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Eddie Stubbs Biography | Country Music | Ken Burns

His big break came in 1995, when he moved to Music City to play fiddle in Kitty and Johnnie’s band full time. “I heard it said once, years ago, if you want groceries, you’ve got to go to the store,” Stubbs later remembered. “Nashville is the store where the groceries are if you want to be in the country music industry.”

Within five days of arriving in Nashville, Eddie had landed a job working as a deejay on legendary station WSM – and in less than two weeks more, he’d been hired as a regular announcer for the Grand Ole Opry. A year later, he began hosting the station’s evening shift. Today, Stubbs is WSM’s longest-serving broadcaster in the 7-to-Midnight slot and enjoys one of the longest tenures as the Opry’s announcer – third only to his heroes, Hairl Hensley and Grant Turner. Stubbs also serves as on-camera announcer for the Marty Stuart Show on RFD-TV and has volunteered his time and talent to the Country Music Association, the International Bluegrass Music Association, and the Country Music Hall of Fame & Museum.

Stubbs has written extensively on country music history – in journals, newspapers, books, and liner notes. He has had the great honor of delivering eulogies at the funerals of more than forty country music artists, including those of over a dozen members of the Country Music Hall of Fame. Eddie has been a finalist for the CMA’s Large Market Broadcast Personality of the Year six times, an award he won in 2002. In 2012, he became one of the youngest living inductees into the Country Radio Hall of Fame.

Born: November 25, 1961, Gaithersburg, Maryland

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