A BLUE-COLLAR VOICE WALKED OUT OF NORTH CAROLINA — AND SOMEHOW MADE MILLIONS FEEL SEEN… Luke Combs was born on March 2, 1990, in Asheville, North Carolina, far from the polished myth of a perfect country star. He did not arrive with glitter, mystery, or a carefully built mask. He came with a ball cap, a beard, a thick, weathered voice, and songs that sounded like they had been written after a long shift, under a porch light, with one cold beer left and too many memories still awake. That was his gift. Luke never sang down to ordinary people. He sang from inside their lives. In 2016, “Hurricane” broke through like a storm over a small Southern town. Then came “When It Rains It Pours,” “Beautiful Crazy,” “Beer Never Broke My Heart,” “Forever After All,” and “The Kind of Love We Make.” Love. Family. Friends. Beer. Work. Heartbreak. Nothing fancy. Nothing fake. Just the kind of truth people carry in pickup trucks, lunch boxes, wedding dances, and quiet drives home after losing someone they still love. Soon, Luke became multi-platinum. CMA Awards. ACM Awards. Billboard Music Awards. Grammy nominations. Stadiums. Grand Ole Opry nights. Crowds so loud they could shake the floor. But the deeper story was never just the trophies. It was the man beneath them, singing like he still remembered being unknown. Like he still knew what it meant to wonder if anyone was listening. Then came “Fast Car,” his unforgettable cover of Tracy Chapman’s classic. And suddenly, it was not just a hit song. It was America looking out a windshield at an old dream. Somewhere, a father heard it and remembered being young. Somewhere, a woman thought of a road she never took. Somewhere, a worker sat in his truck after a long day and felt, for three minutes, that his quiet life had finally been understood. That is Luke Combs’ power. He does not make country music feel distant. He brings it back to the kitchen table, the barroom stool, the gravel driveway, the wedding hall, the lonely motel, and the heart of someone who never knew their own story could sound that beautiful. Luke Combs did not just become one of modern country’s biggest stars. He became the voice people reach for when they cannot explain what hurts. And someday, when his songs come on in an old truck on a dark highway, someone will turn the volume up, say nothing, and remember a piece of themselves they thought was gone forever.

LUKE COMBS TOOK “FAST CAR” BACK ACROSS AMERICA — AND MILLIONS HEARD THEIR OWN LIVES IN IT... The song was already a classic before Luke Combs ever touched it. But…

“IT’S ONLY MAKE BELIEVE” SOUNDED LIKE A DREAM — BUT CONWAY TWITTY SANG IT LIKE A MAN BEGGING REALITY TO CHANGE. Before Nashville crowned him a country legend, before the velvet voice became familiar in lonely kitchens and late-night radios, Conway Twitty was Harold Jenkins from Mississippi, chasing a sound that felt bigger than the life he had been handed. Then came 1958. “It’s Only Make Believe” rose like a storm out of rock and roll’s golden age, climbing to No. 1 and turning him into a star almost overnight. But what made the song unforgettable was not just the high notes or the drama. It was the ache. Conway sang like a man trapped between fantasy and heartbreak, smiling for the world while confessing that the love he wanted most might exist only in his mind. Behind that soaring voice was a young artist trying to be seen, trying to survive, trying to turn longing into something the whole country could feel. And people did feel it. Teenagers slow-danced to it. Mothers hummed it while washing dishes. Men who never spoke of loneliness heard their own silence inside that melody. Years later, Conway would become one of country music’s most beloved voices, filling halls with songs of love, regret, and desire. But “It’s Only Make Believe” remains the first lightning strike — the moment a young man sang a fantasy so powerfully, it became real forever.

“IT’S ONLY MAKE BELIEVE” HIT NO. 1 IN 1958 — BUT CONWAY TWITTY SANG IT LIKE A DREAM HE COULD NOT WAKE FROM... The song made him famous almost overnight.…

ALABAMA PLAYED FOR TIPS UNTIL THE WORLD FINALLY HEARD THEM — THEN JEFF COOK HAD TO FIGHT FOR THE HANDS THAT BUILT THE SOUND. Before Alabama became a dynasty, they were three cousins from Fort Payne with worn-out gear, hungry hearts, and a beach-bar stage in Myrtle Beach. The place was called The Bowery. Not glamorous. Not Nashville. Just smoke, noise, tourists, tip jars, and long nights that sometimes stretched into 13-hour days. Randy Owen, Teddy Gentry, and Jeff Cook played there for six years, learning how to turn strangers into believers one song at a time. Then the world caught up. “Mountain Music.” “Feels So Right.” “Dixieland Delight.” Forty-three No. 1 hits. Seventy-five million albums sold. The Country Group of the Century. But inside that triumph lived a quieter heartbreak. In 2012, Jeff Cook was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. For five years, he kept it private. Imagine that — the guitarist, the fiddle player, the man whose hands helped hold the whole Alabama sound together, quietly facing an illness that could take those hands away from him. Still, his gear stayed on the bus. Just in case. Sometimes he played. Sometimes the song had to carry him. When Jeff died on November 7, 2022, Teddy Gentry said, “No one can take your place. Ever.” And he was right. Because Alabama was never just a band. It was family, sacrifice, and one guitar still echoing from Fort Payne to forever.

ALABAMA PLAYED FOR TIPS UNTIL THE WORLD FINALLY HEARD THEM — THEN JEFF COOK HAD TO FIGHT FOR THE HANDS THAT BUILT THE SOUND... Before Alabama became a country music…

16 NUMBER-ONE HITS, 500 SONGS, AND A NASCAR LIFE — BUT A VIDEO GAME HAD TO OPEN THE DOOR BACK TO MARTY ROBBINS. Marty Robbins should never have needed rediscovery. He had “El Paso,” the border-town tragedy that won a Grammy and made country music feel like cinema. He had “A White Sport Coat,” sweet enough to cross into pop memory. He had “My Woman, My Woman, My Wife,” tender enough to earn another Grammy and break grown men in quiet rooms. And then there was the other Marty. The one who climbed into NASCAR stock cars and ran against professionals at speeds that could turn one mistake into a funeral. Sixteen number-one hits. More than 500 songs. Dozens of albums. A voice wide enough for cowboys, lovers, sinners, and lonely men driving home after midnight. Still, time did what time does. It pushed him toward museum walls, old radio signals, and the soft corners of his fans’ memories. Then in 2010, Fallout: New Vegas placed “Big Iron” inside a ruined Mojave world, and millions of young players suddenly heard 1959 breathing through their headphones. Not as history. As fire. A song about an Arizona Ranger and Texas Red became cool again, alive again, dangerous again. Nashville had let the dust settle. A wasteland kicked it up. And somewhere beyond that digital desert, Marty Robbins rode back into the world with the big iron still on his hip.

16 NUMBER-ONE HITS, 500 SONGS, AND A NASCAR LIFE — BUT A VIDEO GAME HAD TO OPEN THE DOOR BACK TO MARTY ROBBINS... Marty Robbins should not have needed rediscovery.…