Skip to content

OldiesButGoodies

OldiesButGoodies

  • Home
  • Sample Page
Songs

Rhonda Vincent – You Can’t Take It With You When You Go

Post navigation

Tammy Wynette & George Jones – Golden Rings
The Doobie Brothers – What A Fool Believes

Related Post

Ain’t No Fun To Be Alone In San Antone – Gene Watson

“Barry Gibb in 2025: The Last Bee Gee’s Journey of Love, Loss, and Music—How He Keeps His Brothers’ Legacy Alive, Finds Healing in Every Note, and Creates a New Era of Sound with His Children, Returning to the Warmth of Analog After Decades in Digital”

That evening in Nashville, Toby moved just a bit slower than he used to. And while the world saw the spotlight and the smiles, only Tricia noticed the truth — the gentle way he held her hand, like he was holding on to time itself. In between camera flashes and warm nods, they leaned closer, sharing words that belonged to them and no one else. Not “I love you.” Something quieter, deeper — “I’m still here.” He wrote so many songs, but the silence between them that night had its own music — the kind you don’t perform, you just feel. A melody whispered from the heart, like “You Shouldn’t Kiss Me Like This” — a song where the kiss isn’t for the crowd… but for the soul. And maybe that’s what true love really is — gentle, unspoken, yet impossible to miss.

Recent Posts

  • He Didn’t Fear Dying — He Feared the Day the Music Stopped Forever. In a deeply candid 2013 interview, Merle Haggard admitted that the thought of death never truly haunted him. What unsettled him was something far colder: the silence that follows when the lights go out and the applause fades. Speaking openly with Dan Rather, Haggard revealed why he kept returning to the stage again and again—not for fame, not for money, but to outrun the crushing loneliness he believed waited for him in stillness.
  • When Country Music Faced a Crisis, One Texas Voice Showed Up — And Saved a Legend. In an industry often defined by competition, chart battles, and radio airplay wars, what happened between Gene Watson and Mark Chesnutt proves that real country music is built on something far deeper than success — it’s built on loyalty, faith, and heart.
  • Melissa Gibb brought the entire audience to the brink of tears when she walked onto the stage to accept the GRAMMY Gold for “Best Vocal Performance” on behalf of her late father, Robin Gibb—turning what should have been a celebration into a haunting, unforgettable moment of love, loss, and legacy.
  • END OF A LEGENDARY CHAPTER: The Shadows Featuring Cliff Richard Declare 2026 Farewell Tour — “One Last Ride” That Will Change Everything
  • “He didn’t disappear. He just took the long road into the sky.” Only days after Merle Haggard was laid to rest, the silence at the Shasta County ranch felt almost unbearable, as if the land itself was holding its breath. The barn that had once pulsed with late-night chords and laughter stood still, dust floating in the pale light. Ben, Noel, and Marty stepped inside together, none of them quite ready, yet unable to stay away. The guitars were still there, exactly where their father had left them, as if he might walk back in at any moment. “Play something he’d recognize,” someone murmured, barely louder than the wind outside. For a long second, no one moved. Then Ben lifted the weathered Martin guitar — the one etched with years of calloused fingers and restless nights. The first notes of “Silver Wings” rang out, fragile but clear. Noel’s voice joined, then Marty’s. It wasn’t polished, it wasn’t perfect — but it was real, trembling with memory. And as they reached the line, “don’t leave me, I cry…”, the words seemed to hang in the air, heavier than ever before. People in the room felt it at the same time: this wasn’t just a song anymore. It was a bridge, a way of reaching someone just beyond sight. When the final chord faded into the rafters, Ben looked down at the guitar and spoke quietly, his voice breaking, “He didn’t disappear… he just took the long road into the sky.” From that night forward, every time the Haggard boys sang “Silver Wings,” it wasn’t a performance, and it wasn’t even a tribute. It was the closest thing they had to hearing their father answer back.

Categories

  • Country
  • Elvis Presley
  • Oldies Music
  • Rock & Roll
  • Songs

You Missed

Country

He Didn’t Fear Dying — He Feared the Day the Music Stopped Forever. In a deeply candid 2013 interview, Merle Haggard admitted that the thought of death never truly haunted him. What unsettled him was something far colder: the silence that follows when the lights go out and the applause fades. Speaking openly with Dan Rather, Haggard revealed why he kept returning to the stage again and again—not for fame, not for money, but to outrun the crushing loneliness he believed waited for him in stillness.

Country

When Country Music Faced a Crisis, One Texas Voice Showed Up — And Saved a Legend. In an industry often defined by competition, chart battles, and radio airplay wars, what happened between Gene Watson and Mark Chesnutt proves that real country music is built on something far deeper than success — it’s built on loyalty, faith, and heart.

Oldies Music

Melissa Gibb brought the entire audience to the brink of tears when she walked onto the stage to accept the GRAMMY Gold for “Best Vocal Performance” on behalf of her late father, Robin Gibb—turning what should have been a celebration into a haunting, unforgettable moment of love, loss, and legacy.

Oldies Music

END OF A LEGENDARY CHAPTER: The Shadows Featuring Cliff Richard Declare 2026 Farewell Tour — “One Last Ride” That Will Change Everything

OldiesButGoodies

Copyright © All rights reserved | Blogus by Themeansar.