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Publicity photo of Roy Rogers and Trigger | Born1945/Wikicommons
How did singing cowboys migrate from cattle drives to the silver screen?
7 Country Music Events in Southern California
If Ken Burns’ Country Music inspires you to explore the genre’s roots even further, here are a few upcoming Southern California concerts that feature…
Country-Music
Join host Kathy Mattea to learn more about the making of the epic documentary series devoted to the history of this truly American art form. Features…
Dolly Parton signs Martin D-28 guitar. Parton is among the 76 of the 101 country music artists interviewed for the series who signed two Martin D-28 guitars. | Courtesy of Katy Haas
After traveling thousands upon thousands of miles the "Country Music" team racked up impressive stats. Here are a few fun factoids about the new show.
Maybelle, Sara, & A.P. (Country Music Hall of Fame). | Flickr/John Irving/Creative Commons (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)
In this excerpt from "Country Music: An Illustrated History," meet A.P., Sara and Maybelle Carter, a music group who were instrumental to the genre of country music.
Dolly Parton publicity shot. Circa 1977 | Wikimedia Commons/RCA Records
An episode guide to “Country Music,” which tells the history of the genre that came to define what we now know as “America’s music.”
Bill Monroe on the Grand Ole Opry, Nashville, c.1958. | Les Leverett Collection
Ken Burns talks about how his new documentary "Country Music" explores the genre’s beginnings and diversity.
Blue Rangers at the EM Club in Yokosuka, ca. early 1960s | courtesy of J.T. Kanehira.
As the Cold War Space Race fired up the imaginations of young minds in the West, so too did the American occupation of Japan swing open the saloon doors to the Western world.
The Bakersfield Arch in Bakersfield, California, USA | Nick Chapman/ Wikicommons
During the 1950s, this strand of country-western music, featuring drums, electric guitars (especially the California made Fender Guitar) and strains of mariachi music and rock n’ roll, flourished in honky-tonks and dance halls in and around working-class Bakersfield. By the 1960s, this outlaw strand of country had become mainstream
Gene Autry comic books featured him in his many outfits | Courtesy of the Autry Museum of the American West
Designed mostly by first-generation immigrants to America, the rhinestone cowboy aesthetic would come to symbolize the best of the Wild West dream — big, bold, brawny and bedazzled.
Roots | Brent/Flickr/Creative Commons License
From the late 1930s through the 1990s, country western music and the hybrid culture from which it came defined much of white working class Los Angeles.
Sons of Pioneers (left to right): Tim Spencer, Bob Nolan, Roy Rogers, Ken Carson and Karl Farr (1946). | Courtesy of the Terry Sevigny Scott Collection.
The Mojave Project traces the musical heritage of Pioneertown and other adjacent communities of the High Desert.
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