Sad, but I have to thank them for a job well done for so long. Thomas Hardy and I played there in '54, a couple of raw teenagers. Ernest and the band treated us so well.
LeGrande II, Nash. 112, Fender Twin Tone Master, Session 400, Harlow Dobro, R.Q.Jones Dobro
That's a shame, but not too surprising. It's gotta be pretty expensive having that property in the middle of downtown Nashville. I can't imagine record sales being too profitable today.
Brad’s Page of Steel
A web site devoted to acoustic & electric lap steel guitars
I remember being in there on one of my trips to Nashville. Wasn't there a D10 pedal steel on display in there at one time, maybe one of Pete Drake's guitars?
Sure enough, that is what I remembered. An Icon from the days when country music featured fiddles and pedal steel guitars. Thanks for the picture, Jerry.
One of my favorite stops in Naashville although it was dead the last time there, no one playing at all.
Sad to see historic places like this disappear.
Sad to see that it is closing down.
If they did international shipping I would buy something from them.
Tony Davis gave me an old catalogue from there that he got 20 years ago.. I will hang onto it as a souvenir of better days in country music.
I hope when I someday get to Nashville there is still something there....
Tom Keller wrote:Will the radio show continue on WSM at midnight or is that gone?
Tom, I believe the Saturday Night Midnight Jamboree radio show closed down a few years ago. The show was moved from the downtown location to an auxiliary Record Shop location located in a mall in the suburbs. I believe the Jamboree radio show stopped when the auxiliary location closed.
After looking at the ‘in depth articles’ and hearing pugnacious protagonists’ postulations fly freely, I can only laugh out loud at that characters name: Joe Buck Yourself. The rest is just as sad as a rainy-day funeral.
Sad as hell, but also a sign of the times. Nobody really cares about things like this anymore, there is NO Connection. The younger generations have turned the corner to " nobody gives a crap about anything anymore" All they care about is which IPhone do they have.
I'm actually surprised it lasted as long as it did. I've been there many times and I'm glad for that.
Think about this....Mannys Music on 48th Street NYC, which was the premier Music Store in NYC , hang out on a Saturday and any BIG TIME Artist or player who was in NYC would come into the store . Well now its parking lot or maybe even an empty lot.
Our generational culture has changed 180 degrees and it didn't even take that long.
Emmons L-II , Fender Telecasters, B-Benders , Eastman Mandolin ,
Pro Tools 12 on WIN 7 !
jobless- but not homeless- now retired 9 years