Thank you for joining us at the 2nd annual Nashville Boogie Vintage Weekender! You’ll be able to find music in the Event Center closest to the Mall, The Ryman Hall and the Nashville Palace Thursday - Saturday. Sunday we head over to the Grand Ole Opry House for our grand finale performance and then back to the Palace for a FREE afterparty. Our event is closest to the Delta atrium area. Ask for that when checking in. The car show and vintage market expo is in the Ryman Hall & is open to the public for just $5. It’s included in your Boogie wristband. We encourage you to take some time to explore our beauty of a town. Middle Tennessee has the most important music history in the world! So much of the music we love is tied to Nashville. Please enjoy yourselves and take notes for us to help us grow. We’ll follow up after the event with a survey and will be counting on your input. We appreciate you choosing the Nashville Boogie in 2016. -Jason Galaz muddyrootsrecords.com, nashvilleboogie.com & powermerch.com
Cowboy Church w/ JoAnne Cash Johnny Cash’s sister.The Sunday morning service is held at 10 a.m. in the Texas Troubadour Theatre (across from the Opryland Hotel)
WESTERN ROUNDUP
FASHION SHOW
2 0
AT T H E
BOOGIE V INTAG E
TH
14 M AY 1 6
WE E K EN
DE R
Ri l e y Re ed
b ern i e d e xt er
t y l er g eo rg e
fa b l es by ba rr i e
j erry lee atwo od
of
by
un io n w este rn
e lli e mo nst er j es s s ne ll o f Ro ck in ’ B
Ma n u e l
c! l iv e m usi
JP cyr &his ra dio
wran g l ers
est vi n es o f Th e W i es re-ri de sto r uy gir ls b good
2 PM
- Tanya Montana Coe - Lindsay Timberlake - Natasha Blankenship - Ava Couture - Lucy DeLovely - Jenna Dawn - Vixen Lucy Lynn - Jean Velveteen - Eva Darling - Millie Michelle - Cherry De Vine - Cassidy Graves - Kendra Hope - Meredith Shaw - Celine Lee -Miss V -Ryan Warner -Brendan Malone - Adam Wakitsch - Alex Heighton - Shane Tutmarc - Jason Galaz - Joe Dooda - Brinton Ward
styling
hair + makeup
Suzy Galazka Leatrice Lloyd Ashley Westmoreland Danielle Finney Rachel Spann
PRES ENTED BY: rI L E Y rE ED + mUD DY rOOTS eVENTS
GAYLO RD O PRYLAND RESO RT | NAS H VI L L E, TEN N ES S E E
BettiePageWines.com
Other country stars made Madison their home, including Kitty Wells & Johnny Wright, Earl Scruggs, the Everly Brothers, Charlie Louvin, Floyd Cramer, Bashful Brother Oswald, Charlie Rich, Jon Hartford, and Maybelle Carter. Ira Louvin’s home in Madison became the center of interest in 1963 when he was shot six times with a .22 caliber pistol by his wife. Despite his wife telling police, “If the son of a bitch don’t die, I’ll shoot him again,” Ira survived his injuries. He continued living in the house until a traffic accident claimed his life two years later. Just west of Madison and centered on Dickerson Road is the neighborhood of Bellshire. Developed concurrently with Madison in the 1950s, several country stars lived in the neighborhood including Patsy Cline, Ernest Tubb, Carl Smith and June Carter. Bellshire was also the home of Starday Records. When Starday’s owner Don Pierce decided to relocate to Nashville in 1958, he chose to buck the trend and set up business far from the developing “Music Row.” Purchasing property at 3557 Dickerson Pike, he built a large studio and offices for the wonderfully diverse and often kitschy Starday Records. The studio was host to a wide variety of artists from the twisted country recitations of Red Sovine, to the high lonesome bluegrass stylings of the Stanley Brothers and even the funk-powered soul of James Brown. Although the studio and offices are now abandoned and deteriorating from years of neglect, they are still an important piece of Nashville musical history. Beginning in the late 1960s and into the 70s, Nashville underwent the same type of urban flight and suburban expansion experienced by many U.S. cities. As suburban communities such as Hendersonville and Brentwood grew just outside of Davidson County, many musicians moved to larger and more expensive homes, leaving the communities of northeast Nashville behind. But the circle remains unbroken as those same neighborhoods were rediscovered by musicians in the 1990s, leading to revitalization and East Nashville’s current hip status as the neighborhood of music in the Music City.
Starday Records still stands in Madison TN. in poor condition.