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Greatest Hits Oldies But Goodies Ever

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Greatest Hits Oldies But Goodies Ever

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TOBY KEITH WAS INVITED TO OSLO FOR PEACE — BUT THE ROOM WAS ALREADY TURNING AGAINST HIM BEFORE HE EVEN STEPPED ONSTAGE… In December 2009, the world gathered at the Oslo Spektrum for the Nobel Peace Prize Concert. But behind the scenes, the air was freezing. Critics and politicians demanded his removal, labeling his music too “pro-war” for a stage built on diplomacy. Reporters cornered him, waiting for an apology or a retreat. They wanted him to sand down his edges to fit the room. Instead, Toby Keith stood his ground. He didn’t blink, telling them he stood by his country and every soldier wearing the uniform. Then, he walked out into that uneasy silence, carrying the red, white, and blue into a den of critics. He was a man who refused to break for a crowd that didn’t understand his heart. What happened when the first chord struck still resonates today…

IT LOOKED LIKE A STAGE FOR DIPLOMACY — BUT TOBY KEITH CARRIED A FIGHT THE ROOM WASN'T READY TO HEAR... December 2009. The Oslo Spektrum was a sea of suits,…

10,000 MILES FROM HOME. ONE HOSTILE STAGE. AND THE NIGHT HE REFUSED TO APOLOGIZE FOR WHO HE WAS… Oslo, 2009. The Nobel Peace Prize concert. The auditorium was packed with international elites and politicians who had openly protested his invitation. They wanted a polished peace anthem. They got Toby Keith. He had spent years singing for troops in dusty combat zones, unapologetic and raw. Now, he was standing in front of a sea of tailored suits and skeptical glares. Reporters had pressed him to soften his stance, to apologize. He didn’t. He stepped into the blinding spotlight, his scuffed boots echoing against the pristine stage. He gripped the neck of his guitar with calloused hands, stared dead into the cold, uneasy silence, and struck a chord so defiant it made the entire room…

10,000 MILES FROM HOME. ONE HOSTILE STAGE. AND THE NIGHT HE REFUSED TO APOLOGIZE FOR WHO HE WAS... Oslo was supposed to be a celebration of global harmony, but the…

3 DAYS BEFORE HE DIED, TOBY KEITH ENTERED THE HALL OF FAME — BUT HE NEVER GOT THE CHANCE TO HEAR THE NEWS… February 5, 2024. Oklahoma fell silent as Toby Keith’s quiet battle with stomach cancer finally ended. Governor Stitt ordered flags to half-staff—a tribute rarely granted to a musician, reserved for those who become the soul of a state. To the world, he was a global titan; to Moore, Oklahoma, he was just the boy who never truly left. He tried to live elsewhere, but the red dirt always pulled him back. Then, hours after his passing, the final shock arrived. Just 72 hours before his final breath, Toby had been elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame. The vote was sealed, yet the phone never rang. Now, as his name sits atop the Moore water tower, a final revelation from his family remains…

3 DAYS BEFORE THE FINAL BREATH — THE VOTE WAS SEALED, BUT THE "BIG DOG" NEVER GOT THE CHANCE TO HEAR THE NEWS... February 5, 2024. The Oklahoma sky was…

3 DAYS. ONE HIDDEN BALLOT. AND THE SECRET A COUNTRY ICON RAN OUT OF TIME TO HEAR… The morning after Toby Keith passed, flags across Oklahoma slowly dropped to half-staff. The state was mourning its proudest son. He had fought cancer with quiet, unyielding grit. But while millions wept for the cowboy, the heaviest heartbreak was locked away in a Nashville office. For decades, the Country Music Hall of Fame was the one honor that eluded him. Just seventy-two hours before his final breath, the ballots were tallied. He had finally made it. But the phone call was never made. Picture the heavy silence of his final room. As his weathered chest fell for the last time, his greatest victory remained completely unspoken, hidden away in a sealed envelope that he would never get to…

3 DAYS. ONE HIDDEN BALLOT. AND THE SECRET A COUNTRY ICON RAN OUT OF TIME TO HEAR... The morning after Toby Keith passed, the wind across Oklahoma felt entirely different.…

47 YEARS. ONE EMPTY PORCH CHAIR. AND THE DAY THE INVISIBLE HEARTBEAT OF THE STATLER BROTHERS LET THE MUSIC FADE… For half a century, Phil Balsley was the anchor nobody noticed. He didn’t write the hits or speak to the roaring crowds. He just stood in the shadows, delivering the deep baritone that held the Statler Brothers together. When the legendary quartet took their final bow, the others couldn’t fully let go. They chased solo stages and penned memoirs. But Phil? He just went home to Virginia. Then, he lost Wilma, his wife of fifty years. Now 86, he stands entirely alone in his garden. His weathered hands press into the quiet, damp soil. He looks up at her empty chair on the porch, letting the heavy stillness settle over the property. Because as he once whispered, without her, the only sound left was…

47 YEARS OF UNBROKEN HARMONY. ONE EMPTY PORCH CHAIR. AND THE DAY THE INVISIBLE HEARTBEAT OF THE STATLER BROTHERS LET THE MUSIC FADE... For nearly half a century, The Statler…

MOORE WAS IN RUINS — TOBY KEITH CHOSE NOT TO SEND CONDOLENCES, BUT TO BUILD A STADIUM-SIZED MIRACLE FOR THE LAND HE CALLED HOME… May 2013. The Oklahoma sky turned a bruised purple, and in heart-stopping minutes, an EF5 tornado erased entire neighborhoods in Moore. To the world, it was a tragic headline. To Toby Keith, it was the soil he was built from. While others sent “thoughts and prayers” from the safety of Nashville, Toby picked up the phone. He summoned the legends—Garth Brooks, Willie Nelson, and Ronnie Dunn. He didn’t just want to mourn; he wanted to roar back at the wreckage. Sixty thousand people packed the stadium, their voices rising higher than the storm clouds ever could. Two million dollars flowed into the broken streets. But as the final note faded, the real miracle wasn’t the money…

MOORE WAS IN RUINS — TOBY KEITH CHOSE NOT TO SEND CONDOLENCES, BUT TO BUILD A STADIUM-SIZED MIRACLE FOR THE LAND HE CALLED HOME... May 20, 2013. The Oklahoma sky…

TOBY KEITH COULD HAVE JUST SENT A CHECK. NO WORDS. JUST ONE ACT THAT BROUGHT A BROKEN HOMETOWN BACK TO ITS FEET… Moore, Oklahoma, lay in splintered ruin. The May tornado had wiped entire neighborhoods off the map. Most superstars watch tragedies on a screen, post a quick prayer, and move on. But Toby Keith couldn’t do that. This was his dirt. He called in country’s biggest legends—Willie, Garth, Ronnie—building a massive relief concert right out of the rubble. When he finally walked onto the stage, he faced 60,000 battered but breathing Oklahomans. The stadium air was heavy with unspoken grief. He didn’t offer a polished, empty speech. He just gripped the metal mic stand with heavy hands, stared deeply into a sea of tear-streaked faces, and gave a sharp nod to the band to unleash the first roaring chord that would…

TOBY KEITH COULD HAVE JUST SENT A CHECK. NO WORDS. JUST ONE ACT THAT BROUGHT A BROKEN HOMETOWN BACK TO ITS FEET... Moore, Oklahoma, lay in splintered ruin. A monstrous…

“DON’T LET THE OLD MAN IN” — THE FIVE WORDS CLINT EASTWOOD WHISPERED IN A GOLF CART THAT BECAME TOBY KEITH’S FINAL BATTLE CRY… It started as a casual conversation on a golf cart at Pebble Beach. Toby Keith looked at Clint Eastwood—a man who refused to slow down even as the years piled up—and asked for his secret. Clint’s answer was a simple, five-word warning: “Don’t let the old man in.” Toby took those words home and carved them into a haunting melody. At first, the world thought he was just telling Clint’s story for a movie. But as the shadows of illness grew long, the song’s meaning shifted. It wasn’t borrowed wisdom anymore; it was Toby singing to his own reflection. He was staring down time and daring it to come closer. He wasn’t just singing a hit; he was fighting for his soul…

DON'T LET THE OLD MAN IN... THE FIVE WORDS CLINT EASTWOOD WHISPERED IN A GOLF CART THAT WOULD BECOME TOBY KEITH’S FINAL BATTLE CRY... It was a bright day at…

“DON’T LET THE OLD MAN IN.” — THE SIX WORDS SPOKEN IN A GOLF CART THAT ENDED UP WRITING A LEGEND’S GOODBYE… The sun cast long shadows across the Pebble Beach green. Toby Keith sat beside an eighty-eight-year-old Clint Eastwood. Toby, the larger-than-life cowboy, asked the aging icon how he kept pushing forward. He expected a secret to endurance. Clint didn’t preach. He just stared out at the fairway, his gravelly voice dropping to a quiet rumble. “Don’t let the old man in.” Toby felt the weight of those words settle into his bones. Later that night, alone in the quiet, his heavy hands pressed a pen to paper. He thought he was writing a movie song. He didn’t know he was writing the anthem for his own final fight against time, right up until his breath caught on the last…

"DON'T LET THE OLD MAN IN." — THE MOMENT A CASUAL CONVERSATION IN A GOLF CART REWROTE A LEGEND'S FINAL CHAPTER... Toby Keith built an entire empire on sounding completely…

50 YEARS OF SINGING TO MILLIONS. NO WORDS. JUST ONE GESTURE THAT BROUGHT A STADIUM TO TEARS… Alan Jackson has owned the world’s biggest stages. Tonight, thousands roared for the country icon. But he didn’t want the applause. Instead, the towering legend took a physical step backward into the shadows. Beside him stood his daughter, Mattie. The stadium grew incredibly quiet. Alan didn’t speak to the crowd. He just looked at her, his eyes carrying five decades of memories. Then, he reached down. His weathered hands slowly unclipped something heavy. He walked toward her, placing his own worn guitar strap over her shoulders. He pressed the familiar wood into her trembling fingers. She looked up at him, tears welling. He gave one silent nod, leaving her entirely in the light as she strummed the first…

32 YEARS OF AWARDS. ONE QUIET SONG. AND THE NIGHT HE FINALLY STEPPED OUT OF THE LIGHT... The crowd settled as the familiar figure stood under the massive arena lights.…

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THE WORLD KNOWS HER AS AN AMERICANA POWERHOUSE — BUT WHEN SHE STOOD ON THE CMA STAGE TO HONOR A CRYING LEGEND, EVERYONE SAW THE TRUE KEEPER OF COUNTRY MUSIC’S SOUL. Born on this day in the quiet woods of Ravensdale, Washington, Brandi Carlile didn’t come from the polished Nashville machine. She built her own kingdom from the ground up in the worlds of Folk and Americana. Many modern stars use their massive fame to keep the spotlight strictly on themselves. But Brandi uses her once-in-a-generation voice as a bridge. She doesn’t just sing songs; she guards legacies. You could see it so clearly that night at the CMA Awards. Standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Patty Loveless, her voice soared through a heart-tugging tribute that left Vince Gill weeping in the audience. She wasn’t trying to outshine the room. She was holding space for the giants who walked the road before her. That is her quiet, unbreakable magic. She is still here, still standing at the absolute peak of her powers, yet she constantly bows her head to the roots of the music. She breathes fierce new life into the classic ghosts of country, proving that the old sound isn’t fading away—it was just waiting for the right voice to wake it up again. We are incredibly lucky that we still get to witness her on stage. Because as long as Brandi Carlile is standing by a microphone, the legends are never singing alone.
Jun 1, 2026
MILLIONS KNOW HIM FOR THE BLAZING GUITAR SOLOS AND THE STAGE HUMOR — BUT BENEATH THE SPOTLIGHT, BRAD PAISLEY’S GREATEST MAGIC HAS ALWAYS BEEN MAKING US REMEMBER THE MOMENTS WE CAN NEVER GET BACK. In 1999, country music was changing, getting louder and shinier. Then a young guy in a white cowboy hat released his debut album, Who Needs Pictures. He didn’t just sing songs. He opened an old photo album. With just a guitar and a quiet observation, he painted the kind of family nostalgia that makes your chest ache. He sang about the front porches we left behind, the quiet living rooms, and the fleeting beauty of a Sunday afternoon with the people we love. The title track asked a simple question: why do we need photographs when the memory is already burned so deeply into our minds? For a generation of listeners, Brad wasn’t just an entertainer. He became the archivist of their own family histories. When you hear those early chords, you don’t just see a stage. You see your own childhood. You see the faces of the people who shaped you. Today, he is still here, still shredding that Telecaster, still holding the crowd in the palm of his hand. But his true masterpiece isn’t the awards or the packed arenas. It is the simple fact that a quarter of a century later, every time he strums that familiar melody, we still get to close our eyes and go home again.
Jun 1, 2026
AT 33 YEARS OLD, SHE WAS JUST AN EXHAUSTED MOTHER HOPING TO EARN A $125 RECORDING FEE — BUT WHEN SHE STEPPED TO THE MICROPHONE ON MAY 3, 1952, SHE SHATTERED COUNTRY MUSIC’S BIGGEST LIE. In the early 1950s, the Nashville establishment operated on a deeply entrenched rule: men drank the whiskey, men sang the hits, and men sold the records. Women were simply expected to look pretty and stay silent on the sidelines. Kitty Wells was not trying to start a revolution. She was just a wife and mother trying to make ends meet. When she walked into Castle Studio, she recorded “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels” — an unapologetic, direct response to a massive male hit that had unfairly blamed women for broken homes. The establishment panicked. Radio executives pushed back, terrified of a woman answering back with such raw, unvarnished truth. Some stations flatly refused to play it. But out in the real world, something magical happened. Tired mothers and working-class women stopped in their kitchens and wept. They finally heard their own silent, overlooked struggles broadcast over the radio. That single defied every gatekeeper, exploding to No. 1 and selling over 800,000 copies. She didn’t just have one lucky hit. She proved true staying power, dominating the next two decades with iconic anthems like “Making Believe” and “Heartbreak USA,” eventually charting 81 singles. She became the first female country singer to receive a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with legends like Hank Williams. Kitty Wells passed away in 2012, but her legacy is immortal. She did not just break the rules. She handed generations of women the microphone, proving that the only thing louder than a prejudiced industry is the undeniable truth of a woman’s voice.
Jun 1, 2026
BEFORE DOLLY AND LORETTA, NASHVILLE TOLD WOMEN TO STAY QUIET — UNTIL SHE SANG ONE HONEST CONFESSION AND KICKED DOWN THE HEAVIEST DOOR IN COUNTRY MUSIC. In 1952, the country music industry had strict rules. Men sang the hits, drank the whiskey, and told the stories. Women were simply expected to smile from the sidelines. Then came Kitty Wells. She didn’t have a flashy, polished voice. Her tone carried the steady, unglamorous ache of a working-class woman who had survived real disappointment. When a popular male hit blamed women for broken homes, Kitty was hesitant to answer back. She almost didn’t step into the recording studio, doubting anyone actually wanted to hear the painful truth from a woman’s perspective. But after one quiet word of encouragement, she stood in front of the microphone and recorded “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels.” The record didn’t just sell copies. It caused a cultural earthquake. For the first time, housewives and tired mothers across America stopped what they were doing and wept. They finally heard their own silent, overlooked struggles broadcast over the radio. That single made her the first woman in history to reach #1 on the Billboard country chart, launching a two-decade reign of hits like “Making Believe” and “Heartbreak USA.” Kitty Wells passed away a true pioneer. But long after the studio lights went dark, her legacy remains. She didn’t just sing a song. She handed generations of women the microphone and told them it was finally okay to tell the truth.
Jun 1, 2026
IN 1998, A DEVASTATING STROKE THREATENED TO PERMANENTLY SILENCE “THE VOICE” OF COUNTRY MUSIC — BUT HE SIMPLY USED HIS BORROWED TIME TO SING LIKE EVERY WORD WAS HIS LAST. Long before the health battles began, Vern Gosdin had already earned a nickname that most singers spend a lifetime chasing: The Voice. He didn’t sound polished. He sounded human. When he delivered a track like “Chiseled in Stone,” it did not feel like a performance. It felt like a devastating, quiet warning from a man who had already survived the worst kind of grief. But in 1998, life tested his endurance in the most cruel way possible. A severe stroke stole his physical strength. For a man whose entire soul lived inside his vocal cords, that kind of blow could have been the end. He could have quietly faded into the background. Instead, he gripped the microphone even tighter. His body was failing, but his spirit refused to leave the room. He didn’t try to hide his age or mask his fragility. He just stood there, letting the deep ache in his voice do the heavy lifting. He sang like someone who knew that time was no longer a guarantee, but a borrowed gift. When a final stroke took him in 2009 at the age of 74, Nashville didn’t just lose a star. They lost a trusted friend who knew exactly how to make a noisy barroom feel like a sanctuary. The doctors gave Vern Gosdin a little more time on this earth. He spent it making sure we would never forget what a beautifully broken heart sounds like.
Jun 1, 2026
AFTER A LIFETIME OF PULLING JOHNNY CASH OUT OF THE DARKNESS, HER OWN HEART FAILED ON MAY 15, 2003 — AND THE WOMAN WHO WROTE “RING OF FIRE” SUDDENLY LEFT AN ENTIRE INDUSTRY SHIVERING IN THE COLD. June Carter Cash was born into country music royalty long before she became the other half of its most legendary love story. To the public, she was the energetic comic relief on stage. She was the genius who co-wrote the fiery, iconic anthem “Ring of Fire” and the charismatic duet partner who took home a Grammy for “Jackson.” She built a historic career that earned her five Grammy Awards and a spot in the Hall of Fame, yet she never demanded the spotlight for herself. Instead, she became the steadfast savior who stood between Johnny Cash and his most destructive demons. But to the people who truly knew her, June was never just a supporting character in a famous man’s myth. She was the center of gravity. She carried the Carter Family bloodline, a fierce stage instinct, and a rare warmth that made the hardest, coldest rooms feel human. When complications from heart surgery unexpectedly took her at 73, the loss felt structural. At her funeral, the tears were not just for a brilliant singer or a mother. The room mourned a woman who had spent her entire life quietly holding everyone else together. Johnny Cash’s visible, heartbreaking grief—passing away himself just four months later from a broken heart—became the story the media remembered. But the real earthquake was the terrifying silence left in her wake. Some people do not just leave a memory when they die. They take the light in the room with them. June Carter Cash did not just stand beside greatness. She was the quiet, unwavering force that helped greatness survive.
Jun 1, 2026
AFTER DECADES OF FIGHTING ADDICTIONS, HEARTBREAKS, AND WAGING WAR AGAINST NASHVILLE, FOUR WEARY LEGENDS WALKED INTO A STUDIO IN 1985 NOT TO OUTSHINE EACH OTHER — BUT TO CARRY EACH OTHER’S WEIGHT. By the mid-1980s, the music industry was obsessed with shiny new pop stars. Nashville gatekeepers whispered that Johnny Cash, Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Kris Kristofferson were relics of a forgotten era. They had already lived enough for four separate lifetimes. Cash had sung for outcasts in “Folsom Prison Blues” and battled his own dark demons. Waylon had fought label executives to define the outlaw movement. Willie had turned “On the Road Again” into an American anthem while refusing to play by the rules. And Kris had penned poetic masterpieces like “Me and Bobby McGee” that changed songwriting forever. Combined, they held dozens of Grammy awards, over 100 hit records, and enough pride to fill a stadium. On paper, a supergroup of this magnitude should have collapsed under the weight of all those massive egos. But when they gathered to record “Highwayman,” something profound happened. It was not four solo stars trying to steal the spotlight. It was four weary outlaws making space for each other. When Cash brought his dark gravity, Waylon his raw defiance, Willie his loose warmth, and Kris his poet’s soul, it did not sound like a manufactured commercial project. It sounded like a confession. The song was about a spirit constantly returning — a sailor, a dam builder, an outlaw, a starship pilot. As they took turns singing, it felt like they were acknowledging their own painful resurrections. They had all been written off. Hurt. Lost. And reborn. They proved that true greatness does not age out. It deepens. Today, with most of that room now gone, the music they left behind still feels like a door opening. Because sometimes, the most powerful thing a legend can do is not stand alone at the top of the mountain, but share the microphone with the only men who know exactly how hard the climb really was.
Jun 1, 2026
ON NOVEMBER 11, 2020, HE ACCEPTED HIS LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD SINGING LIKE A MAN WITH YEARS LEFT — NOBODY KNEW THEY WERE WATCHING HIS FINAL GOODBYE. The lights shined down on the CMA stage that night, illuminating an 86-year-old pioneer. Charley Pride did not walk out like a man preparing to leave us. The sharecropper’s son who had once forced a deeply segregated industry to make room for his warm baritone looked calm, elegant, and endlessly grateful. He took the award, smiled at the crowd, and did what he had done for five decades. He started singing “Kiss An Angel Good Mornin’.” It was a performance that required no theatrics. Just a legend, a microphone, and a room full of peers who finally understood his quiet magnitude. He did not look finished. He looked like someone ready for the next tour, the next spotlight, the next song. But weeks later, the world abruptly stopped. By December, COVID-19 had taken him in a Dallas hospital, sending a suffocating shockwave through Nashville. What makes his sudden passing hurt the most is that there was no long, dramatic farewell tour. The doctors fought with everything they had to save his physical body. But Charley Pride’s heart was still out there on the road, pointing toward the next melody. Today, that final stage moment carries a heavier weight. It was not just a tragic, sudden ending. It was a weary, gentle traveler giving us one last beautiful memory, leaving behind a voice that will never really leave the room.
Jun 1, 2026
IN 1966, NASHVILLE WAS SO AFRAID OF HIS SKIN COLOR THEY HID HIS FACE ON HIS FIRST RECORDS — BUT WHEN HE OPENED HIS MOUTH, 29 NUMBER ONE HITS BROKE DOWN THE HEAVIEST DOORS IN COUNTRY MUSIC. Country music in the 1960s did not need a “Keep Out” sign. The silence did the heavy lifting. Born to sharecroppers in Mississippi, Charley Pride picked cotton and first chased a baseball dream. But the music living inside him was too loud to ignore. When legendary producer Chet Atkins heard him, he recognized a pure, traditional country soul. But the industry was not ready. RCA released his early singles without his picture, terrified that the heavy prejudice of the era would silence the music before it ever had a chance to speak. Then came the live shows. Audiences would literally gasp when he stepped into the stage lights. The tension in the room was often suffocating. But that shock only lasted until the very first note. The moment his warm, effortless baritone delivered the opening lines of “Kiss an Angel Good Mornin'” or “Is Anybody Goin’ to San Antone,” the room melted into pure reverence. He didn’t fight the system with anger. He dismantled it with grace. He forced a deeply segregated industry to make room, going on to win three Grammys, claim the prestigious 1971 CMA Entertainer of the Year, and earn a permanent spot in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Though he is gone, Charley Pride remains a masterclass in quiet dignity. He didn’t just break the rules. He kept singing his truth until the door stopped mattering altogether.
Jun 1, 2026
HE NEVER CHASED A SINGLE SECOND OF FAME — YET FOR 60 YEARS, THE BIGGEST LEGENDS IN COUNTRY MUSIC REFUSED TO STEP ONSTAGE WITHOUT HIM. In Nashville, everyone comes looking for the neon lights. But Jimmy Capps found his home in the quiet shadows just behind the microphone. Under the soft, cinematic glow of the Grand Ole Opry stage, he sat perfectly still with his acoustic guitar. He didn’t need the applause. He was the anchor. When singers walked out to face thousands of people—voices trembling, hearts sometimes broken by the very songs they were about to sing—the spotlight could be a incredibly lonely place. But they didn’t have to carry that weight alone. They would glance back over their shoulder, find Jimmy’s gentle nod, and suddenly, the stage felt safe. He breathed life into the timeless tracks of classic country, his fingers shaping the defining melodies for icons like Conway Twitty, Alan Jackson, and countless others. His touch was the warmth captured inside the vinyl. When country music lost him in the spring of 2020, the Opry didn’t just lose a master musician. It lost its quietest guardian. Sometimes, the most beautiful legacy isn’t the loudest voice in the room. It is the steady hands that held everyone else together.
Jun 1, 2026

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Greatest Hits Oldies But Goodies Ever

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