Country
3 Redneck Tenors
In the melodic wake of the three operatic tenors comes a new breed of tenors from more humble origins...3 Redneck Tenors - A New Musical Adventure. The musical comedy featuring classically trained veteran artists from Broadway and world opera stages is like Greater Tuna meets Das Barbecu - down home laughs with big city music!
Aaron Lines
There's just one road into Fort McMurray, a small town in northern Alberta, Canada, about 600 miles from the United States border. Pick up Hwy. 63, a two-lane blacktopped road, about 10 minutes outside of Edmonton, then drive 300 miles north. You'll know when you get there, because you can't go any farther on Hwy. 63. Fort McMurray is the end of the road.
Aaron Tippin

"Working Man's Ph.D." isn't just one of Aaron Tippin's many hits. It is a degree he has earned and bears with pride. From swinging a "Ten Pound Hammer" to "drivin' a truck", you better believe, Aaron Tippin has done it.
Alabama
This serving of music from Alabama comes to you "super-sized."
Fifteen tunes long, a full year in the making and over budget, When It All Goes South is the biggest and most ambitious album that RCA's superstar band has ever created. In a career that has been characterized by superlatives, this collection stands out as a major accomplishment.
Alan Jackson
Like Red on a Rose is Alan Jackson’s sixteenth album, and the first produced for him by Alison Krauss.
Alison Brown Quartet
Alison Brown achieved an international reputation as a banjo player by pushing the instrument out of its familiar Appalachian settings and into new musical territory.
Alison Krauss & Union Station
Alison Krauss and Union Station will be releasing their first studio album in three years. Lonely Runs Both Ways features fifteen tracks of band originals and songs by some of their favorite writers. Jerry Douglas contributes another instrumental - "Unionhouse Branch," and Ron Block offers two new songs for the project, "A Living Prayer" and "I Don't Have to Live This Way."
Allison Moorer
was born on June 21, 1972, in Mobile, Alabama. I was raised around there, too. I grew up in a musical family and started singing (harmony) when I was about 3, I'm told. I went to college at the University of South Alabama, and graduated with a B.A. in Public Relations in June of 1993. On the day I took my last exam, I moved to Nashville they mailed me my diploma.
Amy Grant
"Rock of Ages, cleft for me, let me hide myself in thee...."
In shelter there is hope, and in churches across many generations, inspiring Christian hymns have been the expressions of strength and courage enabled by faith's sanctuary. New life is being breathed into these treasures today, stirring hope for people who've never known, or may have misplaced, their value.
Andy Griggs
Andy Griggs has seen plenty of changes in the country scene since he first debuted, back when kings like Waylon and Johnny still walked among us and "idols" were just little gold statues.
Ashley Monroe
A little more than a year ago, Ashley Monroe took stock of herself. A major label development deal had come and gone, and she had shopped her music without success at other labels. She decided to take some time to focus on her songwriting and do some soul-searching for what her chosen career path really held for her.
Asleep At The Wheel
Over the course of the last 36 years, Ray Benson and Asleep at the Wheel have boldly defied the fickle lures of the mainstream -- and thrived -- by sticking to their noble cause of keeping that distinctly American of art forms, western swing, alive and kicking.
Baillie & The Boys
In every sense, a lot of time, care and emotion was put into the latest release by Baillie & The Boys, titled Lovin’ Every Minute, to make the record what it should be - a representation of where the group is today.
Big & Rich

Here, ladies and gentlemen, brothers and sisters, is that new universe: Big & Rich, Horse of a Different Color. Two guys, thirteen songs. The kind of genre-hopping, fence-busting, gully-whumping statement of purpose that doesn't bust out of Nashville or New York, or L.A., or anywhere else-too often these days. It may well be that true rarity in the music business: something new under the sun.
Bill Anderson
There's an old saying: "If you want someone's attention, whisper."
Bill Anderson has been using that philosophy for over thirty years to capture the attention of millions of country music fans around the world, en route to becoming one of the most popular and most enduring entertainers of our time.
Bill Engvall
I was born in Galveston, Texas in 1957 in the middle of a hurricane and I guess because of the drop in the barometric pressure it affected my brain and I was destined to become a stand-up comic. Although at that age I wasn't aware of my destiny. We moved a great deal when I was a child and so I used my sense of humor to make friends quickly.
Billy "Crash" Craddock
Billy "Crash" Craddock was born the youngest of 13 children in Greensboro, NC. A good portion of his childhood was spent surrounded by music and love of his family. His father, typical of musicians of his day and time, played harmonica, spoons, washboard and buck danced.
Billy Currington
From small-town Son of the South to hot new artist to bona fide country star, Billy Currington has seen it all. In 2003 he burst onto the Nashville scene with his self-titled debut album, and proceeded to burn up the charts with Top Ten singles “I Got a Feelin’” and “Walk a Little Straighter”.
Billy Dean
Billy Dean doesn't live on the Ponderosa.
His home is in a part of Nashville where tourist buses never run. His neighbors work nine to five, punch time clocks or manage blue-collar businesses. Like Billy, they take out their own trash, cook for their kids, and wash their own dishes. They all know each other by their first names.
Billy Gilman
He wrote a killer in 'Let Me Remind You Again,' " says Gilman. "He played it to me over the phone and it was all crackly because he was on his cell phone, but even so I had goose bumps because the song is just everything I hoped for. It sounds like Patsy Cline or Ray Price, songs they would perform in a heartbeat. So it was great to see the versatility in his writing."
Billy Ray Cyrus
Back To Tennessee is much more than just another album in one man’s remarkable and enduring career. This is an extremely meaningful homecoming in that man’s singular journey back to the musical roots that have long sustained him. “This album is everything I am at this second,” says Cyrus.
BJ Thomas
He owns one of the most distinctive voices in American pop music—a reassuringly masculine timbre conveyed with a smattering of unique embellishments that represent a distillation of the most influential genres in pop culture.
BlackHawk
Blackhawk is a musical group of seasoned professionals with decades of dedication to their music. Led by singer Henry Paul on acoustic guitar / mandolin, the group includes Billy Crain on lead guitar / harmony vocals, Randy Threet on bass guitar / harmony vocals, Chris Anderson on lead guitar / harmony vocals, Jon Coleman on keyboards / harmony vocals, and Monte Yoho on drums / percussion.
Blake Shelton

For a guy who doesn't care much about the idea of "stardom," Blake Shelton has made quite a name for himself during the past couple of years. Awards from Billboard, Country Weekly and Music Row magazines, a No. 1 smash single, a chart-topping video and a Gold record all ensued from his astonishing album debut.
Bobby Bare
In his own quiet way, Bobby Bare has long been regarded as one of Country Music’s most innovative and talented writer/performers. “I’ve never believed in standing still with my music,” he says, and the diversity of his recordings are testimony to the success of this approach.
Bomshel
In a town recently noted for music playing second fiddle to grandiose marketing schemes, Bomshel was born the old fashioned way. Performing weekly for nearly a year for country music fans at the famous Tootsies Orchard lounge, in Nashville Tennessee.
BR549
There’s been a boatload of changes on the country landscape since a rough-and-tumble quintet of hard-core, true-blue pickers set about turning a complacent, soft-around-the-edges and squishy-in-the-middle Nashville on its collective ear in the early-’90s.
Brad Cotter
Brad Cotter has been around the block and back again. This guy has lived a lot of life in a very short time. When Brad was only 7 years old, his parents took him to his first Gospel singing. He has always been a big fan of music.
Brad Paisley
Brad Paisley is a walking testament to modern-day country’s possibilities. His albums are cornucopias of words and music that provide alternately poignant and hilarious journeys across the human landscape.
Brenda Lee
Brenda Lee sang her way out of an impoverished childhood and into the hearts of the world. From the beginning it was obvious that here was a rare talent with a distinctive throaty style and rich vocal presence. By six she was astounding listeners with a mature sound and lyric interpretation reserved for women who had gathered both thru time and experience.
Brian McComas
"I feel like this is a calling," says Brian McComas, "just like it would be for a preacher or a race car driver or a doctor. For me, making music is like breathing."
Brooks & Dunn

“We came from pretty blue-collar backgrounds, so you had to dream some lofty dreams,”
says Ronnie Dunn about the emotional momentum that drives Cowboy Town, the powerful new
album by country music superstars, Brooks & Dunn. With the disc’s first single, “Proud of the
House We Built,” yet another smash in a career of more than twenty #1 singles, Dunn observed,
Bryan White
Few people who sing country music earn real stardom. Only a handful attain the rank of honest-to-goodness phenomenon. But a few years back, a shy Oklahoma singer with great pipes and teen-idol good looks did just that.
Bucky Covington
Bucky Covington is that most remarkable of entertainers—a man known and loved as much for his engaging personality as for his formidable talent. The talent has shone through on three hit singles that have helped push his debut album toward gold status; his undeniable likeability and his ability to wear his stardom as comfortably as his jeans has done the rest.
Buddy Jewell
With a new collection titled Times Like These, Buddy Jewell steps into the ranks of the truly world-class country singers.
Carolina Rain
“Based on what we have heard so far, this is going to be some really exciting music to work,” he continued. “Rhean Boyer (lead vocals, guitars) is the primary writer for the band. History has proven to me that when you have an act that writes much of their own material, you have a very potent combination.
Carolyn Dawn Johnson
"I've always wanted to be an artist who writes things that are real to me," Carolyn Dawn says. "I just want to be honest in my music”.
Carrie Underwood
Carrie Underwood's career is the stuff of dreams. Possessed of that rarest of combination--undeniable talent, an extraordinary work ethic, and girl-next-door likeability--she blossomed as a national phenomenon before tens of millions of viewers by winning American Idol, captivated by both her vocal talent and personality.
Chad Brock
Chad Brock has been singing his entire life, but the former athlete didn't realize how unique his musical talent was until he met Florene Gabriel Reese--his high school chorus teacher and perhaps the biggest influence in his life. "I elected chorus because I wanted an easy A," the native of Ocala, Florida now admits.
Chalee Tennison
It’s not simply that Chalee Tennison is a world-class country singer. Nor is it merely that she’s a gifted songwriter. The power of this artist is based on something much more – her charisma is founded on her honesty. In a world of manufactured images, Chalee (pronounced Shuh-LEE) Tennison is the real deal.
Charley Pride
Born to poor sharecroppers, one of eleven children in Sledge, Mississippi, Pride is a timeless everyman, revered by his musical peers and adored by countless millions of fans around the globe. His golden baritone voice has transcended race and spanned the generations.
Charlie Daniels Band
On October 28, 1936, Charles E. Daniels was born in Wilmington, North Carolina. When he was a child, he spent his time between North Carolina and Georgia. Like many a lad, little Charlie went coon and deer hunting with his dad. In the 1940's, Charlie wrote his first story, a ghostly tale about a wooley swamp.
Charlie Robison
Let’s just get it out of the way right up front: In the five years between his last and most successful album yet, Good Times, and his new Dualtone Records release, Beautiful Day, Charlie Robison got divorced from his wife Emily (of The Dixie Chicks). So it’s only natural to assume that this is his “divorce album,” which is not altogether untrue.
Chely Wright
Country star Chely Wright is best known for hits such as “Single White Female” and “Shut Up and Drive,” but is also a top notch songwriter in her own right. Through her songs, Chely feels the freedom to write and record songs that mean something to her and is willing to fully share with us what she is about.
Chonda Pierce
Chonda Pierce is a speaker, comedian, author, preacher's daughter, wife, mother of two and singer. The author of Second Row, Piano Side and It's Always Darkest Before the Fun Comes Up, she has recorded three audio and video products, including her recently released Having a Girls' Nite Out.
Chris Cagle
In his debut CD entitled Play It Loud, Chris Cagle unleashes his unique version of high octane country music that's like an icy glass of Jolt Cola and a pair of well-worn cowboy boots. In the tradition of the Charlie Daniels Band and Travis Tritt, Play It Loud blends the soul of rock and country to create a new sound that remains rough around the edges.
Chris Young
An air of high expectation and inevitability has always surrounded Chris Young. Anyone who heard him sing, and anyone who experienced his poised and engaging stage show, inevitably decreed that this tall fellow with the friendly smile had what it takes.
Chuck Wicks
Everyone has heard the phrase “practice makes perfect” and though it’s a mantra more often associated with sports than songwriting, it’s just as apropos for that vocation as any other endeavor--just ask singer/songwriter Chuck Wicks.
Clay Walker
Certain artists just seem to have an innate sense of what it takes to please an audience. Clay Walker is one of those artists. Whether on stage or in the recording studio, Walker never gives less than a hundred percent, and it's that kind of dedicated work ethic combined with God-given talent that have made him one of the most successful country acts of the past decade.
Clint Black
Yes, the melodies are memorable. For if you love country music, they're virtually a soundtrack of the '90s. And when delivered by the unmistakable voice of Clint Black, they can, indeed change your "State of Mind."
Collin Raye
One of the true hitmakers of the 1990's, Collin Raye still continues to crank out soulful, heartfelt material with the honesty and richness that is signature to his vocals on his newly formed label StarPointe Records.
Confederate Railroad
Few acts have carved as distinctive a niche in modern musical history as Confederate Railroad. With their high-energy combination of honky-tonk rockers, sensitive ballads, and offbeat humor, they have created a unique identity that has brought them chart success, multi-platinum sales, and continued popularity as a road band.
Connie Smith
Connie Smith remembers as a fiveyearold saying, "Someday I'm gonna sing on the Grand Ole Opry." She didn't say it too seriously because she didn't think her dream would come true.
The Elkhart, Indiana native was a housewife and mother of a fourmonthold son living in Warner, Ohio, in 1963 when she began to realize that dream.
Cowboy Crush
They are, to put it simply, one of country music's great sagas. Cowboy Crush has built, one soul-stirring, tail-shaking show at a time, a unique niche and a devoted following across the U.S. and in half a dozen countries.
Craig Morgan
When Craig Morgan was ten years old and on a school field trip to Nashville, he sang "The Star-Spangled Banner" well enough to catch the ear of a distinctive older lady in the crowd. "She walked up to me and said, ‘Son, someday you’re gonna be a famous singer,’" Morgan remembers.
Crystal Gayle
Before country was ‘cool,’ Crystal was ‘class’…”
Never has one reviewer captured a platinum clad, Grammy Award winning career so beautifully in so few words.
Crystal Shawanda
I'm Native American. We're automatically country . joined to the land and the real stories of everyday people. A long time ago, we traditionally used music as our daily prayer and as our way of giving thanks. To Native Americans, music is our everything. It's our storytelling, our history, and our dance. We use it to remember and to forget. It's how we celebrate life and mourn death.
Dan Seals
Dan's another Texas grown country singer who got his start in life on February 8th in McCamey, Texas. Dan's early years were spent in a two room house with his parents, older brother Jimmy - of Seals & Crofts fame - and his grandparents.
Danielle Peck
There is an undeniable division in Danielle Peck's voice. A bluesy pull, a reluctant smokiness that, when it breaks, yields soaring, ringing, soul-stirring power and clarity. That tantalizing slow-pour tension is a fitting reflection of the artist herself. Is she an exuberant young country singer or an experienced and purposed entertainer?
Darryl Worley
Through five albums and seventeen chart hits, Darryl Worley has produced one of the most impressive and wide-ranging catalogs in contemporary music. He has for ten years been a mainstay of modern country, a distinctive singer and first-rate songwriter whose music has chronicled life, love and the world situation with equal facility.
Daryle Singletary
A lot of things have changed for Daryle Singletary since the release of his debut album, but his commitment to classic country remains rock solid.
David Allan Coe
If there's ever been a way to describe DAC, it has got to be his ability to defy categorization. With nearly three decades of following his musical muse wherever it's led, this outlaw has crossed the panorama of American roots music.
David Ball
David Ball was born into a musical family in Spartanburg, South Carolina on July 9th, 1953. His father was a Baptist minister and his Mom was a multi-talented musician, who still enjoys playing ragtime piano. David is the third of four sons and a daughter. Starting out on the ukelelue, he switched to guitar at 12.
David Frizzell
In any discussion about the greatest voices in country music, David Frizzell’s name is certain to come up — at least among those who know country music. And it’s not just because he bears a vocal resemblance to his older brother, that ultimate stylist, Lefty Frizzell.
David Lee Murphy
David Lee Murphy's records have an extra kick that makes him instantly identifiable in a crowd of new country artists. Call it a driving rhythm or a no-nonsense attitude or a willingness to push the envelope- it's an element of his artistry that has produced some of the biggest hit singles of 1995 and 1996, and it's there on his new MCA album, We Can't All Be Angels.
Deana Carter
Deana Carter, of the golden hair, bare feet and mega-watt smile, writes people's souls.