Twang Nation
Country Music, Alt-Country, Roots Music and Americana Music Blog

Country Acts and the Superbowl Halftime Show

February 2nd 2009 in Americana, Bluegrass, Country Music, Humor, Legends, Radio, Television, alt.country, blogs
  • Bill Chapin at MLive Music is posting his “entry in my Albums of the Aughts series, highlighting 50 great or near-great albums released since Jan. 1, 2000.” Albums of the Aughts No. 5 is the old time music juggernaut from  Dec. 5, 2000 the T-Bone Burnett produced  “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” soundtrack featuring Alison Krauss, Gillian Welch, bluegrass legends Norman Blake and Ralph Stanley and Grand Ole Opry members Emmylou Harris and The Whites.
  • PopMatters‘ Bob Proehl posts a story on the history of the spiritual/secular divide in country music  (Hank’s Other Side: Religion, Radio, and the Roots of Country Music) and how marketing and technology (radio) helped shape tactics like Hank Williams’ Luke the Drifter character to meet the artists desire to record spititual and gospel songs.
  • The Bluegrass Blog covers Steve Martin’s hosting of Saturday Night Live (his 15th time , outlapping Alec Baldwin’s 13 times hosting SNL.) Martin plays “Late for School” from his upcoming bluegrass tinged banjo showcase album The Crow.
  • The Boss and the East Street Band did a great job for the 43rd superbowl halftime show, and it got me to thinking “When was the last time a country act had that gig?” Checking the all-knowing Wikipedia, that would be 1994’s Superbowl 28 (or XXVIII for you purists) Rockin’ Country Sunday featuring Clint Black, Tanya Tucker, Travis Tritt and The Judds. And yes I did exclude Shania Twain’s Superbowl 32 and Kid Rock’s  Superbowl 33 .

Related posts:

  1. News Round Up: Country for Our Country Supports the Troops
  2. News Round Up: Country for Our Country Supports the Troops
  3. Lyle Lovett To Perform and Recieve Special Award at Americana Honors and Awards Show
  4. Dwight Yoakam to make 24th appearance on ‘The Tonight Show’
  5. Vince Gill, Mel Tillis and Ralph Emery to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame – October




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6 Day Bender began as a group of students in Charlottesville, VA playing a thing they call “Mountain Rock and Roll.” I figure there’s enough confusion with the current sub-genres already available so let’s settle with roots-rock with an emphasis on both.These neo-revivalists create, like their contemporaries Old Crow Medicine Show, The Hackensaw Boys and The Avett Brothers, a rousing blend of pre-World War II folk, bluegrass spiked with rock attitude. Imagine the O Brother where Art Thou soundtrack if [...]

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If you’re like me and you want to see the The Marty Stuart Show, but your cable provider doesn’t offer RFD-TV, you can head over to the MSS YouTube page for some highlights. It is great to see my old family firnd Charlie Pride doing his classic Kiss an Angel Good Morning (below.)
Charlie Pride – Kiss an Angel Good Morning

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRIRTQ_k-Sg[/youtube]

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