“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.”

What an incredible milestone for country music! The Grand Ole Opry marked its 100th anniversary on March 19th with a spectacular celebration that truly captured the heart and soul of this iconic institution.

The extraordinary three-hour special, hosted by Blake Shelton, brought together an impressive lineup of nearly 40 performers and approximately 50 Grand Ole Opry members on that hallowed stage. I was completely moved watching such legends share one space!

In one of the evening’s most powerful moments, over four dozen Opry members—ranging from Bill Anderson, the longest-serving member, to newest inductee Steven Curtis Chapman—came together for a stirring tribute to Dolly Parton with “I Will Always Love You.” The collective talent on that stage was simply breathtaking.

Other unforgettable performances included the emotionally charged collaboration between Vince Gill and Ricky Skaggs, and a nostalgic ’90s country tribute featuring Blake Shelton, Trace Adkins, and Clint Black that had me reminiscing about country music’s golden era.

The Nielsen ratings confirmed what we all suspected—this event resonated deeply with music lovers everywhere, drawing an impressive 5.3 million viewers across NBC and Peacock streaming. It dominated viewership that Wednesday night, claiming the top spot among all broadcast networks.

Interestingly, those watching from home missed the true finale—after the televised Dolly tribute, the assembled country music royalty remained on stage for a poignant rendition of “Will The Circle Be Unbroken.” What a perfect, though unseen, conclusion to such a momentous celebration of country music’s enduring legacy!

You can watch the unaired performance in the video below.

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Vince Gill has 22 Grammy Awards. Twenty-two. More than any male country artist who ever lived. But ask him which song of his career means the most, and he won’t mention a single trophy. He’ll talk about a funeral. In the mid-’90s, Gill was carrying something heavy. His brother had passed, and a close friend — a young man with a whole life ahead — was gone too soon. Gill sat with that grief for years before he turned it into music. What came out wasn’t a country song in any way people expected. It was a hymn. Barely any drums. Just that Oklahoma tenor reaching so high it felt like the man was trying to hand-deliver the words somewhere past the ceiling. Nashville heard it and didn’t know what to do at first. Country radio wasn’t sure where to put it. But people at funerals knew. Churches knew. Families burying someone they loved too much knew. The song won CMA Song of the Year. George Jones requested it for his own memorial. Vince’s wife Amy Grant — herself a music icon — once said she still can’t hear it without stopping whatever she’s doing. Gill has played this song at hundreds of funerals over the years, sometimes flying across the country just to sing it for a grieving family. He never charges a dime. “If that song can bring somebody five minutes of peace during the worst day of their life,” he told a reporter once, “then it did more than I ever could.” Twenty-two Grammys, and the song that defines Vince Gill is one he wishes he never had a reason to write. Do you know which song that is?