These programs honor and showcase the careers of musicians and session singers who have played important roles in country music history. Through in-depth, one-on-one interviews with the honorees, museum visitors gain a better understanding of how musicians made careers for themselves by backing hit artists in the recording studio or on concert tours. Quarterly. Learn more about Nashville Cats.
No events for May 17th, 2012.
On January 10 1956, two months after leaving tiny Sun Records for RCA and two days after turning 21, Elvis Presley retired to a Nashville studio for his first sessions on the new label. The first song he cut was a cover of Ray Charles' "I Got a Woman," the second was "Heartbreak Hotel." The latter song, and Presley's follow-up hits, had such a commercially devastating impact on country music that for a time Nashville's famed 16th Avenue seemed to be the loneliest street in America.