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30 YEARS ON WSM. THOUSANDS OF MORNINGS WAKING UP NASHVILLE. BUT THE VOICE THAT MADE THE GRAND OLE OPRY FEEL LIKE HOME HAS FINALLY GONE QUIET.

There is a very specific feeling to driving down a two-lane road early in the morning, turning the dial on an AM radio, and hearing a voice that sounds exactly like a warm cup of coffee.

For more than three decades, that voice belonged to Bill Cody.

He was the front porch of Nashville.

When you tuned in to 650-AM WSM for Coffee, Country & Cody, you weren’t just listening to a morning broadcast. You were pulling up a chair to a gathering place.

Bill had a conversational ease that couldn’t be faked. He possessed this unerring ability to make a terrified, trembling debut artist feel just as important and welcomed as a seasoned Hall of Famer.

But the man who became the trusted guardian of country music’s airwaves didn’t start out under the glowing red “On Air” lights of a legendary broadcast booth.

Before he was the great Bill Cody, he was Trent Clutts, a rural preacher’s kid growing up in Lebanon, Kentucky.

He fell in love with broadcasting by listening to his father’s Sunday sermons playing back on a tiny, 1,000-watt local station.

At just 12 years old, he stepped up to a microphone for the very first time. He cued up his very first record—Wanda Jackson’s “We’ll Sing in the Sunshine”—and accidentally sent it out over the airwaves at the completely wrong speed.

He wasn’t a polished industry veteran yet. He was just a boy obsessed with the magic of a signal cutting through the dark.

He grew up hearing stories of Roy Acuff, Uncle Dave Macon, and the ghosts of the Ryman Auditorium.

He would later admit that it was a pure romance for him. He just wanted to go where those people were. He didn’t know exactly where that was, but he knew it had to be the coolest place on earth.

He found his way there.

In 1980, Bill and his high-school sweetheart, Rebecca, spent their honeymoon in Nashville.

They didn’t have backstage passes. They didn’t have VIP access. They just bought tickets and sat right out there in Section 10 of the Grand Ole Opry House.

They sat side-by-side in the dark on the historic night Loretta Lynn stepped up to the mic to introduce Sissy Spacek to the cheering crowd.

Just a young husband and wife, staring up at that famous circle of wood, entirely unaware that one day, he would be the one welcoming the world to that very stage.

Bill Cody went on to interview Oscar winners and former presidents. He became a Country Music DJ Hall of Famer.

But his secret was remarkably simple: no matter how famous he got, he never lost the unjaded awe of that kid sitting in Section 10.

He loved country music, its history, and its broken, beautiful characters more than anyone else in the room.

He spent a lifetime making sure their stories were told, their pain was understood, and their legacies were protected.

Now, at 67, after a quiet, grueling battle with a failing body, his microphone has been left empty.

The familiar warmth that carried so many commuters, truck drivers, and dreamers through the dawn has faded into the static.

It is a heavy, painfully quiet morning in Music City.

But there is something deeply comforting about the physics of radio waves.

Once a voice goes out over the air, it doesn’t just stop. It never truly disappears. It just keeps traveling, echoing outward, carrying the music into the great wide open.

The Grand Ole Opry lost its voice this week.

But somewhere out there in the endless ether, Bill Cody is still broadcasting.

And he is finally right there with all his heroes.

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