ERNEST TUBB INTRODUCED HIM, THE BAND HELD ITS BREATH, AND A MAN FROM A MISSISSIPPI COTTON FIELD STEPPED INTO THE SPOTLIGHT — THEN CHARLEY PRIDE OPENED HIS MOUTH AND COUNTRY MUSIC CHANGED FOREVER.January 7, 1967. The Grand Ole Opry stage. The same stage a sharecropper’s son had heard through a Philco radio as a boy in Sledge, Mississippi.Now he was standing on it. The first Black solo singer ever to perform there.Ernest Tubb — the Texas Troubadour, one of Pride’s childhood heroes — walked out to introduce him. Pride later admitted he couldn’t remember a single second of what happened next.”I was so nervous, I don’t know how I got through those two songs.”He chose a Hank Williams song first. “I Can’t Help It (If I’m Still in Love with You).” The song of the man whose voice had raised him through static and cotton dust.When the last note faded, the Opry gave him something it had given almost no one before: silence, then thunder.What Ernest Tubb whispered to him backstage, before that introduction, Pride kept to himself for decades.Do you remember the first time you heard Charley Pride’s voice — and where you were when it happened?
The Night Charley Pride Stepped Into the Light On January 7, 1967, the Grand Ole Opry did not look any…