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  1. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1992 Cassette release of "Country Music Hall Of Fame Series" on Discogs.

  2. Wright died on September 27, 2011. Wells was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1976 and was nominated for a 1989 Grammy Award for her “Honky-Tonk Angels Medley” with k. d. lang, Brenda Lee, and Loretta Lynn. In 1991, Wells received a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, along with Bob Dylan, Marian Anderson, and John Lennon.

  3. The Country Music Association (CMA), the country music industry's trade organization, created the accolade to recognize significant contributions to the advancement of country music by individuals in both the creative and business communities. The first members—Jimmie Rodgers, Fred Rose, and Hank Williams—were inducted in 1961. Sort.

  4. 20. Dez. 1999 · In 1977 he recorded his 104th LP for RCA Victor, Still Moving On, proving himself an apt title for an artist who gave longevity a new and dramatic meaning. Hank Snow died in 1999. –Charles Wolfe. – Adapted from the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum’s Encyclopedia of Country Music, published by Oxford University Press. Hall Of Fame.

  5. As such, he toured Texas grocery and feed stores and sang on town squares, where such future stars as Charlie Walker and Hank Thompson first heard him. On the strength of his sixth Decca release and all-time biggest career hit, “Walking the Floor Over You” (1941), Tubb sang in two Columbia western movies made in 1942, Fighting Buckaroo and Riding West .

  6. Hank Thompson. Texas-born singer, songwriter, and bandleader Hank Thompson wore this Nudie leather jacket—with metallic yoke, pocket flaps, and rhinestone-studded fringe—and this rhinestone-accented neck scarf in the 1950s. Thompson’s long string of hits included “Humpty Dumpty Heart” (1948) and “The Wild Side of Life” (1953).

  7. The Museum’s extensive Objects Collection includes nearly 500 musical instruments, more than 1,900 items of stage wear, personal clothing, and accessories, and thousands of other three-dimensional objects—from microphones to automobiles—documenting the history and culture of country music. Explore More in the Digital Archive.