I hope Mr. Acuff's family will be able to read this. My father was born in 1933 and as a young boy was placed in an orphanage near Nashville. Mr. Acuff use to spend time with those kids, take them to his farm and Vanderbilt football games. My father died in 2002 thought the world of Roy Acuff and he made a huge positive influence on my father, thank you.
This is my favorite song of all time. It's an American classic without comparison. It speaks of generations of pride and conviction you can feel. It's not about me, it's about us, and about our heritage, faith and convictions. This song is sancrocinct with American pride.
If this is your favorite song, Listen to this version by the Grateful Dead's guitar player and lead singer...its pretty good with verses Roy doesn't sing.
One of the best of country songs is the Wabash cannonball but only one man could bring it to life and make it work like this gentleman Mr Roy Acuff. Hes a professional and a generous man, if you look him up and see what he's done for orphan kids and other have nots...he gave back to his community .I could go on and on. They just don't make them like this man anymore !!!
My friend, I hope I can restore your faith in good country music. I'm rather young and I'm a huge fan of Roy, Hank, Johnny Horton, and other classics. I've even started writing my own songs in their styles because God knows the classic style is the best.
I was born in '57 and grew up listening to wonderful music like this. I'm like the other folks my age wondering just what happened to country music. So thankful for RUclips's Time Machine.
The purity of Roy Accuf's consecrated soul is clearly sensed thru the hauntingly beautiful words, tributes to persons & places, his well-modulated voice and natural diction of his rendition of this immortal song. Truly inspiring. Played over & over.
I always loved Roy Acuff for honoring Daddy Claxton ..a turn of the century Black farmer in Alabama who fought against the railroads charging sky high fees to haul all farmers crops to market ..he stole the Cannon Ball and got his crops to market ..he actually drove it as the engineer ..tried in the courts of Alabama ..the White farmers on the jury aquitted him .. setting him free ..Thank you Roy Acuff ..you and Daddy Claxton live on..
That voice. Roy's voice never aged, despite him aging. His chipper and joyful voice never faultered when singing his classic train song. Truly a legend among music, it's easy to tell why Hank Sr. Idolized him. May he rest in peace.
He was the original King of Country music, but they parade George Straight as the King of Country Music. Our boy Roy and George Jones is the true kings of country music.
@@bryanwills9742 Bob Wills is the King when you cross that old Red River. Texas. The Opry didn't praise Bob Wills like it did Acuff,Williams, and Tubb.
He was a living legend. I saw him as a kid on b&w TV and we laughed at his hillbilly music (I lived in east Tennessee), but we knew easily that he was a national treasure
listening to this just makes me want to cry...reminds so much of my Mom and when I was a little thing running around with her while she cleaned and listened to this. :) Miss you so much Mama.
There will never be another Roy acuff or bashful brother Oswald -aka Pete Kirby today so called country jus does,,nt measure up n in my option its ugly noise no soul no feeling goes in Mr acuff n others like him truly appreciated their craft nuttin but pure honey dripping off the bars pure gold rest in peace Mr acuff n bro oz n all my radio heros!,🤘🏿🤠💚💛
My Grandpas Favorite song of all times.. Every time i played this for him he would be like Look i got goose bumbs and starts singing it.... Brings tears to my eyes thinking about him 4 years since we lost him
Today’s music is sick, there’s no talent or effort put into it. The ‘artists’ are nobody’s with no life. Roy Acuff, Bashful brother Oswald, Bill Monroe, Ralph Stanley and so on, they are the real music artists. They weren’t just good song writers, but they were extremely awesome people and good examples. I wish there were people like them around today
Modern country music sounds like it was made by a computer. Just throw in a bunch of clichés (beer, trucks, and dirt roads) and you have a modern country song.
I grew up listening to my grandmother playing records by the grand old opry stars..Roy singing the cannonball song is what us kids would always ask for we loved the train whistle sound..I went on to be a professional musician playing all my life I still love this song
Extemely emotions run through my body as i remember my grandmother who passed last march talk about roy, roy was her 2nd cousin but she always talked about how the too familys always wanted to reunite but she live in OK during the great depression so money was scare and they lived on the east coast and travel wasnt so an option and ended up moving to california later. Her favorite HeeHaw show is still recorded the one with roy
Went on tour with a group when I was a little girl. Stood on the Grand Ole Opera stage I didn't understand it bk then and couldn't appreciate it. But I'm so glad I have those memories. 💯👍🎶🎼
This was a request by my Uncle at my wedding. I had a friend of mine William "Tex" Doyle played country music at my wedding and it went over real good. It was very different and so many of the people loved it. My Uncle always loved this song and I had them play it for him.
I grew up watching Hee Haw. I remember Roy Acuff as the one of many greats on that wonderful show. It’s obvious that I’m among the younger generations who was around when Acuff was alive.
The greatest train song ever written. There is nothing to compare to the sights and sounds of a steam locomotive. A massive living, breathing, huffing, puffing and wailing steel behemoth.
One of the best songs of all times the humanity and the railroad which it speaks volumes takes me back to when my grandmother talked to me about country music and the good old days
Every time I hear this song, I see my parents dancing. In the house I grew up in, there was a vent in the floor upstairs that you could see into the living room. Back in the day, that's how the upstairs were heated. (No, it didn't work. Ha ha). All 8 of us kids slept upstairs . We watch our parents dancing around the living room looking through that vent while this song played. Dad's been gone since '88, mom a few years back. Every time I hear this song, tears of sadness because they're gone, tears of happiness for the memory. 💗💗💗
You're absolutely right..... Good evening Rose how are you doing over there hope you're having a wonderful day it's a wonderful day that the lord has made.
Mr Roy was such a fine man used to go to the Grand ole opry 10 r 12 times a year back in the 60's threw early 80's. he would set and talk to you for hours he was really nice to my dad. each time we went and if he saw dad he would talk to him
Thanks for posting this! --Donald J. "Daddy" Claxton, born Dec. 6, 1965. Many from my dad's side of the family hail from Athens, Alabama. When I worked for Gov. Guy Hunt in the late 1980s and throughout much of the 1990s, one of my chiefs of staff called me "Daddy Claxton," every time we were in the same room. A few years later, I got married and we had three daughters. At different times, I get called "Daddy" by each of them. During the re-election campaign of Gov. Fob James in 1998, the governor's campaign chartered a train that began in Athens, and down the very tracks the fictional train would have followed, we rolled on into Birmingham and knowing the lyrics, the chief of staff's proclivity to call me "Daddy Claxton," it felt surreal.
This is (I think so) the best, greatest video on youtube. Picture and sound quality are awesome. Each musician is nice (not only behind Roy) with his name. God bless you all. From France : Jo luttringer
As a little girl I had a little white wicker rocking chair. I remember setting by my Daddy and rocking listening to this song. Precious memories. I will always love this song.
This is my favorite song of all time.... Many different ones does it like boxcar Willie but it doesn't matter who does it, it's still walbash cannonball....... Let me hear the choo choo...... Trains was my favorite when I was growing up, I always wanted to drive a train......
Just discovered Roy , he was a friend of my family up the road a ways from Maynardville. Gave an old uncle a bunch of guitars and banjos one time I heard.
Got a chance years ago to go the Nashville & see the Grand Ole Opry one Thanksgiving. That was the week Roy Acuff passed away, so I never got to see him live. Thankfully we have videos
I'm looking for a RUclips video from March 16,1974 when Roy Acuff and his Smoky Mountain Boys performed The Wabash Cannonball on the opening night of the Grand Old Opry House at Opryland.
The Wabash cannonball was a line of the Wabash Railroad. I'm checking to see if the railroad relates to the Wabash River in Indiana, I think. There is a street in Chicago, or south of it, called Wabash.
One of the most evocative lines in American music: "Hear the mighty rush of the engine, hear the lonesome hobo's call You're travelin' through the jungles on the Wabash Cannonball"
Ever so often an entertainer comes along that truly is a master entertainer. Doesn’t happen often but Roy Acuff was definitely in that class. I wish I could have seen him before he was gone.
I hope Mr Acuffs family will be able to read this my great uncle was a conductor for the southern pacific from I think the 30s to the 60s he has unfortunately passed away and my late grandfather was a railroad spike layer for the mccloud river railroad
When Roy introduces Onie Wheeler on harmonica, it should not be forgotten that Onie is also the person responsible for the human train whistle on Acuff's 1947 re-recording of this song. This performance came from the 1978 special 50 Years of Country Music.
ClassicTVMan, Onie wasn't the one on the 1947 Wabash Cannonball re-recording. Onie had his own Band in the Bootheel of Missouri. Onie had been in the Army in WW2 @ Pearl Harbor when it was hit. In the mid 1950s, Onie was doing Rockabilly on Sun Records on the same Bill as Elvis Presley. Onie didn't join up with Roy Acuff until 1965. Onie had been a Star in his own right. He died on the Opry Stage -May 26,1984 singing on the WSM Grand Ole Gospel Show .
I used to listen to this and other roy acuff songs when I was younger while playin with my lionel pennsylvania flyer freight set... ironically I was born in 2001, not 1951
I love you papaw . I cant wait to play this again with you when i get up there Amen. RIp jimmy crowder. Ill dance bare🦶foot with you on that golden road ❤
The Wabash Cannonball was a Detroit to Saint Louis train. It died when the last major source of income was put on trucks. US Mail. It should never have gone away! It was a important cross line .
You're absolutely right..... Good evening jean how are you doing over there hope you're having a wonderful day it's a wonderful day that the lord has made.
This video is part of a fantastic show called "50 Years of Country Music"....I wonder who has the complete show and is willing to share it on RUclips???
A true first class act. You never hear the respect of singers to their bands . I love the respect of introduction of players
Spend more time listening to Country music. Ray Price, George Strait, Merle Haggard and of course Bob Wills just to name a few!
I hope Mr. Acuff's family will be able to read this. My father was born in 1933 and as a young boy was placed in an orphanage near Nashville. Mr. Acuff use to spend time with those kids, take them to his farm and Vanderbilt football games. My father died in 2002 thought the world of Roy Acuff and he made a huge positive influence on my father, thank you.
Wow, nice to know starts did good things. Mr. Acuff never forget where he came from.
:)
👍
Yard Sale Roy good
jerrymahoney391[ney
This is my Daddy's favorite song. He's 93. I love him so much.
Roy and Hank are what every true country singer strive to be. They are the two kings of country.
This is my favorite song of all time. It's an American classic without comparison. It speaks of generations of pride and conviction you can feel. It's not about me, it's about us, and about our heritage, faith and convictions. This song is sancrocinct with American pride.
"City Of New Orleans" is my other favorite Railroad Song.
It has been my favorite since I first heard it when I was 5 years old. I am now 80.
ruclips.net/video/LNO10K_CmCk/видео.html&start_radio=1
If this is your favorite song, Listen to this version by the Grateful Dead's guitar player and lead singer...its pretty good with verses Roy doesn't sing.
One of the best of country songs is the Wabash cannonball but only one man could bring it to life and make it work like this gentleman Mr Roy Acuff. Hes a professional and a generous man, if you look him up and see what he's done for orphan kids and other have nots...he gave back to his community .I could go on and on. They just don't make them like this man anymore !!!
One of the very last true Country Mucic Showmen, an old timer that is often immitated but never surpassed.
Yes he was. And those who tried to imitated him. We’re of not able to for he was one of a kind.
Certainly was the very best RIP that great great man Roy Acuff
My friend, I hope I can restore your faith in good country music. I'm rather young and I'm a huge fan of Roy, Hank, Johnny Horton, and other classics. I've even started writing my own songs in their styles because God knows the classic style is the best.
I was born in '57 and grew up listening to wonderful music like this. I'm like the other folks my age wondering just what happened to country music. So thankful for RUclips's Time Machine.
Country music died the day Johnny Cash left us.😥
The purity of Roy Accuf's consecrated soul is clearly sensed thru the hauntingly beautiful words, tributes to persons & places, his well-modulated voice and natural diction of his rendition of this immortal song. Truly inspiring. Played over & over.
I always loved Roy Acuff for honoring Daddy Claxton ..a turn of the century Black farmer in Alabama who fought against the railroads charging sky high fees to haul all farmers crops to market ..he stole the Cannon Ball and got his crops to market ..he actually drove it as the engineer ..tried in the courts of Alabama ..the White farmers on the jury aquitted him .. setting him free ..Thank you Roy Acuff ..you and Daddy Claxton live on..
Great message!
His middle name is Claxton. I should hope so.
Thank you. I have always wondered about that reference to Daddy Claxton
That voice. Roy's voice never aged, despite him aging. His chipper and joyful voice never faultered when singing his classic train song. Truly a legend among music, it's easy to tell why Hank Sr. Idolized him. May he rest in peace.
Long live the King of Country Music, Roy Acuff!
He was the original King of Country music, but they parade George Straight as the King of Country Music. Our boy Roy and George Jones is the true kings of country music.
Bob Wills is still the king ! 😉
@@bryanwills9742 Bob Wills is the King when you cross that old Red River. Texas. The Opry didn't praise Bob Wills like it did Acuff,Williams, and Tubb.
@@glencoe6305 I agree with you. ! 🤠
George Jones was right when he sang....."Who's gonna fill their shoes." There will NEVER be another Mr. Roy Acuff!
There also won't be another Mr. Onie Wheeler!
Or hello darling...
@@ClassicTVMan1981X Onie was a great entertainer and let's not forget Bashful Brother Oswald!
That's true.
The country music singers now days just aren't the same, in my opinion.
Truth
Roy a cuff was the real deal. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤rest in peace
As a member of his family I appreciate the comments
God bless, Mr. Smith. 🙂
How are you related to him
He was the greatest entertainer ever to grace the stages of the opry.
@@SlyTyler97 great grandpas brother
Love this music and those who performed
They were, above all, gentlemen, gentlemen and true performers of the best kind. Not a sour note within a hundred miles. Wonderful.
Very , very few true gentlemen left tday.
My pop was a UP railroad engineer for 58 yrs. He’d take his guitar and play and sing as trucked down the tracks. Those were the days.
Seen him years ago and his band. Man I miss them good Ole country singers. There the real deal. Bless them all.
He was a living legend. I saw him as a kid on b&w TV and we laughed at his hillbilly music (I lived in east Tennessee), but we knew easily that he was a national treasure
listening to this just makes me want to cry...reminds so much of my Mom and when I was a little thing running around with her while she cleaned and listened to this. :) Miss you so much Mama.
There will never be another Roy acuff or bashful brother Oswald -aka Pete Kirby today so called country jus does,,nt measure up n in my option its ugly noise no soul no feeling goes in Mr acuff n others like him truly appreciated their craft nuttin but pure honey dripping off the bars pure gold rest in peace Mr acuff n bro oz n all my radio heros!,🤘🏿🤠💚💛
I love to watch the great ones perform. Even at this age, Roy still performs this song best.
This version and its lyrics is the version that I learned many years ago. Love this version.
My dad was inspired by roy acuff, and sang this song very proudly in his local and regional bands.
My Grandpas Favorite song of all times.. Every time i played this for him he would be like Look i got goose bumbs and starts singing it.... Brings tears to my eyes thinking about him 4 years since we lost him
This makes today’s music look sick
Today’s music is sick, there’s no talent or effort put into it. The ‘artists’ are nobody’s with no life. Roy Acuff, Bashful brother Oswald, Bill Monroe, Ralph Stanley and so on, they are the real music artists. They weren’t just good song writers, but they were extremely awesome people and good examples. I wish there were people like them around today
Today’s music if ya wanna call it that s just trash
jus say your racist bro
@@dondoprophet ??
Modern country music sounds like it was made by a computer. Just throw in a bunch of clichés (beer, trucks, and dirt roads)
and you have a modern country song.
I grew up listening to my grandmother playing records by the grand old opry stars..Roy singing the cannonball song is what us kids would always ask for we loved the train whistle sound..I went on to be a professional musician playing all my life I still love this song
Extemely emotions run through my body as i remember my grandmother who passed last march talk about roy, roy was her 2nd cousin but she always talked about how the too familys always wanted to reunite but she live in OK during the great depression so money was scare and they lived on the east coast and travel wasnt so an option and ended up moving to california later. Her favorite HeeHaw show is still recorded the one with roy
I grew up in Broken Arrow, OK listening to Roy Acuff sing the same songs my Granmaw sang to me.
Roy acuff and George Jones and Hank Williams tunes sooth my soul!
Missing my grandpa I never really got to meet. And my father. Favorite songs of theirs... This song is a real tearbreaker.
Went on tour with a group when I was a little girl. Stood on the Grand Ole Opera stage I didn't understand it bk then and couldn't appreciate it. But I'm so glad I have those memories. 💯👍🎶🎼
This was a request by my Uncle at my wedding. I had a friend of mine William "Tex" Doyle played country music at my wedding and it went over real good. It was very different and so many of the people loved it. My Uncle always loved this song and I had them play it for him.
Nov 9, 1962 _ Roy Acuff became the first LIVING person inducted to the Country Music Hall of Fame!
Roy was inducted into the Hall of Fame the day I was born. You just can't beat the pioneers of music.
I grew up watching Hee Haw. I remember Roy Acuff as the one of many greats on that wonderful show. It’s obvious that I’m among the younger generations who was around when Acuff was alive.
The most Iconic country music song ever, in the history of country music !
Now this is country music. Please keep it alive. This bull butter crap you hear today is not country music
Yeah. How are you Jerry?
I don’t think a lot of the new country artists appreciate those who came before them. It’s all about them! Roy Acuff was a true gentleman!
The greatest train song ever written. There is nothing to compare to the sights and sounds of a steam locomotive. A massive living, breathing, huffing, puffing and wailing steel behemoth.
One of my favorite songs.
I used to listen to the grand ole Opry with my dad on the radio, we didn't have a TV, my dad would just cry when wabash cannon ball played
Smiles, how are you doing Martha?
Hello, So sorry for the infringe on your privacy. Beautiful song. How are you?
Real!!! Country!!! Music!!! Wooooooo 🎶🎶🎶 Johnny from Alabama wooooooo 🎶🎶🎶
One of the best songs of all times the humanity and the railroad which it speaks volumes takes me back to when my grandmother talked to me about country music and the good old days
Every time I hear this song, I see my parents dancing. In the house I grew up in, there was a vent in the floor upstairs that you could see into the living room. Back in the day, that's how the upstairs were heated. (No, it didn't work. Ha ha). All 8 of us kids slept upstairs . We watch our parents dancing around the living room looking through that vent while this song played. Dad's been gone since '88, mom a few years back. Every time I hear this song, tears of sadness because they're gone, tears of happiness for the memory. 💗💗💗
You're absolutely right..... Good evening Rose how are you doing over there hope you're having a wonderful day it's a wonderful day that the lord has made.
Mr Roy was such a fine man used to go to the Grand ole opry 10 r 12 times a year back in the 60's threw early 80's. he would set and talk to you for hours he was really nice to my dad. each time we went and if he saw dad he would talk to him
Roy acuff was one of the greats in country music
Thanks for posting this! --Donald J. "Daddy" Claxton, born Dec. 6, 1965. Many from my dad's side of the family hail from Athens, Alabama. When I worked for Gov. Guy Hunt in the late 1980s and throughout much of the 1990s, one of my chiefs of staff called me "Daddy Claxton," every time we were in the same room. A few years later, I got married and we had three daughters. At different times, I get called "Daddy" by each of them. During the re-election campaign of Gov. Fob James in 1998, the governor's campaign chartered a train that began in Athens, and down the very tracks the fictional train would have followed, we rolled on into Birmingham and knowing the lyrics, the chief of staff's proclivity to call me "Daddy Claxton," it felt surreal.
Medlin family from.Shreveport. Louisiana thanks you Mr. Roy!
I first heard him on radio when am radio was the only music we had country will live forever
That's nice. How are you?
I can remember as a little boy when my dad use to listen to these old songs on his old radio. A day at home couldn't sound any better.
This is (I think so) the best, greatest video on youtube. Picture and sound quality are awesome. Each musician is nice (not only behind Roy) with his name. God bless you all. From France : Jo luttringer
The 👑 of country music Mr. Roy Acuff
George Strait too!
As a little girl I had a little white wicker rocking chair. I remember setting by my Daddy and rocking listening to this song. Precious memories. I will always love this song.
How true Country Music today is sick. Bring back the old time singers. They should have a station where they play all oldies!!!!
Hello Barbara, How are you doing?
Hello, So sorry for the infringe on your privacy. Beautiful song. How are you?
There's a few country oldies stations out there
Looked this song up
Spending time with my sister we used to watch with grandpa and grandma. 💃
This is my favorite song of all time.... Many different ones does it like boxcar Willie but it doesn't matter who does it, it's still walbash cannonball....... Let me hear the choo choo...... Trains was my favorite when I was growing up, I always wanted to drive a train......
Just discovered Roy , he was a friend of my family up the road a ways from Maynardville. Gave an old uncle a bunch of guitars and banjos one time I heard.
Mr Acuff seemed like a stand up guy. I sure do miss these guy's and gal's .
Got a chance years ago to go the Nashville & see the Grand Ole Opry one Thanksgiving. That was the week Roy Acuff passed away, so I never got to see him live. Thankfully we have videos
My dad's side was and is from Maynardville Tennessee. God bless that volunteer state
A truly lovely rendition that really does this great railway song justice❤❤❤
Great song and video footage, thanks for sharing your video with us !
This video is one reason I love RUclips. Omg this is amazing and so many wouldn’t have ever seen this. Such a treasure.
I'm looking for a RUclips video from March 16,1974 when Roy Acuff and his Smoky Mountain Boys performed The Wabash Cannonball on the opening night of the Grand Old Opry House at Opryland.
Roy acuff was a real class act and a true legend. R.I.P Roy
Now that was awesome!
my grandfather. very proud of him
My friends you have just witness the best in this business Roy Acuff.
My granny loved Roy Acuff
The Wabash cannonball was a line of the Wabash Railroad. I'm checking to see if the railroad relates to the Wabash River in Indiana, I think. There is a street in Chicago, or south of it, called Wabash.
Hello there Alice nice meeting you here
That was the part that always confused me about Roy's version. The Wabash never went south of St. Louis. Too literally minded, perhaps.
One of the most evocative lines in American music:
"Hear the mighty rush of the engine, hear the lonesome hobo's call
You're travelin' through the jungles on the Wabash Cannonball"
I was camping with my dad and asked what he wanted to hear and it was this song because of his memories with his dad.
Ever so often an entertainer comes along that truly is a master entertainer. Doesn’t happen often but Roy Acuff was definitely in that class. I wish I could have seen him before he was gone.
No one else (in the past or future) will ever be able to do this song any justice!
❤ thank you
Amazing how the one man could mimic a train whistle with his voice.
I hope Mr Acuffs family will be able to read this my great uncle was a conductor for the southern pacific from I think the 30s to the 60s he has unfortunately passed away and my late grandfather was a railroad spike layer for the mccloud river railroad
I have loved this all my life. ❤
Hello Vivian, How are you doing?
Little to no change in his voice between this performance and one he did in 1940. Have to love true, classic, country and singers like Mister Acuff.
Legendary
When Roy introduces Onie Wheeler on harmonica, it should not be forgotten that Onie is also the person responsible for the human train whistle on Acuff's 1947 re-recording of this song. This performance came from the 1978 special 50 Years of Country Music.
"Onie Wheeler and his harmonikee!"
ClassicTVMan, Onie wasn't the one on the 1947 Wabash Cannonball re-recording. Onie had his own Band in the Bootheel of Missouri. Onie had been in the Army in WW2 @ Pearl Harbor when it was hit. In the mid 1950s, Onie was doing Rockabilly on Sun Records on the same Bill as Elvis Presley.
Onie didn't join up with Roy Acuff until 1965. Onie had been a Star in his own right. He died on the Opry Stage -May 26,1984 singing on the WSM Grand Ole Gospel Show .
I used to listen to this and other roy acuff songs when I was younger while playin with my lionel pennsylvania flyer freight set... ironically I was born in 2001, not 1951
I had a cheap Lionel, couldn't set it up too often: small living room
What a treat! Thank you.
Very proud to say I saw him live at the Opry
Jimmy Riddle on piano was a master on the harmonica as well. He recorded an album wuth guitar geniius Jackie Phelps, both played with Roy Acuff.
Bashful Brother Oswald made the great sound on the Dobro that made Roy so popular.
Hi howard how are you?
Brilliant I knew this because Dizzy Dean mentioned it while broadcasting baseball games
Comments
TOP. .....Newest
1day ago.....That says it all ,never to be forgotten ,he says as I go now to Johnny Cash vesion...... all day !!! 😊😎
I love Roy. One of the Greatest.
Good 'ole song!
Roy’s life was a testimony of his belief in Jesus Christ.
Mr. Roy Acuff looks like my late grand father, doppelganger 💖🎶✨
OMG, so good.
The greatest train song EVER
I love you papaw . I cant wait to play this again with you when i get up there Amen. RIp jimmy crowder. Ill dance bare🦶foot with you on that golden road ❤
The best of the best!!
Roy was simply the best
The Wabash Cannonball was a Detroit to Saint Louis train. It died when the last major source of income was put on trucks. US Mail. It should never have gone away! It was a important cross line .
GOOD STUFF !
One of the greatest ❤️
You're absolutely right..... Good evening jean how are you doing over there hope you're having a wonderful day it's a wonderful day that the lord has made.
This video is part of a fantastic show called "50 Years of Country Music"....I wonder who has the complete show and is willing to share it on RUclips???
Yes, I am looking for that as well!
THE 50 YEAR HISTORY OF COUNTRY MUSIC 1922-1972
Narrated by Hugh Cherry 39 Radio programs.
Love JR. Sadly missed. Country Music isn't the same. He's a country music class clown in the books. He wrote great songs and others recorded them
Yes he was the best of the best ever and many tried to imitate him but failed.