The Music City Walk of Fame in Nashville added stars for Old Dominion, Charley Pride and Liz Rose on Nov. 11, 2025.
The late Charley Pride was inducted Tuesday into the Music City Walk of Fame in a ceremony in Nashville, along with Old ...
Trailblazing country music star Charley Pride died in December 2020, leaving behind a legacy that includes over 40 No. 1 hits and millions of record sales. After his death, it was confirmed that some ...
In the mid-1980s, when Charley Pride was in between record contracts, he went into a Dallas studio with an all-star cast of area musicians to record a series of songs by Brook Benton. He intended to ...
Charley Pride was the first great African American star of country music. Born in Sledge, MS in 1938, Pride left farm life behind and had a budding baseball career in the Negro and minor leagues. He ...
Benton penned “It’s Just a Matter of Time” with Belford Hendricks and Clyde Otis and released it in 1959. It was a No. 1 R&B hit and went to No. 3 on the Hot 100. Sonny James released his version in ...
Few country artists could match Charley Pride’s level of success in the 1970s. He collected eight No. 1 albums and 20 No. 1 singles. He also earned several awards, including three Grammy Awards and ...
Pride was country music’s ‘first Black superstar,’ while Old Dominion and Rose have garnered multiple awards over the years.
Old Dominion, Charley Pride, and Liz Rose are the latest inductees into the Music City Walk of Fame. Old Dominion is the reigning CMA group of the year, while Liz Rose is a songwriter known for her ...
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