In the late ’50s, “Don Owens’s TV Jamboree” was a must-see every Saturday for country music fans across the Washington metro area. A promoter and DJ with a carnival-barker’s zeal, Owens was known to ...
She was a legendary country and pop music crooner of the 1950s and ’60s, known for her smooth-as-silk contralto voice and throaty vocals. Now the life of Patsy Cline is returning to the stage in Point ...
Editor's note: This segment was rebroadcast on Sept. 29, 2025. Click here for that audio. Singer Patsy Cline helped create the Nashville sound, a crossover between country and pop, in the 1950s and ...
The Bloomsburg Theatre Ensemble will present ‘A Closer Walk with Patsy Cline’ on May 1 through ay 4 in the Alvina Krause Theatre, downtown Bloomsburg. Patsy Cline recorded some of her big hits — songs ...
WAKEFIELD, R.I. — One of her sold-out concerts actually registered a 2.3 magnitude on a seismograph and caused earthquake tremors, the result of a massive sound system and a stadium full of flailing ...
Cowboy hats and Nashville-style dresses proliferated Thursday night in Oakbrook Terrace. Not the first time I’ve noticed that fans of country music are more common in Chicago’s western suburbs than ...
American Theatre Company’s Always…Patsy Cline brings the legendary singer’s story and songs to life through a heartfelt musical based on her real-life friendship with a devoted fan. TULSA, Okla. - ...
More than 60 years after her tragic death, country music legend Patsy Cline still has more to share with the world after never-before-released recordings of the iconic star were discovered in a ...
Mickey Guyton Covers "Walkin' After Midnight" Mickey Guyton Covers Patsy Cline's "Walkin' After Midnight." CLIP: 2:33 Kristin Chenoweth Covers "I Fall To Pieces" Kristin Chenoweth covers Patsy Cline's ...
Walking into Always... Patsy Cline feels like tagging along with a friend to a concert where they know every word, every note and every backstage story — meanwhile, you're only vaguely familiar with ...
The late Joe Edwards, who wrote for the Associated Press, described March 5, 1963, as the “Darkest Day in Country Music.” Patsy Cline, Hawkshaw Hawkins, Cowboy Copas and pilot Randy Hughes were killed ...