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Roy Acuff’s captivating vocal delivery and electrifying stage presence made him the heart and soul of one of country music’s longest running and most revered institutions, the Grand Ole Opry.
A rare Roy Acuff fiddle is making its way to East Tennessee, to be on display at the Mountain Music Museum in Kingsport.
Roy Acuff was considered 'The King of Country Music.' After his death in 1992, country music stars mourned the Grand Ole Opry mainstay.
Roy Acuff, the singer and fiddler who was known to millions of Grand Ole Opry listeners as the ”King of Country Music,” died Monday at Baptist Hospital in Nashville. He was 89. He died … ...
Tennessee has long inextricably associated with country music, but do you remember which country icon actually ran for governor in his home state?
A fiddle formerly owned by Roy Acuff was donated to a Goodwill in Kansas City, Mo., and is now up for auction.
If not for the summer sun, Roy Acuff might have made it to baseball's big leagues — and country music might never know one of its greatest stars.
Roy Acuff was in a broadcast booth in Wichita, Kan., in July 1990 when wind and rain chased the teams off the field. The Missions' play-by-play radio announcer began filling time at the microphone.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A fiddle believed to be once owned by the late country music star Roy Acuff is back with its owners after it was accidentally donated to a Goodwill store in Missouri.
Roy Acuff graduated from Knoxville Central High 100 years ago. A salute is planned May 20.
Grand Ole Opry legend Roy Acuff, who died 24 years ago today, performs his signature song "Wabash Cannonball" on the Grand Ole Opry stage.
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