Jewly Hight
[Copyright 2024 NPR]
-
Alongside her daughter Wynonna, Naomi Judd, who died on April 30, willed one of the most riveting acts in country music into being through persistence and sacrifice.
-
A contemporary brass band that grew out of one of Nashville's historically Black universities is helping to expand the lost musical identity of the country capital.
-
Black women leveraged the power of streaming platforms and social media to bridge the chasms previously carved by labels, publishers and radio.
-
The mostly white country and folk music industries remain frustratingly difficult for Black musicians to enter. During one of Nashville's biggest events, one group envisioned a new pathway in.
-
Madi Diaz had much to process leading up to her new album, History of a Feeling: moving home to Nashville from L.A., reestablishing herself as a solo artist and splitting from her partner.
-
Allisson Russell has spent her career collaborating – but for Outside Child, her first solo record, she is stepping boldly out in front, sharing her tales of healing.
-
This fall, the bluegrass supergroup Sister Sadie became the first all-female band ever to win the top prize at the International Bluegrass Music Association awards.
-
After his older brother helped The BlackSon get his artistic career underway, the pair now find themselves living in a new "city."
-
The pair have found and are maintaining a place for themselves in the professional songwriting world of Nashville.
-
The autodidact producer spent time learning in Florida, before returning to Nashville with a vision for elevating the entire city.