Each Wednesday at 8 a.m. I join Cindy and Doug for the Country Classic Flashback. We take a trip down memory lane to highlight a country legend. This week we are featuring Patsy Cline.
If you visited the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in 2012, you were one of 564,777 visitors, meaning it was a very popular place to be. In fact, it was the largest attendance total in the museum's history, which spans 45 years. Two reasons for the phenomenal attendance rate? Taylor Swift and Patsy Cline.
She’s one of the most important names in modern music history, but Patsy Cline fans haven’t had a place where they can go to celebrate her legacy — until now.
Thanks to the efforts of the aptly named Celebrating Patsy Cline Inc. organization, Cline’s Virginia home has been renovated and is now open to the public.
She appeared on -- and won -- Arthur Godfrey's talent Scouts show in 1957. Six years later, at the height of her career as a pop and country western artist, Patsy Cline would be killed in a private plane crash. Join us Sunday morning at 11 as we remember the music Patsy Cline made famous.