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Reba McEntire stood still on the opening stage of the 2025 ACMs, her voice choked up in front of thousands of waiting, then suddenly said: “I sing this song for everyone who has ever been looked down upon, who has ever been called a country bumpkin, who has ever been laughed at just because they are real,” and when the melody of “Okie from Muskogee” rang out, the whole audience fell silent – ​​then each hand clapped, each tear began to fall, an unofficial anthem for forgotten country hearts, sung by the “Queen of Country Music” herself with a heart full of love, Reba not only opened the awards night – she opened a crack in each listener, allowing memories, pride and tears to flood back.

Reba McEntire Opens 2025 ACM Awards With Powerful Message to “Real People” — And Leaves Thousands in Tears With Merle Haggard Tribute

FRISCO, TEXAS – Country music royalty took the stage on Thursday night, but what unfolded was far more than just a performance — it was a declaration of pride, a healing moment, and a rallying cry for those who have felt unseen.

Reba McEntire, the iconic “Queen of Country,” opened the 60th ACM Awards at the Ford Center not with glitz and glamour, but with a stillness that gripped the arena. As the lights dimmed and a soft spotlight followed her steps, the veteran performer paused. Her voice cracked before she could even begin. Then, she spoke:

“I sing this song for everyone who has ever been looked down upon, who has ever been called a country bumpkin, who has ever been laughed at just because they are real.”

The crowd, stunned, went silent. No one expected a moment this raw so early in the show.

Then came the first familiar chords of “Okie from Muskogee” — Merle Haggard’s 1969 anthem of rural American pride — and with it, something unspoken filled the air. As Reba sang, every word rang with meaning, with memory, and with something that can’t be rehearsed: lived experience.

From the rafters to the front row, people wept. Fans clutched hands. Artists in glittering gowns wiped their eyes. Even younger performers, many of whom had never known a time when country music wasn’t accepted in the mainstream, stood still as if hearing the song for the first time.

By the end of the performance, Reba wasn’t just applauded — she was honored with a thunderous standing ovation that lasted well over a minute. For those watching at home and in the arena, the message was clear: this was not nostalgia. It was recognition.

In a press statement released shortly after, ACM executive producer Ben Winston said,
“We knew Reba would bring heart. What we didn’t expect was for her to bring the soul of America to the stage.”

As the show went on to feature duets, tributes, and powerhouse performances, many attendees agreed: the tone had already been set. Reba had delivered more than a song — she delivered a reminder.

A reminder that country music is not just a sound. It’s a story. And last night, Reba McEntire told it for all of us.

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TIM CALDWELL DIED IN A ROAD ACCIDENT IN MARCH. ONE MONTH LATER, TOMMY CALDWELL CRASHED HIS LAND CRUISER AND WAS GONE TOO. TOY CALDWELL HAD TO STAND INSIDE A BAND THAT SUDDENLY DIDN’T SOUND LIKE HOME ANYMORE. The Marshall Tucker Band had been built out of Spartanburg, South Carolina, not a Nashville office. Toy Caldwell wrote the songs, played lead guitar with his thumb, and gave the band “Can’t You See.” His younger brother Tommy held down the bass and helped drive the thing from the inside. Around them were Doug Gray, Jerry Eubanks, George McCorkle, and Paul Riddle — a country-rock band loose enough to stretch, but tight enough to carry a room. By the late 1970s, they had already made their mark. Capricorn Records. Gold albums. “Fire on the Mountain.” “Heard It in a Love Song.” Long rides, long jams, and a sound that could move from country to blues to Southern rock without asking permission. Then 1980 hit the Caldwell family twice. On March 28, their younger brother Tim died in a traffic accident. On April 22, Tommy’s Land Cruiser struck a parked car. He suffered massive head injuries and died six days later, on April 28. He was 30. The band had just finished its tenth album, *Tenth*. Tommy’s last show with them had been only days earlier. The Marshall Tucker Band kept going. Franklin Wilkie came in on bass. The next album was called *Dedicated*. But something had shifted that a replacement could not fix. Toy was still there. The songs were still there. The name was still on the road. But in one month, two brothers were gone — and the music had to learn how to stand without the blood that helped build it.

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TIM CALDWELL DIED IN A ROAD ACCIDENT IN MARCH. ONE MONTH LATER, TOMMY CALDWELL CRASHED HIS LAND CRUISER AND WAS GONE TOO. TOY CALDWELL HAD TO STAND INSIDE A BAND THAT SUDDENLY DIDN’T SOUND LIKE HOME ANYMORE. The Marshall Tucker Band had been built out of Spartanburg, South Carolina, not a Nashville office. Toy Caldwell wrote the songs, played lead guitar with his thumb, and gave the band “Can’t You See.” His younger brother Tommy held down the bass and helped drive the thing from the inside. Around them were Doug Gray, Jerry Eubanks, George McCorkle, and Paul Riddle — a country-rock band loose enough to stretch, but tight enough to carry a room. By the late 1970s, they had already made their mark. Capricorn Records. Gold albums. “Fire on the Mountain.” “Heard It in a Love Song.” Long rides, long jams, and a sound that could move from country to blues to Southern rock without asking permission. Then 1980 hit the Caldwell family twice. On March 28, their younger brother Tim died in a traffic accident. On April 22, Tommy’s Land Cruiser struck a parked car. He suffered massive head injuries and died six days later, on April 28. He was 30. The band had just finished its tenth album, *Tenth*. Tommy’s last show with them had been only days earlier. The Marshall Tucker Band kept going. Franklin Wilkie came in on bass. The next album was called *Dedicated*. But something had shifted that a replacement could not fix. Toy was still there. The songs were still there. The name was still on the road. But in one month, two brothers were gone — and the music had to learn how to stand without the blood that helped build it.

HE TURNED 35 AND ALREADY FELT LIKE THE WORLD HAD PASSED HIM BY. DAVID BELLAMY TURNED THAT MAN INTO “OLD HIPPIE,” AND COUNTRY RADIO KNEW EXACTLY WHO HE WAS. The Bellamy Brothers had already lived through one kind of fame. “Let Your Love Flow” had taken two Florida brothers around the world in 1976. Then country radio gave them another life with “If I Said You Had a Beautiful Body Would You Hold It Against Me,” “Sugar Daddy,” “Redneck Girl,” and a string of records that made David and Howard Bellamy feel less like Nashville products and more like men who had brought their own weather in from Florida. By 1985, they did not need another love song to prove they could survive. Then David Bellamy wrote “Old Hippie.” The man in the song was only 35, but he already sounded older than his years. He had grown up in the 1960s, watched the world turn through Vietnam, rock and roll, disco, new wave, and a country scene that suddenly felt like the last place left for people who did not fit anywhere cleanly. He was not trying to lead a movement anymore. He was not trying to change anybody. He was just trying to adjust without losing the person he used to be. It was not a joke about a burned-out hippie. It was a portrait of a whole generation looking in the mirror and seeing gray hair before they felt ready for it. Released in 1985, “Old Hippie” reached No. 2 on the Billboard country chart and No. 1 in Canada. Years later, Rolling Stone placed it among the 100 greatest country songs. The Bellamy Brothers did not just find another hit. They found a character who kept aging with the audience.

“KISS YOU ALL OVER” MADE THEM NO. 1 ON POP RADIO. THEN THE WORLD MOVED ON — AND EXILE HAD TO REBUILD ITSELF AS A COUNTRY BAND FROM KENTUCKY. Exile had already been around long before the big hit. The band started in Kentucky in the 1960s, playing local events, cover songs, road dates, and whatever kind of room would let them work. They were not born cleanly into country music. They moved through rock, pop, rhythm and blues, and the kind of long band life where members change, labels come and go, and most people quit before the real break ever arrives. Then 1978 came. “Kiss You All Over” hit No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100 and stayed there for four weeks. For a moment, Exile looked like a pop success story. The record was sleek, sensual, and far from the Kentucky country sound they would later be known for. But one giant pop hit can become a cage. The follow-up records did not carry the same force. Lead singer Jimmy Stokley left. The band could have become another name filed under late-’70s one-hit wonder nostalgia. Instead, they turned toward country. By the early 1980s, J.P. Pennington, Sonny LeMaire, Les Taylor, Marlon Hargis, and Steve Goetzman reshaped Exile around harmony, songwriting, and a cleaner country-band identity. “High Cost of Leaving” opened the door. Then “Woke Up in Love” and “I Don’t Want to Be a Memory” both went to No. 1. The second life was not small. Exile went on to stack country No. 1s through the 1980s, proving the pop hit had not been the whole story. It had only been the first mask. Some bands get trapped by the song everybody remembers. Exile survived by becoming the band country radio had not expected to need.

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