Everyone knows the song “Tennessee Waltz.” In the past 75 years, it’s been recorded more than 500 times and has sold around 14 million records. In 1965, it became the official Tennessee state song.
The criminal irony of a Tennessee state song elected in 2023 baffles even the original songwriter, who's convinced no one ...
Here’s a guide to the 2025 Bach Festival, the 90th. It’s a double celebration this year as John Sinclair marks 35 years as ...
Glennda M. Lopes, revered as an unyieldingly positive, dedicated, and generous soul, was a kind, loving wife, mother, ...
The highest-profile candidates in both special primary elections Tuesday, state Sen. Randy Fine and Florida CFO Jimmy ...
The Tennessee Legislature passed a series of anti-immigration measures including a law making it a crime for local officials to vote for sanctuary policies. The move comes as other Republican-led ...
Chattanooga (16-8 overall, 8-3 SoCon) held the Terriers to only one basket over a nearly 13-minute span of the final stanza ...
Music written in three can be found in many genres and I offer the following examples: In the world of country music think of: “The Tennessee Waltz,” “Could I Have This Dance” (the first dance for ...
Trump’s plan drew immediate, sharp backlash from Arab countries and Palestinian authorities, as well as assertions from Democratic lawmakers and other international legal scholars that the concept is ...
The last of the five members of the iconic American rock group, The Band, Garth Hudson’s death is the end of an era.
If you grew up in Tennessee it is likely you learned about Tennessee’s state flag, flower, and state bird. How do we know these are official state symbols though? Are they written down somewhere?