Sixty-five years ago today, the country music world lost a legend who recorded some of the genre's most memorable songs.
In the middle of the night on Nov. 5, 1960, Johnny “Battle of New Orleans” Horton’s premonition of dying at the hands of a drunk came true on a dark highway in Central Texas.
Towards the back end of the '50s, there were a lot of new sounds beginning to develop, but which of them did the public take ...
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Today-Music-History-Nov05

Today in Music History for Nov. 5: ...
Principal Krista Pearson recently announced Lowndes High School’s honor roll for the first nine weeks of school. 9th Grade Honor Roll: Makaela Adams, Miller Aguilar,Israel Alegria, Nashalie Alicea, ...
Charli XCX announced she will release "House" featuring John Cale on Monday, ahead of her album for the film 'Wuthering Heights' ...
One year before Johnny Cash’s death, he recorded an unexpected song that served as an especially poignant farewell. In 2002, the music legend known as The Man in Black recorded a cover of the 1994 ...
Johnny Paycheck was trying not to get disheartened by a long line of near-hits when he finally released what would become his first and only No. 1 song in the fall of 1977. Paycheck (born Donald ...
Playboi Carti performs during The Weeknd: After Hours Til Dawn Tour at Mercedes-Benz Stadium on August 21, 2025, in Atlanta, ...
DeKalb Schools chief Dr. Devon Horton was placed on paid leave after being indicted in Illinois over alleged kickbacks from his time leading another district. DeKalb County Schools Superintendent Dr.
Billy Strings closed out his Baltimore run with a little more help from his friends Leftover Salmon, Cory Henry, and Cris Jacobs.