The marty stuart show
#The marty stuart show tv
But we are absolutely going to go back to the TV cameras in the next couple years, I think.” “I love TV, and I think there’s another television show in development, probably for another network. It’s in history books,” says Marty Stuart. “That particular show is in the books now. This doesn’t mean that Marty Stuart is done with television though. So we know these shows stand the test of time, and there’s definitely and evergreen element to them, and they will remain popular.”
#The marty stuart show series
And Marty, along with RFD-TV, has in some cases produced more episodes than some of those older series from the late 60’s, early 70’s, yet those shows are still going strong on RFD. It’s been a short time I suppose, but some of our most popular classic programming is ‘The Porter Wagoner Show,’ ‘Pop Goes The Country,’ those kinds of shows. Let’s move on.”Įarlier this week, RFD-TV Program Director Jeremiah Davis had told Saving Country Music, “We’d love nothing more than to have him back, a nd I know our viewers would too. But at the end of the 156 episodes and six or seven seasons, you know what? Mission accomplished. I think there were maybe five or six names on my wish list for the first season that I never got to, or they couldn’t do it or didn’t want to do it, whatever. “The mission statement there was to put our arms around the culture of traditional country music inside the walls of Nashville before it completely disappeared off the edge of planet Earth. “I did 156 episodes, me and the Superlatives,” Marty Stuart told The Boot. Though the only official answer we could pull was that Marty was taking time off from the show in 2017 to tour behind his recent record Way Out West, in a new interview Marty Stuart leaves no wiggle room for the show’s return.
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He has without question evolved into one of the most important roots musicians and visionaries in America.Just this week Saving Country Music inquired if there would ever be any new episodes of The Marty Stuart Show-the long-running RFD-TV staple that saw Marty share the stage with his backup band The Fabulous Superlatives, as well as a host of special guests, including many great country music oldtimers, as well as newer up-and-comers. Not only as country music's most notable ambassador/caretaker, but as its main archetypical crusader. So, what's next? As musicologist Peter North cites, "Marty Stuart seems wrapped in his destiny at this point in time. Stuart's zest for every conceivable flavor of country music is also seen regularly by TV viewers these days, on RFD-TV's "The Marty Stuart Show", a musical variety show and the number one program on the network. His latest musical oeuvre is ably supported by the coolest cats in Nashville - his backing band, The Fabulous Superlatives: guitarist Kenny Vaughan, drummer Harry Stinson, and bassist Paul Martin. The turn of the century saw Stuart looking inward to make deeply felt records paying homage to his love of vintage gospel, his Native American passions, and as always, his core - foot-stompin', tail-shakin', honky tonkin', rockin' hillbilly music. His teenage years on tour with bluegrass legend Lester Flatt in the '70s were followed by six years in Johnny Cash's band during the '80s and a chart-topping tenure as a solo artist in the '90s. Since starting out singing gospel as a child, Stuart, 54, has spent over four decades celebrating American roots music with a missionary's zeal.
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Marty Stuart is a five time GRAMMY-winner, platinum recording artist, Grand Ole Opry star, country music archivist, Southern culture historian, photographer, musician, songwriter, TV show host, charismatic force of nature, and country music fan.