Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. “I just sing like I hurt inside. If you can’t do it with feeling, then don’t,” Cline once said of her passion for performing — and ...
Released during a period of mourning, the collection helped ensure that her voice and the timeless songs she recorded would ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Few friendships in show business have been as legendary or heartfelt as the bond between the late country superstars Loretta Lynn ...
A 1961 country hit that helped redefine the genre has been ranked among the greatest songs of all time by Rolling Stone, cementing its place as one of the most enduring recordings in music history.
On March 7, 1953, Cline married her first husband, Gerald Cline. She signed a record contract the following year and recorded her first songs. Her husband reportedly hoped she would be a more ...
Country music is full of women with powerful voices. Loretta Lynn, Reba McEntire, Carrie Underwood, and many more have golden vocal cords. However, none of them would likely have reached the level of ...
Loretta Lynn — the “Coal Miner’s Daughter” who died at 90 Tuesday — had a special bond with another female country legend: Patsy Cline. The two singers — who were born just five months apart in 1932 — ...
On January 21, 1957, Patsy Cline made her national television debut on “Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts,” which aired Monday nights on CBS. The show featured agents and managers from across the country ...
Patsy Cline is one of the most ubiquitous names in the female country music artist canon, but it wasn’t the one she was born with. And while her decision to adopt a new stage name wasn’t exactly ...
Patsy Cline's former home in Nashville recently sold for more than half a million dollars, and pictures offer a window into country music history. The country icon's "dream home" in the Nashville ...
Unlike other country & western stars, Pacific Northwest chanteuse Neko Case doesn’t traffic in heartache, but comeuppance. “You get what you deserve,” she sings atop twangy noir like a bruised yet not ...