'Nashville Cats' exhibit set

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- While country music has long been synonymous with Nashville, rock and folk musicians in the late '60s and early '70s made the Southern city the new hip spot to record.

The city's talented session musicians helped create some of the seminal country-influenced rock albums of the period, including Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde and Nashville Skyline, The Byrds' Sweetheart of the Rodeo and Neil Young's Harvest.

Nashville's rock period is the subject of the next exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum, called "Dylan, Cash, and the Nashville Cats: A New Music City," which opens March 27.

Michael Gray, museum editor and co-curator of the exhibit, said it is not only about the music made in Nashville during this period, but also the cultural changes the city experienced.

"It was sort of thought of as a conservative town, maybe not as hip as the music circles in New York, San Francisco, L.A. or London," he said.

But Dylan's decision to record multiple albums in Nashville opened the floodgates for folk and rock musicians, he said.

Johnny Cash also had a big role in welcoming these new musicians to town through his television program The Johnny Cash Show, which aired from 1969 to 1971 and featured country and folk artists, including Dylan, Young, Joni Mitchell, and Eric Clapton.

"He did help bridge some of those political and cultural gaps between the Nashville establishment and the outsiders, the folk rockers who identified with the counterculture," Gray said.

The exhibit will allow fans to compare Nashville session musicians performing on country and folk albums, see the instruments used in the recordings and look at original pressings and lyrics.

For more information, call (615) 416-2001 or visit countrymusichalloffame.org.

Travel on 12/21/2014

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