5,000 Shows Later, the Grand Ole Opry Is Still the Sound of Nashville (Published 2021)


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A two-hour celebration for the milestone broadcast captured the shifts and strides in country music that played out over the past century on the Opry stage.

The Grand Ole Opry broadcasts began on Dec. 26, 1925. On Saturday night in Nashville, Connie Smith, the Gatlin Brothers, Bill Anderson, Darius Rucker, Terri Clark and Chris Janson were among those who took the stage to honor the show.Credit...Kyle Dean Reinford for The New York Times

NASHVILLE — The survival of the Grand Ole Opry was anything but guaranteed when Bill Anderson started performing in it six decades ago. Rock ’n’ roll was luring away fans. Radio stations were abandoning barn dance-style programs. There were nights, he said, when musicians could look out from the Opry stage and see empty seats.

But on Saturday night, as the curtain went up and he started singing “Wabash Cannonball,” the house was packed, his music beaming out live on WSM, the Nashville station that has carried the Opry since the fledgling days of radio, and streaming online to viewers around the world.

The show on Saturday was the 5,000th broadcast of the Grand Ole Opry, a constant accompanying American life through generations of turmoil and transformation, through the Depression and recessions, wars, cultural upheaval and, most recently, a pandemic.

The milestone — adding up to roughly 96 years worth of weekly shows, an unparalleled achievement in broadcasting — was a testament to the durability of the Opry as a radio program but also as a Nashville institution that has inducted well over 200 performers as members.

“The Opry is bigger than any one artist,” Anderson, one of the longest-serving members of the Opry cast, said in an interview. “As times change and things evolve, somehow, the Opry has been able to remain the star of the show.”

The Nashville crowd heard staples like Loretta Lynn’s “Coal Miner’s Daughter.”Credit...Kyle Dean Reinford for The New York Times
Dustin Lynch, one of the Opry’s younger stars, prepared to go onstage Saturday night.Credit...Kyle Dean Reinford for The New York Times

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