Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. “I just sing like I hurt inside. If you can’t do it with feeling, then don’t,” Cline once said of her passion for performing — and ...
The late, great Patsy Cline had the kind of voice that could cut right down to the bone in the best kind of way. The country-pop crossover artist had a way of capturing melancholy that was almost ...
Country western music icon Patsy Cline was born just one year after the birth of my own mom Peggy. Patsy was born Sept. 8, 1932, and mom Peggy, Aug. 17, 1931. Tragically, Patsy died at age 30 in March ...
Featuring classics from Faron Young, Elvis Presley, Ferlin Husky, and more, the humble jukebox is a national treasure. But which song has been played the most?
New Patsy Cline music is now out in the world. In honor of Record Store Day on April 12, Cline’s Imagine That: The Lost Recordings (1954-1963) was released. The two-LP set is a collection of 48 ...
On January 21, 1957, Patsy Cline made her national television debut on “Arthur Godfrey’s Talent Scouts,” which aired Monday nights on CBS. The show featured agents and managers from across the country ...
Singing superstar Patsy Cline is a music legend at this point. In her short career, she made an almost immediate and incredibly lasting impact on the genre. Almost 60 years after her death, she’s ...
Tehuan Harris is a news and features journalist at Collider, reporting and writing about all things music and reality TV (sometimes). She is a talented journalist and a natural storyteller who writes ...
It might sound crazy, but one of the most enduring country songs of all time never reached No. 1 on the charts. Patsy Cline's career-defining hit, "Crazy," is not only considered the late country icon ...
Editor's note: This segment was rebroadcast on Sept. 29, 2025. Click here for that audio. Singer Patsy Cline helped create the Nashville sound, a crossover between country and pop, in the 1950s and ...
A 1957 television appearance on a groundbreaking country music show helped set one of the genre’s most iconic voices on the path to stardom.
Loretta Lynn, Dolly Parton, Tammy Wynette, and Patsy Cline harmonized on a song together in 1993. While Lynn, Parton, and Wynette went into the studio to record their parts, Cline had, at that point, ...