New Hall of Famers Gather at the Ryman
There was one more ghost than usual in the wings of the Ryman Auditorium on Monday night.
Less than 24 hours after the passing of their brother in the Hall of Fame and Grand Ole Opry, new Hall of Fame Members Vince Gill, Mel Tillis and Ralph Emery took the stage at the Ryman Auditorium for their first public appearances following their inductions. If Monday’s performance at the celebration of WSM-AM’s 82nd anniversary is any indication, the futures of Porter Wagoner’s two most beloved institutions are in good hands.
Humility was the theme of Wagoner’s 2002 Hall of Fame induction speech, and that quality is not lost on the new members. Vince Gill ambled on stage unannounced following the performance of opener Nicole Broussard, lounged on an upstage riser and applauded the introductions of WSM’s on-air staff. Emery entered demurely and bashfully acknowledged a standing ovation with his Hall of Fame medallion hanging around his neck.
It didn’t take Ralph long to loosen up behind the podium where he announced countless Grand Ole Opry broadcasts as he poked fun at Gill, Tillis and his former colleagues before introducing Gill and noting that “my wife loves your eyelashes.” “Thank you Ralph. My mom thinks that you have a great ass!” Vince retorted before kicking into “One More Last Chance” amidst the crowd’s raucous laughter.
The rocking side of Vince Gill was on display Monday night in a set that eschewed most of his ballads. Gill’s strong Telecaster riffs led a talented group of musicians through a set that included such rollicking numbers as “Oklahoma Borderline” and “Liza Jane” and was punctuated by new material from the Country and Western disc of These Days. “Go Rest High on that Mountain,” dedicated to Porter Wagoner, earned a standing ovation and Vince’s encore set included a solo acoustic rendition of the folk classic “Old Shep.” Near the end of a curiously long instrumental break, Gill mused, “I guess that Cialis really does produce memory loss” before remembering the lyrics to the second verse. Set closer “When I Call Your Name” featured powerful harmony vocals by Dawn Sears.
Mel Tillis’ set opened with a medley of his hits that ended with a sing-a-long to “I Ain’t Never.” Killer ballads like “Time Life Turned Her That Way” demonstrated that Tillis’ voice is still in fine form, and he’s a surprisingly spry entertainer for a 75-year old legend, pantomiming the lyrics to “I’ve Got the Hoss” and tirelessly urging audience participation in “Coca-Cola Cowboy.” While Mel still possesses traces of his trademark stutter, speech therapy has greatly improved his speaking ability, and the newly liberated Mel has a lot to say. He regaled the audience with tales of his daughter Pam and his old schoolmates before returning to the music. “New Patches” and “Heart Over Mind” were set highlights and Tillis acknowledged tradition by closing the show with Gospel standard “How Great Thou Art.”
It’s the nature of a fan to anticipate that something very special is going to happen when the newest Hall of Fame members come together in the Mother Church of Country Music on the evening after their induction. However, once one sets aside the temporal significance of the performance, Gill and Tillis were most remarkable in their unremarkability: the Vince Gill and Mel Tillis present at the Ryman Auditorium on Monday night were the same performers playing the same show that they’ve played in Anywhere, USA every night for decades. Perhaps it’s that consistent greatness, rather than some extraordinary brilliance afforded by a favorable setting, that truly distinguishes the Hall of Famer, and it wouldn’t be fair for anyone at the Ryman to expect more. I think that the Thin Man from West Plains would approve.
Popular Stuff
Sponsor
Tagged In This Article
Country Music Hall of Fame // Grand Ole Opry // Mel Tillis // Nicole Broussard // Porter Wagoner // Ralph Emery // Ryman Auditorium // Vince Gill // WSM
Current Discussion
- Vicki: The Beatles, Carrie Underwood, Jamey Johnson and Josh Groban.
- Matt: I'm glad you chose to review this as opposed to the new Joe Nichols album. Instead of complaining about bad ...
- Terry Ridont: I think its cool. Thats what I like about indy rock artists, everything isn't the same high budget packaging and ...
- Stormy: Jon: The problem is that the progressive country music is now being called Americana. And why is it ...
- Razor X: Maybe his brother did talk him into it but what’s to say he hasn’t ‘always loved’ and ‘wanted’ to ...
- Brian: Josh Kelley will be fine. At the very least it means Katherine Heigl may show up on country award shows regularly. ...
- Razor X: Change may be inevitable but we aren't required to support it and if enough people boycott it, it doesn't last ...
- Jon: "You can’t stop “progress”… We can if we try hard enough. Um, no. Not that I think "progress" is a good ...
- Joe: When she moved from Mercury to BNA, I think we were all just allowed to think there'd be some grand ...
- sam sam: Well, Suzie, maybe if I saw his live show I'd love him. But I'm not interested in attending concerts. Radio ...

Is Dave Haywood going solo? This and many other of country music's most pressing questions answered in the September edition of The 9513's world famous Mailbag!
Caroline Herring likes to sing songs about life in the South. No, not exactly like Justin Moore and Jason Aldean...
The 9513's resident historian Paul W. Dennis sits down for a chat with country music legend Gene Watson.
As much as we love girl singers, we love songs about girl singers even more. Here's just a few of the many tribute songs out there.
Step away from the river and up to a jukebox, because heartbreak is only temporary, but a good song about drowning yourself—like a diamond—lasts forever.
What do you think about music labels "testing the waters" with a single before providing access to an artist's entire album?
What country artist, young or old, would you recommend as a must-listen artist to a newcomer on his/her journey through country music, and what would your essential song picks be?


9 Comments
RSS for comments on this post | Trackback URI for this post
October 30, 2007 at 5:04 pm Permalink
I read somewhere that when Wagoner was asked who would be the Opry torchbearer when he was gone he mentioned Vince Gill, and while I’ve never seen him in person he seems like a witty guy that oozes class.
October 30, 2007 at 8:48 pm Permalink
nicole broussard was fantastic. I want to get anything she’s recorded!
October 31, 2007 at 3:43 am Permalink
Scharton, I’d stop short of calling her fantastic, but she certainly performed well-crafted contemporary bluegrass. Ryman crowds tend to eat that kind of stuff up. I’m often unsure of whether to mention local openers in these reviews. If I’m impressed, I usually just file it away for a possible future feature.
October 31, 2007 at 8:45 am Permalink
Edward Morris, from the CMT Blog, was there, too.
November 6, 2007 at 8:49 pm Permalink
Hey Matt C., you can just shove that comment about Nicole Broussard right where it belongs. She was fantastic, fresh, and what country music needs! You obviously wouldn’t know talent if it punched you right between the eyes.
November 6, 2007 at 8:54 pm Permalink
Okay, the last comment might have been a little on the rude side, but you obviously missed the talent. Her songs were original, and something new for country music. Anymore, it seems everybody sounds the same, and she has a sound that’s all her own. I was there at the Ryman, and I heard the same thing you did, but you must have missed something! Anyway, sorry about the last comment, but I tend to defend the musicians I think are awesome!
November 6, 2007 at 10:02 pm Permalink
Sheesh. I thought Rascal Flatts fans were rabid. “She certainly performed well-crafted contemporary bluegrass” almost sounds like a compliment, but excuse me for not calling an unsigned and more or less unnoticed local artist the finest talent ever to grace the Ryman stage. I liked what I heard but didn’t find it compelling enough to use the word “fantastic” when a show headlined by two hall of famers was the frame of reference.
If readers are interested, the can check out some of Nicole’s material at her myspace.
November 11, 2007 at 4:49 pm Permalink
I am a huge V Gill fan but don’t understand his nasty humor at times, such as comment to Ralph E. about his wife! Just don’t get it….Vince, that isn’t the first time but please let it be the last! I fail to get the point nor the need for such if you are such a fine man?
January 20, 2008 at 1:02 pm Permalink
It was a shame they were not allowed to be on the stage of the CMA to accept this honor.
Leave a Comment