pplpod
Terri Clark moved to Nashville as a teenager and spent years singing for tips at Tootsie's Orchid Lounge, the legendary bar next to the Ryman Auditorium. She was a hat-wearing, boot-stomping Canadian woman in a town that already had rigid ideas about what female country artists should look and sound like. Clark refused every suggestion to soften her image or smooth out her sound. She wore the cowboy hat when they told her to take it off, kept the rock edge when they wanted polish, and became one of the most successful female country artists of the 1990s by being exactly the person Nashville said wouldn't work. • The years of singing for tips at Tootsie's that forged her performing chops • Why a Canadian woman in a cowboy hat violated Nashville's expectations for female artists • The refusal to remove the hat or soften the sound that became her signature • How Clark proved that authenticity beats conformity in country music's marketplace
300 episoder
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