COUNTRY MUSIC’S HIGHEST HONOR CAME THROUGH ON THE MORNING OF FEBRUARY 6, 2024. TOBY KEITH HAD DIED IN HIS SLEEP THE NIGHT BEFORE, AT 62. Hall of Fame voting had closed on February 2, three days before he went. Hours after the country woke to the news out of Oklahoma, the results landed at the CMA: elected, Modern Era, class of 2024. Sarah Trahern, the CMA’s chief executive, said her heart sank knowing they had missed their chance to tell him. That October his widow, Tricia, accepted the medallion and told the room she figured Toby would have said, “I should have been.” He came up out of the Oklahoma oil fields with a guitar his grandmother bought him, and he finished with twenty No. 1 country singles, more than 40 million albums and eleven USO tours behind him. That was the giant the world got. The version his mother got was smaller. On December 12, 2023, at the Park MGM in Las Vegas, he walked over and brought Carolyn Covel out into the light. “Eighty-two years old and she’s in Vegas tonight,” he told the crowd, and said she was the one who taught him to sing. Almost nobody out there knew she had been the singer first, that record men once came to her mother’s supper club in Fort Smith to look at her, that Toby thought her young pictures looked like Patsy Cline. Then he told her to tell everybody to go to hell, and she took the microphone and did it, laughing. Two nights later he played his last show. On February 5 she outlived her son. Nashville got the last word on his career. She got the night he handed her his microphone, and at eighty-two she brought the house down with it.

The Morning Country Music Woke Up Too Late for Toby Keith Country music’s highest honor arrived on the morning of…

BEFORE HOLLY DUNN EVER SANG “DADDY’S HANDS” IN PUBLIC, IT WAS ALREADY SITTING ON SOMEONE ELSE’S ALBUM, IGNORED. The Whites — Buck White and his daughters, Sharon and Cheryl — recorded it for their 1985 record Whole New World. It stayed an album cut, never pushed out as a single, and reached almost nobody. Which meant the woman who wrote it still had it. And she hadn’t written it for a chart anyway. She wrote it as a Father’s Day present for her dad, a Church of Christ preacher in San Antonio, and never meant it to travel any further than his hands. So she cut it herself and took it out on the road, and by her own account people in the crowd wept every single time. She’d look over at her band mid-song, trying to figure out what was happening to the room. It puzzled her enough that she went to her label and pushed for it as a single. August 1986: No. 7, six months on the country chart, two Grammy nominations the year after. The song hadn’t changed a word since 1985. What changed was who was singing it, and why. Dunn wasn’t performing a song about fathers, she was handing her own father a present in front of a room full of strangers, and for a lot of those strangers it stopped being her father they were hearing. It was theirs. They told her so for the rest of her life. A gift written for one preacher in San Antonio, and it’s still the song people can’t get through in June.

Before Holly Dunn Sang “Daddy’s Hands” to the World Long before “Daddy’s Hands” became one of country music’s most beloved…

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COUNTRY MUSIC’S HIGHEST HONOR CAME THROUGH ON THE MORNING OF FEBRUARY 6, 2024. TOBY KEITH HAD DIED IN HIS SLEEP THE NIGHT BEFORE, AT 62. Hall of Fame voting had closed on February 2, three days before he went. Hours after the country woke to the news out of Oklahoma, the results landed at the CMA: elected, Modern Era, class of 2024. Sarah Trahern, the CMA’s chief executive, said her heart sank knowing they had missed their chance to tell him. That October his widow, Tricia, accepted the medallion and told the room she figured Toby would have said, “I should have been.” He came up out of the Oklahoma oil fields with a guitar his grandmother bought him, and he finished with twenty No. 1 country singles, more than 40 million albums and eleven USO tours behind him. That was the giant the world got. The version his mother got was smaller. On December 12, 2023, at the Park MGM in Las Vegas, he walked over and brought Carolyn Covel out into the light. “Eighty-two years old and she’s in Vegas tonight,” he told the crowd, and said she was the one who taught him to sing. Almost nobody out there knew she had been the singer first, that record men once came to her mother’s supper club in Fort Smith to look at her, that Toby thought her young pictures looked like Patsy Cline. Then he told her to tell everybody to go to hell, and she took the microphone and did it, laughing. Two nights later he played his last show. On February 5 she outlived her son. Nashville got the last word on his career. She got the night he handed her his microphone, and at eighty-two she brought the house down with it.