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6625: How Ricky Skaggs Pulled Country Music Back from the Brink

Episode 6625 Published 1 week, 2 days ago
Description
By the early 1980s, country music was drowning in string sections, pop crossover production, and an identity crisis that threatened to dissolve the genre entirely. Then Ricky Skaggs walked into Nashville with a mandolin and a mission to drag country back to its roots. Skaggs didn't just play traditional country—he made it commercially dominant again. His run of number-one hits in the mid-1980s proved that audiences hadn't abandoned traditional sounds; they'd simply been denied them. His intervention may have saved country music from becoming an indistinguishable subset of pop. • The crisis of identity that nearly dissolved country music in the late 1970s • How Skaggs weaponized traditional bluegrass instrumentation against pop-country • The string of chart-toppers that proved traditional country still had commercial power • Why his influence echoes through every neo-traditionalist movement that followed
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