Saturday Sessions: Shane Smith & The Saints perform “It’s Been A While”


Saturday Sessions: Shane Smith & The Saints perform “It’s Been A While” – CBS News

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Shane Smith & The Saints have wowed fans across the country with their unique blend of Texas country, Celtic-inspired folk and hard-hitting rock music. Over the last decade, they’ve released three independent albums and performed over 1,000 live shows. This month, they finally released their much-anticipated studio album “Norther.” Now, making their national television debut, here is Shane Smith & The Saints with “It’s Been A While.”

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Saturday Sessions: Shane Smith & The Saints perform “The Greys Between”


Saturday Sessions: Shane Smith & The Saints perform “The Greys Between” – CBS News

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Shane Smith & The Saints have wowed fans across the country with their unique blend of Texas country, Celtic-inspired folk and hard-hitting rock music. Over the last decade, they’ve released three independent albums and performed over 1,000 live shows. This month, they finally released their much-anticipated studio album “Norther.” Now, making their national television debut, here is Shane Smith & The Saints with “The Greys Between.”

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Saturday Sessions: Shane Smith & The Saints perform “All I See Is You”


Saturday Sessions: Shane Smith & The Saints perform “All I See Is You” – CBS News

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Shane Smith & The Saints have wowed fans across the country with their unique blend of Texas country, Celtic-inspired folk and hard-hitting rock music. Over the last decade, they’ve released three independent albums and performed over 1,000 live shows. This month, they finally released their much-anticipated studio album “Norther.” Now, making their national television debut, here is Shane Smith & The Saints with “All I See Is You.”

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Dolly Parton wished for Beyoncé to cover “Jolene” years before “Cowboy Carter”


What inspired Beyoncé’s “Cowboy Carter”?


What inspired Beyoncé’s new album “Cowboy Carter”?

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Looks like Beyoncé got the message —and Dolly Parton got her wish.

In a 2022 interview with Trevor Noah on The Daily Show, Parton was asked about her wish to have the “Renaissance” singer cover her iconic song “Jolene.” 

“I don’t know if she’s even got the message, but wouldn’t that be killer?” Parton says in the interview. “I would just love to hear ‘Jolene’ done in just a big way, kind of like how Whitney [Houston] did my ‘I Will Always Love You.’ Just someone that can take my little songs and make them powerhouses.”

Beyoncé’s album “Cowboy Carter” arrived Friday, with Parton herself appearing on an interlude preceding the cover of “Jolene.”

“Hey miss Honey Bey, it’s Dolly P,” the country music legend says in the track. “You know that hussy with the good hair you sang about? Reminded me of someone I knew back when.” 

The interlude connects Parton’s 1973 ballad with Beyoncé’s reference to a “Becky with the good hair” on her 2016 album “Lemonade.”

The country legend has been heaping praise on Queen Bey’s latest music. When the “Cowboy Carter” single “Texas Hold ‘Em” hit No. 1 in February, Parton wrote on social media that she was “very excited that she’s done a country album.”

“I think she’s recorded “Jolene” and I think it’s probably gonna be on her country album, which I’m very excited about that,” Parton told the Knoxville News Sentinel earlier this month. 

But Beyoncé’s version of “Jolene” isn’t a line-for-line recreation —a change in the lyrics replaces “begging” and “crying” for a warning.

“I had to have this talk with you, ’cause I hate to have to act a fool. Your peace depends on how you move, Jolene,” Beyoncé croons on the track.

Parton seemed to be pleased with the changes, taking to social media again Friday to say “Beyoncé is giving that girl some trouble and she deserves it!”





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What inspired Beyoncé’s new album “Cowboy Carter”?


What inspired Beyoncé’s new album “Cowboy Carter”? – CBS News

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Beyoncé released her highly anticipated album “Cowboy Carter” on Friday, featuring 27 tracks and a genre-bending sound that pays tribute to country music’s Black origins. Lamar Dawson, radio host and pop culture expert, joins CBS News to discuss the new album.

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Beyoncé’s ‘Cowboy Carter’ spotlights Linda Martell, Black country music pioneer


Beyoncé’s new album, “Cowboy Carter,” has shined a light on a country music pioneer that many people may not know.

One of the album’s tracks is called “The Linda Martell Show,” which is an intro to the song “Ya Ya.” Martell appears on that track, as well as the song “Spaghetti.” Though Linda Martell, 82, has a long history in country music, many who are unfamiliar with her name and her vocals, are asking the question: Who is Linda Martell?

Read on to learn more about the country music pioneer.

Who is Linda Martell?

In 1970, Martell released “Color Me Country” which featured the hit “Color Him Father,” a cover of a song by The Winstons. The album also included such popular songs as “Bad Case of the Blues,” “Before the Next Teardrop Falls” and “You’re Crying Boy, Crying.”

Rolling Stone said that her album, which was described as “a mix of honky-tonk spunk and heartbreak balladry, all infused with her roots in gospel and R&B,” led Martell to become the first solo Black woman country artist to play the Grand Ole Opry.

“During that time,” Rolling Stone reports, “She also appeared on the hugely popular syndicated country variety show ‘Hee Haw’ and shared stages with country artists like Hank Snow and Waylon Jennings.”

Lindamartell.com also touts her as “a pioneering force hailed as the unsung hero of the genre” who “had the highest peaking single on the Billboard Hot Country Singles (now Songs) chart at #22, ‘Color Him Father,’ by a Black female country artist in the history of the genre in 1969, until Beyonce’s “Texas Hold ’Em” debuted at #1 on February 21, 2024.” 

What is Linda Martell’s history with country music?

Born Thelma Bynem in South Carolina, Martell debuted at the Opry in 1969 and told Rolling Stone in 2020 that she would make a dozen appearances on the famed stage. The Opry said she did perform, but could not confirm how many times.

Martell released only that one album after signing with Shelby Singleton Jr., who died in 2009. She was turned off when discovering it would be released not by his SSI International label, but a sister company called Plantation Records, a moniker replete with racial undertones, even though Singleton told her he didn’t have a specific reasons for using that name.

“I said, ‘Yes, there was,’” she told Rolling Stone. “He said, ‘Of course not.’ I said, ‘Yes. What you are telling me is that black people belonged on the plantation!’” 

Martell also endured racist taunts while on the road.

“It was very hard,” she told Rolling Stone. “When you’re playing to an all-white audience — because Lord Jesus, they are prejudiced — you learn to not say too much. You can carry it a little too far if you’re correcting somebody. So you learn how not to do that.”

She said things would improve, but never to the point where heckling would disappear altogether.

“You still heard some names,” she said. “Maybe not loud names, but you’d hear them.… You wonder why people do it. Why not just sit there and enjoy the music?”

What happened to Linda Martell after she released her first album?

Martell would eventually leave Plantation Records and failed in her efforts to record another album. She also found herself on the outside looking in when she says Singleton told her he wanted to focus on the career of Jeannie C. Riley — who was white — after she scored a hit with “Harper Valley P.T.A.”

Linda Martell
Linda Martell poses for a portrait, circa 1969 in Nashville.Michael Ochs Archives

“When Jeannie came on the scene, it seemed like he forgot all about me,” she told Rolling Stone. “I was totally ignored at that time.”

“I thought he was still gonna promote me,” she added. “But he just kept promoting Jeannie, and I told him I’m not gonna play second fiddle to Jeannie C. Riley. That’s when we separated.”

Martell claims Singleton “blackballed” her when she tried to make another album with a different company.

“He blackballed me,” she told Rolling Stone. “You heard the term? Well, he did that. So no one else would record me. It ruined my reputation in country music. Shelby had a lot of power during that time.”

What did Linda Martell do after country music?

Martell’s life would go in different directions after she left country music. She returned to South Carolina, sang in clubs and bars, as well as on a cruise in California. She ran a record store in the Bronx, drove a school bus when returning again to South Carolina and worked with kids with learning disabilities.

In 2021, she received the Equal Play Award at the CMT Music Awards “for her groundbreaking work as a woman of color in country music.”

Martell’s granddaughter, Marquia Thompson, is working on a documentary about the singer and her country music experience, “Bad Case of the Country Blues.”

“Minority, women and marginalized artists deserve to play on a level playing field in the country music industry,” she told The Tennessean in 2023. “My grandmother was (a) courageous artist who challenged an industry by following her passions. People who want to mirror my grandmother’s desires undeniably need to know her history.”

What to know about Linda Martell’s collaboration with Beyoncé’ on ‘Cowboy Carter’

In March 2024, Beyoncé enlisted Martell on her new album, “Cowboy Carter,” which is the second act of her “Renaissance” trilogy.

Martell is featured on two of the album’s tracks: an intro titled “The Linda Martell Show” and a song called “Spaghetti,” which also features rising country music artist Shaboozey. 

“The Linda Martell Show,” which is just 28 seconds long, serves as an intro to the song “Ya Ya.” On the track, Martell introducing the next record after a round of applause.

“Haha, okay, thank you so very much,” she says. “Ladies and gentlemen, this particular tune stretches across a range of genres and that’s what makes it a unique listening experience. Yes, indeed. It’s called ‘YA YA.’”

On “Spaghetti,” Martell starts off the song with a question about music genres, likely a nod to Beyonce’s past struggles with country music in which she said she did not feel welcomed by some in the community.

“Genres are a funny little concept, aren’t they?,” Martell asks, before Shaboozey responds, “Yes, they are.”

“In theory, they have a simple definition that’s easy to understand. But in practice, well, some may feel confined,” she adds.

From there, on a bass-heavy beat, Beyoncé and Shaboozey continue the song with a rap, before transitioning back to more melodic singing.

“Spaghetti” serves as the only rap song featured on the 27-track album. 

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Robert Randolph talks performing on new Beyoncé album, “Cowboy Carter”


Beyoncé’s new album, “Act Two: Cowboy Carter” dropped at midnight.

The 27-song album features collaborations with different artists, including musician Robert Randolph, leader of Robert Randolph and the Family Band.

“As you can see today with the release of so many songs, rightfully so, I mean she had all of this creative energy for all of these different country collaborations,” he said. “So it’s like rock meets country.”

Randolph is a six-time Grammy nominee and an expert on the pedal steel guitar. He has collaborated with Joe Walsh of The Eagles, Dave Matthews, Los Lobos and blues legend Buddy Guy.

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Robert Randolph appears on CBS Mornings on March 29, 2024 to talk about collaborating on Beyoncé’s new album.

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Randolph said he was at home cooking on a grill when he received a call about participating on Beyoncé’s latest album. Her hit song “Texas Hold ‘Em” came out last month and made her the first Black woman ever with a No. 1 single on the Hot Country Songs chart.

“So I got the call and I’m like, ‘What, for real? Play on Beyoncé? What am I going to do? Am I going to do “Bootylicious” or something?'” he joked.

Randolph, who collaborated on the song “16 Carriages,” said they would rehearse the song in different ways, adjusting his usual style.

“Oh yeah, I had to work on some country licks,” he said.

On the album, Beyoncé shines light on some of the pioneering, unsung Black artists throughout country music’s history. Randolph said she’s inspiring new artists.

“For the last 20, 30 years, there’s been a lot of Black country artists trying to break through out of Nashville,” he said. “Many have moved there, and just the fact that she’s sort of hinted at releasing a record and now that it’s out, she’s given all of those people newfound hope.”



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Six-time Grammy nominee Robert Randolph talks collaboration with Beyoncé as her new album drops


Six-time Grammy nominee Robert Randolph talks collaboration with Beyoncé as her new album drops – CBS News

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Robert Randolph, a six-time Grammy nominee and leader of the “Robert Randolph and the Family Band,” discusses his collaboration with Beyoncé as her new album, “Cowboy Carter,” drops.

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Beyoncé drops 27-song track list for new album “Cowboy Carter”


Beyoncé dropped the track list Wednesday for her hotly anticipated country album, “Cowboy Carter,” in a vintage-inspired social media post, prompting a flurry of excitement and hypotheses among her fans. 

Beyoncé’s post features a collection of red, white, black and blue-colored graphics and text boxes reminiscent of a printed, old-school concert advertisement. “Cowboy Carter” appears in block lettering along the upper edge of the graphic beside the album’s release date, which is Friday, March 29. 

Although the pop star revealed the album’s title and cover art last week, Wednesday’s teaser included what appeared to be an extended name for the record: “Cowboy Carter and the Rodeo Chitlin’ Circuit.” 

With 27 titles listed — assuming they’re all tracks — the album will be Beyoncé’s longest by far.

Beyoncé announced the album during the 2024 Super Bowl, describing it as “act ii” of the three-act project that began with her critically acclaimed “Renaissance” album, which she released in 2022. 

The announcement was accompanied by the release of two singles — “16 Carriages” and the smash hit “Texas Hold ‘Em,” which catapulted to the top of Billboard’s country music chart, making Beyoncé the first Black woman to score a No. 1 country hit. The song ultimately nabbed the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, too.

Both “Texas Hold ‘Em” and “16 Carriages” are included on the apparent track list, and they appear among several intriguing breadcrumbs. The first is “Jolene,” the classic hit by country music legend Dolly Parton that Parton had hinted might appear on the new album.

There also appears to be a track called “Dolly P,” as well as a potential collaboration with Willie Nelson, another country icon, on a song called “Smoke Hour.” Other titles include “Tyrant,” “Desert Eagle” and “Amen.” There’s also a reference to Linda Martell, who is considered to be the first Black woman to have found commercial success in the country music genre.

“This album has been over five years in the making,” Beyoncé wrote on Instagram last week, marking the 10-day countdown to the album’s release. 

“It was born out of an experience that I had years ago where I did not feel welcomed…and it was very clear that I wasn’t,” she wrote, hinting at her appearance at the 2016 Country Music Awards. “act ii is a result of challenging myself, and taking my time to bend and blend genres together to create this body of work.”

“I have a few surprises on the album, and have collaborated with some brilliant artists who I deeply respect,” Beyoncé added, before ending her message with, “This ain’t a Country album. This is a “Beyoncé” album.”





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Twitter commandeers @music handle from user with half a million followers



Social network Twitter, recently rebranded as X, has commandeered the handle @music from an open-source software developer who told CNBC he created the account in 2007, and had built a community of around half a million followers there.

While Elon Musk-led X gave Jeremy Vaught no choice but to surrender the desirable username on its platform, he was offered the option to choose from a list of other handles related to the topic of music. His X-assigned account — @musicfan — is not to his liking but he’s settling for it for now. X ported his followers over to the new account at least, he said.

The move on the part of the social media company raises questions about the worth of a handle on its platform. X terms of service, last updated in May, say, “We may also remove or refuse to distribute any Content on the Services, limit distribution or visibility of any Content on the service, suspend or terminate users, and reclaim usernames without liability to you.”

The threat of losing a handle may make it hard for creators to trust the platform enough to build there long-term, Vaught said.

While he had not monetized his @music account, Vaught sometimes took the opportunity to review consumer hardware, mostly from the makers of headphones, ear buds and other accessories seeking his opinion, given his status as a social media influencer.

Many years ago, Vaught worried whether Twitter’s prior management would try to take over his handle. However, before Musk had acquired and appointed himself to the C-suite there, Twitter decided to leave @music alone and established its own @twittermusic brand instead.

It’s not clear what X plans to do with the @music account now. On Thursday, the company posted a photo of the musician Ed Sheeran there, holding a copy of his 2014 album “x” which is pronounced “multiply.” Representatives for Sheeran, X, and Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Vaught said he has previously invested in another Musk-led company, electric vehicle maker Tesla, though he holds no shares currently. He has also paid a $100 refundable fee to reserve a Tesla Cybertruck, the company’s trapezoidal pickup truck for which Tesla has yet to disclose final specs and pricing.

Vaught said he is still using X, though he did set up a new account on Meta’s text-based competitor Threads, and another on Mastodon.

“The software development community is active on Twitter to this day,” Vaught said. “So for that reason alone it’s still the most interesting social that I have.”

Vaught was disappointed that X would take over a handle from a user who invested 16 years into its platform with nothing but impersonal correspondence, more akin to a technical support help ticket.

“I was definitely proud of having built @music to a half a million followers give or take,” he added. “And I’m a software developer. I had been thinking about what I could build around this to potentially capitalize on my audience.”

When Twitter rebranded to X abruptly last month, it took over the handle of another long-time user who had the name @X on the platform, raising questions about intellectual property, and users’ rights on social media.

When X notified Vaught that he would have to give up his username, it assigned him the handle @musicfan, and offered a list of other suggested handles he could choose from. Looking through those, he said he felt uneasy.

He discovered that @musicfan had been created in 2011, according to the site. Vaught said he hopes that X hasn’t taken something away from another user to give to him, but he couldn’t get a definitive answer from Musk’s social media company either.

“The whole thing is just skeezy,” he said.





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