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== The Hall of Fame in media ==
== The Hall of Fame in media ==
* One studio for [[XM Satellite Radio]] is housed inside the museum's store.
* One studio for [[XM Satellite Radio]] is housed inside the museum's store.

==Controversy==
Stacy Harris had been investigating tax and other issues with the CMA.

[http://www.geocities.com/Nashville/2851/IveyKyle.html The Country Music Foundation Cover Up!]
[http://www.geocities.com/stacy.harris/CMFHorsnell.html What The Country Music Foundation Doesn't Want You To Know!]
[http://www.geocities.com/Nashville/2851/article.html the article that has provoked CMA to deny Stacy credentials for most of its events since 1993!]
[http://www.geocities.com/stacy.harris/CMFHorsnell.html More Country Music Foundation shenanigans! ]


==See also==
==See also==

Revision as of 16:07, 8 June 2008

Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is located at 222 Fifth Avenue South in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Its mission is to identify and preserve the evolving history and traditions of country music and to educate its audiences. Functioning as a local history museum and as an international arts organization, the CMF serves visiting and non-visiting audiences including fans, students, scholars, members of the music industry, and the general public - in the Nashville area, the nation and world.

History and first museum

In 1961, the CMA announced the creation of the Country Music Hall of Fame. The first three inductees, Jimmie Rodgers, Fred Rose and Hank Williams, were announced at a CMA banquet in November. Bronze plaques, with the facial likeness and a thumbnail biography of each new member, were cast in bas relief. They were unveiled on the Grand Ole Opry by Ernest Tubb. These plaques, and those for subsequent Hall of Fame inductees, were displayed in the Tennessee State Museum in Nashville until 1967.

In 1963, the CMA announced that a Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum was to be built on Music Row in Nashville. In that same year, Tennessee chartered the Country Music Foundation (CMF) as a nonprofit, educational organization to operate the museum.

File:CMFlogo.jpg
Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum logo

The original Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum opened on Music Row (Music Square East and Division Street) on April 1, 1967. Operations of the museum came to include educational programs, the CMF Press and CMF Records, the Country Music Foundation Library (1968), and the historic sites RCA Studio B (1977) and Hatch Show Print (1986). The Music Row location of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum was closed December 31, 2000. The building was later razed and a private parking lot for employees of music licensing firm BMI now occupies the site. Before they went on to become major stars in the country music recording industry, Kathy Mattea and Trisha Yearwood worked as tour guides at the Music Row museum.

Current museum

On May 17, 2001, the CMF held the grand opening of its new $37,000,000 facility ten blocks away in downtown Nashville. Inside, the Museum presents its collection to illustrate country music's story as told through the turns of two centuries. Included are historic country video clips and recorded music, as well as a regular menu of live performances and public programs, a museum store, live XM Satellite Radio broadcasts, and on-site dining.

The new building's exterior is laced with symbolic images. The most obvious of these are the windows that mirror the configuration of piano keys. More conspicuous images include the diamond-shaped radio mast, which is a miniaturized replica of the WSM tower located a few miles south of Nashville. The round discs surrounding the tower symbolize the different size records and CDs country music has been recorded upon. When viewed from the air [1], the building is in the shape of a bass clef. The north-west corner of the building juts out like the tail fin of a '57 Chevy. The Country Music Hall of Fame was designed by local architecture firm Tuck Hinton Architects and museum design firm Ralph Appelbaum Associates.

The Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum is accredited by the American Association of Museums, certifying that the Museum operates according to the highest standards, manages its collection and provides quality service to the public. Of the 8,000 museums nationwide, only some 750 are accredited.

The Hall of Fame in media

Controversy

Stacy Harris had been investigating tax and other issues with the CMA.

The Country Music Foundation Cover Up! What The Country Music Foundation Doesn't Want You To Know! the article that has provoked CMA to deny Stacy credentials for most of its events since 1993! More Country Music Foundation shenanigans!

See also

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