“Our mom and dad loved music,” Curtis recalled to Nash Country Daily. “They grew up as Mennonites, like the Amish. No electricity. They rode a horse and buggy. They were very, very old school. When they finally got electricity, they fell in love with music. We had a record player with Ricky Skaggs, Buck Owens, and The Everly Brothers, and those were the three records that were wore out.

4 Things Brad and Curtis Can’t Hit The Road Without

BRAD: I take a diffuser for the bus, which is pretty important to me lately. I’m obsessed with smells, so much so that my wife has googled how to make your home smell like Whole Foods.

CURTIS: Emergen-C vitamins.

BRAD: It’s pretty important. Hair gel. Lots and lots and lots of hair product.

CURTIS: Pants. I never leave home without pants.

“We listened to so much Skaggs growing up,” Curtis adds. “Honestly, we didn’t have a whole lot of musical influence as kids and that was pretty much it. The acoustic vibes that he’s always brought impacted us hugely. We’ve just kind of kept that old school acoustic feel and brought that into the studio to our producer [Seth Mosley]—who’s a lot more hip and cool than we are. The combination just created what we have now.”

What they have now is Dear Life, their fifth studio album but their first major-label release. The album features 11 songs, three of which—”She’s With Me,” “Dear Life,” and current single “Make You Mine”—that were pulled from their previous album, County Line.

“When we were working on ‘Make You Mine’—that was before we had a record deal or anything—thankfully, the song caught enough action on YouTube and on iTunes that all of a sudden, record labels got interested,” said Brad. “What we loved so much about Warner Brothers, when they signed us, is they said, ‘Hey, we don’t want you guys to change anything. Keep going to your buddy’s house to record.’ That’s the only thing we could afford. They said, ‘Keep recording there. We want “Make You Mine” to be the first single.’ We were overjoyed. You here all these horror stories of bands signing record deals and all of the sudden losing all control and we have had the exact opposite. We’ve always tried to give our fans a lot of control, and thankfully, Warner Brothers has thought that’s the smartest way to do it, and they’ve allowed us to keep doing that.”

Photo by Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Kicker Country Stampede
Photo by Rick Diamond/Getty Images for Kicker Country Stampede

Allowing their fans to be a part of the record was important to Brad and Curtis. They even went so far as to allow them to pick the songs that would go on this album.

“We let our fans hear a lot of our music and demos ahead of time,” said Curtis. “From day one, we’ve always asked like, which t-shirt do you think we should print and have available at our shows? And they’ll vote. Or we’ll ask, which shoes should I wear to the awards show? Just things like that. Then we were like why don’t we ask them what songs they want us to record? So, we started letting them hear demos.”

“I think we played them 50 demos. Some were really bad quality,” adds Brad.

“We gave them a bunch of demos,” Curtis continued. “‘Make You Mine’ was definitely the highest voted—easily way higher than any other song. We knew that we loved it, but we let them hear it and our fan club just loved it.”

The title track, written by Brad, Ben Stennis and Seth Mosley, came from an everyday situation Brad found himself in when dealing with his children.

“I came home one day and my wife said, ‘Man, our kids are growing up so fast. I feel like we’re hanging on for dear life.’ I said, ‘Oh, wait a minute. I think that’s a song,'” recalls Brad.  “I called Seth and Ben—my buddies—and I said, ‘Hey, I’ve got this title called ‘Dear Life’ and I want to write it like a diary. Our producer [Seth] and his wife and kids and Ben and his wife and kids and myself and my wife and our kids, we’d all go to the beach together. ‘Dear Life’ was the first song of the beach trip. We recorded it in Pensacola Beach—we wrote it and recorded it. The lead vocals that you hear on the record are the same ones we recorded on the beach the moment we wrote the songs.”

The Canadian-born brothers are currently on the road with Martina McBride as part of her Love Unleashed Tour as they gear up for their own headlining European tour kicking off in February 2017. As the duo winds down the year, they look ahead to what 2017 will bring.

“It looks busy. Very, very, incredibly busy. And I mean that in a good way,” says Brad of their busy 2017 schedule. “It’s what we signed up for. It starts in Europe and we got all the country thunders and country jam and country who knows what festivals. We’ve got so many great festivals coming up and a couple of them stand out to me—some exciting placements where we get to play right before Alan Jackson. I’m really looking forward to that. It’s going to be a busy year and it’s going to be the first year where I think we’ll feel like we can expect people to sing along to our songs. This last year, we were shocked every time it happened. We’re just psyched for it.”

Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney, Luke Bryan & Toby Keith Are Country Music’s Top Earners on Forbes’ 2016 List

Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney, Luke Bryan & Toby Keith Are Country Music’s Top Earners on Forbes’ 2016 List

While they couldn’t top Taylor Swift ($170 million), One Direction ($110 million) or Adele ($80.5 million), a handful of country crooners made Forbes’ 2016 World’s Highest-Paid Musicians list, including Garth Brooks, Kenny Chesney, Luke Bryan and Toby Keith.

Forbes’ list measured pretax income from June 1, 2015, to June 1, 2016 before deducting management fees. Numbers are based on data from Pollstar, Nielsen and the RIAA, as well as interviews with managers, agents, lawyers—and some stars themselves.

Check out country’s top earners.

#22. Toby Keith: $47.5 million
Touring, endorsements (Ford), restaurants (I Love This Bar & Grill)

#19. Luke Bryan: $53 million
Touring, endorsements (Miller Lite, Cabela’s)

#13. Kenny Chesney: 56 million
Touring, endorsements (Corona beer), business ventures (Blue Chair Bay Rum)

#6. Garth Brooks: $70 million
Touring

Taylor Swift may have earned $100 million more than Garth, but we think $70 million is enough to live comfortably.

 

 

Watch CMT’s First Trailer For Season Premiere Of “Nashville” [Update] Full Season Trailer Released

Watch CMT’s First Trailer For Season Premiere Of “Nashville” [Update] Full Season Trailer Released

For all you #Nashies that can’t wait until Jan. 5, 2017 for the season 5 premiere of the CMT drama, Nashville, you’re in luck. CMT has just released the first trailer to tide you over until then.

nashville-connie-britton-hayden-panettiereBut wait, there’s more. As an early Christmas present, CMT will also offer a sneak peek of the first hour of the two-hour season premiere of Nashville on Thursday, Dec. 15 at 9pm ET. So get those DVR’s ready.

Last we left the Nashville crew, it was unknown whether Juliette Barnes (Hayden Panettiere) would perish in a plane crash or return safely to her daughter and ex-husband, Avery Barkley (Jonathon Jackson), awaiting at the airport. Thankfully, Hayden will be returning for season 5, so we’ll find out her fate in the premiere. Rayna James (Connie Britton) and Deacon Clayburn (Chip Esten) reunited with their daughter Maddie (Lennon Stella) and seemed to be set for a future of happiness. But let’s face it, it’s a drama, no one can be happy for too long.

According to CMT, Season 5 begins with Rayna and Deacon facing a new normal with Maddie now back home and Highway 65 struggling financially. The shocking news about Juliette creates a wave of emotions throughout Nashville and sets Rayna off on a journey of discovery.

In addition, the upcoming season will feature Joseph David-Jones as Clay, Rhiannon Giddens as Hallie Jordan, Jen Richards as Allyson Del Lago, and Cameron Scoggins as Zach Welles in recurring roles.

Check out the trailer for Season 5 and mark your calendars for the one hour sneak peek of Nashville on Thurs., Dec. 15 at 9pm ET on CMT.

UPDATE: Friday, Dec. 16

The full season Trailer was released today. Take a look.

 

Photos Courtesy of CMT

Venues de Force: 5 of the Friendliest Venues in the Country and 15 Must-See Upcoming Concerts

Venues de Force: 5 of the Friendliest Venues in the Country and 15 Must-See Upcoming Concerts

Guys and gals like Luke Bryan and Carrie Underwood may have sold out arena shows in 2016, but bigger isn’t always better when it comes to watching your favorite country artists perform live. Sometimes it’s the setting of an iconic venue that makes a concert memorable . . . so memorable, in fact, that you commemorate the experience by framing your tickets or shelling out the extra cash for a playbill on your way out the door.

Forget about packing the binoculars and tissues for a nosebleed arena seat, here’s a cross-country sampling of 5 playbill-worthy venues to put on your to-do list (or bucket list)—and 15 upcoming concerts that will put you in a country state of mind.

From hallowed grounds to national landmarks, the force is strong with these 5 iconic venues.


bowery-ballroom-exterior-detail-2012-courtesy-bowery-ballroom-facebook
photo courtesy Bowery Ballroom Facebook

Bowery Ballroom, New York City

From the main floor to the wraparound balcony, there’s not a bad sightline in the 575-capacity venue that was built in the 1920s, and that includes the view of Delancey Street from the balcony’s stained-glass window. Part speakeasy, part opera house, the Bowery features high ceilings, stellar acoustics and a friendly basement lounge where you can grab a drink at the U-shaped bar or strike up a conversation before the show. But it’s the main floor full of revelers that puts the roar in this Lower East Side locale.

  • Jan. 12: Frankie Ballard
  • Feb. 2: Maren Morris
  • Feb. 8: Corey Smith

ryman-auditorium-exterior-detail-2016-courtesy-ryman-auditorium-facebook
photo courtesy Ryman Auditorium Facebook

Ryman Auditorium, Nashville

In a city that boasts pilgrimage-worthy stops like the Grand Ole Opry House and Bluebird Café, Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium is still the holy grail of venues. Constructed in 1891, the red-bricked tabernacle is a beacon in Nashville’s bustling downtown for performers and fans alike. With its stained-glass windows, wooden pews and memorabilia displays, the 2,362-seat Mother Church of Country Music is a revival of sight and sound when artists take to its hallowed stage.

  • Dec. 28: Robert Earl Keen
  • Dec. 31: John Prine, Jason Isbell, Kacey Musgraves
  • Feb. 11: Martina McBride

gruene-hall-exterior-detail-2013-courtesy-gruene-hall-facebook
photo courtesy Gruene Hall Facebook

Gruene Hall, New Braunfels, Texas

Gruene Hall was built in 1878 and is billed as the oldest continually run dancehall in Texas—and you’d better be wearing a six-shooter if you say otherwise, ’cause them there are fightin’ words. With a pitched tin roof and side flaps for open-air dancing, the 6,000-square-foot hall is a Texas throwback to the days of yore, where you can pitch horseshoes out back, drain a cold Shiner at the bar or two-step on the wooden dance floor to a lineup of performers that reads like a historical marker.

  • Dec. 16: Bruce Robison, Kelly Willis
  • Dec. 23: Ray Wylie Hubbard
  • Feb. 11: Ricky Skaggs

cains-ballroom-exterior-detail-2012-courtesy-cains-ballroom-facebook
photo courtesy Cain’s Ballroom Facebook

Cain’s Ballroom, Tulsa, Okla.

Arrive early if you want one of the few seats in “The Carnegie Hall of Western Swing,” but seriously, who goes to a ballroom to sit? The legacy of Bob Wills lives on in this 1,200-capacity venue that was constructed in 1924 and was named to the National Register of Historical Places in 2003. The maple floor is mounted on sets of Dodge truck springs that rumble to the beat of your favorite band. Plus, rumor has it that Cain’s is haunted—with the iconic list of performers who have taken the stage, we don’t doubt it.

  • Dec. 30 & 31: Turnpike Troubadours
  • Jan. 1: Cody Canada, Jason Boland, Wade Bowen
  • Feb. 4: Eli Young Band

the-fillmore-san-francisco-photo-cc-by-2point0-cropped
photo CC by 2.0

The Fillmore, San Francisco

With museum-quality playbills adorning its walls in the main room and strobe lights a-swirling, the Fillmore still wafts of the psychedelia that made San Francisco a counterculture hot spot in the 1960s. While that era may be over, the music lives on in this classic venue that features rows of grandiose chandeliers and a wooden dance floor that surges and buckles to the music. And in the tradition of Fillmore founder Bill Graham, you always get a free apple . . . and a poster of the evening’s show if it’s sold out.

  • Dec. 7: Brothers Osborne
  • Jan. 20 & 21: Lucinda Williams
  • May 2, 3, 5, 6: Willie Nelson

photo of Gruene Hall via Gruene Hall;

Dolly Parton to Donate $1,000 a Month to Victims of Wildfires in East Tennessee

Dolly Parton to Donate $1,000 a Month to Victims of Wildfires in East Tennessee

Dolly Parton announced on her Facebook page last night (Nov. 30) that she will be helping out the victims of the wildfires that have been blazing across Pigeon Forge and Gatlinburg, Tenn., near her hometown.

While the wildfires have come close to Dollywood Theme Park, no structural damage has occurred as of today (Dec. 1). Many buildings, including homes and apartment complexes have burned. Evacuations were ordered at the Dollywood DreamMore Resort along with Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, Park Vista and Ski Mountain.

As a show of support, Dolly issued a statement Wednesday (Nov. 30) about the fires.

“I have been watching the terrible fires in the Great Smoky Mountains and I am heartbroken. I am praying for all the families affected by the fire and the firefighters who are working so hard to keep everyone safe. It is a blessing that my Dollywood theme park, the DreamMore Resort and so many businesses in Pigeon Forge have been spared.”

Taking it one step further later in the evening, the superstar with a big heart offered to have her Dollywood companies and the Dollywood Foundation help establish My People’s Fund. The foundation will provide $1,000 a month to all the families that have lost their homes in the fires, until they get back on their feet.

Dolly posted a video on Facebook with information on how to join the effort.

“I have always believed that charity begins at home. As a result, the Dollywood Company and the Dollywood Foundation are helping to establish the My People Fund to provide a hand up to those families who have lost everything in the Smoky Mountain fires.” To join these efforts please visit DollywoodFoundation.org #MyPeopleFund #SomePlaceSpecial”

Watch the video for Dolly’s message:

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