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September 9, 2024 28 mins
Terry McBride of McBride & The Ride joins us as we kick off our shows on the home of the gand ole Opry, 650 AM WSM! Tune in! 
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And welcome inside the Backstage Past. This is the first
show on WSM Radio out there AM six fifty home
of the Grand Old Opry. Out there too, the Backstage Past,
powered by the Sports Guys podcast dot com. It's a
grand slam of music and sports. We love doing that
out there too, and I'm just so excited to take
this new journey, in this new chapter into w s
EM AM six fifty Home of the Grand Old Opry.

(00:21):
And I tell you what, he loves the bat leadoff
as you can listen to us every Sunday morning there
too on the WSM from five thirty am to six AM.
One of the greats of all time, Terry McBride, McBride
and the Bride. Terry, how you doing, brother oh man?

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Congratulations Brandon, I knew you way back when you know
you're still no I'm so glad. I'm tickled to be
in the way. Whatever I can do to help you know. Heck,
that's great man.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
We appreciate you man out there too as well. Hey,
you know, looking back, Terry, just over the career and
I know I saw you at CRS this year, which
was always Country Radio Seminar. Always fun to get out
there and have fun at the Omni Hotel. You guys
just getting back together, you know, for the first time
in a while over these last you know, a couple
of years, and definitely I still look forward to getting
out there and seeing you guys on tour, but just
bringing the harmonies, bringing the guys back together, and knowing

(01:06):
that this thing really never came to an end. There's
always what was talk you had told me to pass
about getting back together and jump starting this again and
really putting out something special. Talk about that and kind
of the reunion of mcbriden to right well, you know, it.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
Just kind of naturally fell back into place after like
a twenty year break. I tell people were well rested.
You know, we had quite a little break there, but
it was kind of like picking up right where we
left off and you know, honestly with the harmonies and
you know, joking around like we always did on the
road back in the day, and we've always stayed in touch.
There was no you know, big falling out that would

(01:41):
keep us from ever maybe pursuing this again. We didn't
know that we would, but I just happened to be
out in Scottsdale on a string of solo dates, and
I was playing the Musical Instrument Museum out there at
this beautiful theater, and I invited Ray Herndon out of
our partner and bandmate. He came out. It was a
great crowd, a lot of fun, got him up to sing,

(02:02):
and it just lit a fire under him and then
me too.

Speaker 3 (02:05):
You know.

Speaker 2 (02:05):
It was cool to have him. And in the next day,
you know, we we reached out to Billy and said,
here's what's happening. What do you think because we've all
been active, you know. The cool thing about us, we
haven't just been you know, lying around, you know, waiting
for something to happen. We've all been actively involved in
some one's career as well as our own, whether it
was writing or performing or whatever. So getting back together

(02:27):
everybody was still in good shape, you know, musically and
physically and all that good stuff. So it's been great. Man.
We look forward to it, and that's something everybody needs
in their life, you know, you need a little something
to look forward to. So the traveling is still fun.
We like getting together. The music is rewarding, the crowds
are wonderful, and that's the big payoff the end of
the day for us.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
You know when you look at all the lists of
the hits, man, I mean Sacred Ground. We played it
on a different station. We're syndicated on this morning too,
which was fantastic to relive that, And I mean going
out of my mind and just one night, no more crying.
Can I count on you? And of course another we're
going to play here on the home home with the
granul Opera AM six fifty WSM here just a little
bit here on the audio broadcast too. But looking back
at all the great hits in the times and getting

(03:08):
out there that you mentioned on the stage and having
people so sing probably to as well those songs too.
At the same time, it has to be probably you said,
more fun now than it was even back in the nineties.
But you guys were going through a time when you
had so many great bands with Brooks and Dunn and
Restless Heart and just so many great guys out there,
so many great bands doing their thing in the nineties.

Speaker 2 (03:26):
It was, you know, looking back, it's what really is
special about that period and why people still want to
hang on to it as much as they can. The
artists that are still around, those that are still touring,
and it's yeah, it was. It was a wonderful decade
of some strong talent that's still out there. And I've
talked to Ronnie Done recently, and they're just killing it

(03:48):
out there. I mean they're they're sold out just about
every big shit, just like they used to do back
in the day, you know. I mean, it hasn't gone away.
I mean, our our crowds are just a little bit
smaller at times, but they're there's every bit as enthusiastic though.
I mean that music has held up and they long
for it, they love it, and then when you get

(04:08):
to see that in person, it's really special. You see
how powerful music is all these decades later. I mean,
that's it's pretty impressive. And yeah, it's been a lot
of fun. This whole experience has been great all the
way from the beginning to where we're at now.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
You know, you guys had a big one. Of course,
a lot of big ones out there too, but I
think one that really told a story for me was
Hurry Sundown. That was just one of my favorites out there,
Terry that I love so much. But it just makes
you think about life in general, and yeah, having those
things that you can really kind of think about what's
important to what's not important, or what people make important
out there too, because it comes to through kind of

(04:42):
like a love story or relationship. Talk to us about
that one.

Speaker 2 (04:45):
Well, that's just country music in general, you know. I
mean that's what hooked me early on. I was just
a young kid. My dad was in the business as
a singer and songwriter. But I was just looking for
my connection to music and those artists that were speaking
to me, just like your listeners do today. You know,
they want to they can just see themselves in that
little three minute mini movie there, you know. And that's

(05:08):
a beautiful thing when it's these well crafted songs that
just suck you right in and hits you right in
the heart, and there's nothing better than that. That's what
we that's what we long for, and that's how you
end up getting your favorite song and your favorite artist.
And you know, Harry Sundene is just another one of
those tunes where it takes you through a working day

(05:29):
and how hard it can be and then looking forward
to being with the one you know you love at
the end of the day. And it's and also that period,
we were also just really looking for those songs and
trying to write those songs that fit that three part harmony.
You know, that became our calling card, our signature sound,
and that Harry Sundown was one of those. You know
still to this day, it's just a big, old powerful chorus.

(05:51):
So that mid tempo song, you know that that has
that strong message and that big, big performance that people
came to know from Bride and the Ride and stuff
that we're still trying to do to this day.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
Well now we got to play when here on the
audio side here too as well again on WSM AM
six p'in fifty, the home of the grandell Opry two.
Out there you can check us out WSM radio dot com,
on the iHeart app, and of course out there where
you where you can find your podcast at or it
is the backstage pass powered by the Sports Guys podcast
dot com. It's Terrybride and Bride and the Ride, the
live version of a song you're gonna be very familiar
with here on WSM Amarillo Scott here it is. Enjoy it.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
He gets up before the dawn, baxxcell unch and athermos.

Speaker 4 (06:55):
Full of coal.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
It's end and the dusty haste, the burn rays weirding
down his body and Jesus word.

Speaker 5 (07:10):
The priscical it's the cheapest Crams episode.

Speaker 6 (07:16):
He's still hop long.

Speaker 5 (07:20):
He just takes a tractor another route, clots of flow
across the crown.

Speaker 4 (07:29):
It sends up another prayer.

Speaker 6 (07:32):
He said, I never complained, I never rest, like, please
don't around my dreams around dry underneath underneath this Hamillo sky.

Speaker 2 (07:52):
That he'll storm back in the eighty three should it
tick tool on his family. Look, he steads strong and.

Speaker 7 (08:03):
Carry it on, just like it's dead and grand dead before.

Speaker 6 (08:11):
And on his knees every night he prays, pleasont my
cross and chill, dre and grove.

Speaker 4 (08:19):
That's all he's held.

Speaker 5 (08:20):
And he just takes a tractor another round, pulls a plow.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
Across the ground. He sends up another prayer.

Speaker 6 (08:35):
He's said it Lord, and I never complain, I never rest.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
Why please don't have my dreams.

Speaker 8 (08:41):
Around drive.

Speaker 5 (08:44):
Underneath underneath this ham River sky. And he takes a
tractor another round, another round, other, another round.

Speaker 2 (09:07):
He takes attractor, another round, another rod. He said, I
never complain another rest?

Speaker 1 (09:16):
Why please told him?

Speaker 2 (09:18):
My dreams are.

Speaker 8 (09:19):
Round driver.

Speaker 5 (09:22):
Under me, und me, this pam Rillo sky under me,
this pam Morillo Sky.

Speaker 4 (10:08):
Nothing but that You're locked into the best sports and
music podcast. It's the Sports Guys and don't forget to
check them out at the Sports Guys podcast dot com.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
The Caiden Gordon Show is a two hour show playing
the best in country music, so check it out at
the Caidangordonshow dot com. Again, that is the Caden Goordon
Show dot Com.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
Go behind the scenes with some of the biggest artists
in music today with the Backstage Past, powered by the
Sports Guys Podcast dot com. Joined Brandon Morrill and his
co host Kirsty Krauss as they talk to rising stars
and legends about their music careers, listen to their latest
tracks and learn fun facts about the men and women
behind the music you love. And be sure to tune

(10:57):
into the Backstage Past Monday through Friddy from three thirty
to six thirty powered by The Sports Guys Podcast dot com.
And welcome into the Backstage Past, and of course you
check us out right here every Sunday morning five point
thirty am to six am. Get up, drink your coffee
with us right there. WSMAM six fifty the home of
the Grand Old Opry and Wsmradio dot Com back you

(11:17):
were Terry McBride, mcbriden and the Ryde here Too. Fantastic song.
We were talking about this a little bit before we
went live. Terry Amarillo Sky was a very synonymous country
song that you guys were very familiar with. Rodney, Clausen,
Big and Rich, so many big names were connected with
this tune. And I love the fact you guys got
to bring this back for that live version. Feel.

Speaker 2 (11:34):
Yeah, we always kind of felt like that was our song,
you know. We helped create that sort of arrangement that
he came to. We actually had John Rich Big Kenny
ree Riot the second verse for a singlar studio as
we were cutting the song, and they, I mean they
went into the kitchen and came back with that line
on his knees. Every night he praised, please let my

(11:56):
crops and children grow a sny life I've ever known.
That's a pretty powerful line to just they came up
with that on the spot, you know, and just the
whole song just kind of came together. We thought we
had a hit because the song was just so good,
you know, and our label just thought it might be regional,
you know, at best. We were so disappointed. But then
later Michael Knox, Jason Aldeane's producer, called and said, man,

(12:17):
we love that version you guys have, and I think
Jason could have a hit us. So I hope he
does because we love the song. We did all we
could with it, and because of that, we still enjoy
playing it to this day. We still treat it like
it's our song, you know.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
Yeah, talk about Jason, because obviously turned it into a
huge hit for him, Jason Aldean. But at the same time,
you guys knew him back when he was young. You
were talking to me before the show about some demos
when he came out, what don't know, fifteen, sixteen, maybe
seventeen years old. So there was a run in and
a tie with Jason Alden before even this song came out.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Oh, he was just a lanky kid when I met him.
I mean he was signed to Warner Chapel. I was
a songwriter over there. Michael Knox was my publisher who
later you know, became his producer and his cheerleader. I mean,
Michael would not give up on Jason. He took him
to every label and he'd just about run out of
places to take him, and then all of a sudden,

(13:07):
the Broken Bow showed up a new label, you know,
and they kicked everything off with Jason. The rest is history,
you know. But we'd go on these songwriting retreats and
we just we had a ball and I had Jason.
I heard one of my demos from way back that
Jason sang for me back in the day. We were
trying to you know, just experimenting with different people and voices.

(13:28):
And he sounds like a kid. He sounds like a young,
young kid and he was. But yeah, his career is
pretty incredible. What's happened to him. I ran into his
dad recently and he reminded me how much Jason thought
of me, and I thought, that's that's pretty cool. After
all these years and still get a thumbs up from Jason.
You know, he's a good kid.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
You know, when to ask you speaking of the young
kids too, Terry. And there's so many of these names
right now that are doing their thing with country music,
bringing back the authenticity of it, bringing back the storytelling
vibe of it. We mentioned, yeah, a little bit off
there about Zach Topp and the impact he's making there
on country music with sounds like the Radio and some
of his hits and the Cold Beer in Country Music,
which is his latest record that came back in April.
Talk about just that feeling of not that it ever left,

(14:09):
but I mean there was a time period where the
industry changes, it shifts a little bit, but keeping that
really authentic sound around, the sound that you guys came
up with in nineties country and that storytelling. And so
it's great to see so many great young artists bring
it back down well.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
And I always kind of thought this might happen, but
always knew it would have to come back around and
be driven by a younger artist. You know, it couldn't
be older artists complaining about what's not happening anymore. That's
not going to change the way. You know, a younger,
newer audience is going to listen to music. But having

(14:43):
a young artist. When I started singing it down in
Texas with guys like Cody Johnson, you know, I was
writing some with Cody and there was a whole cast
of these young guys that were kind of keeping a
country down there, and the audience they had was impressive
and undeniable. You you could not you had to notice it.
They were getting on everybody's radar, and of course now

(15:05):
they're on a lot of people's radar. But yeah, there's
a crop of young artists, female and male, that are
really longing for the I got a text yesterday. Were
really wanting to write, you know, some nineties kind of
sound as stuff. But okay, I'll try and help you
with that. You know, I remember some of that era,
but I like the fact that they're just longing for

(15:26):
as song as they have a little more, like you said,
a little more story, a little more substance, and not
just you know, sounding like everything else. We went through
a period of that where music just goes through these
cycles where we either go pop or we go whatever,
and we just hung in there way too long with
the last round of what country was going through. Now
it's the doors are open. People are really looking for

(15:48):
their own music, and boy, there's a lot to choose
from right now. There was a period where there wasn't
you know, like Chris Stapleton couldn't get arrested. He just
didn't look the part, you know, and that's too bad.
A guy didn't look the part, you know, But go
through phases like that, then he didn't sound the party either.
There's no one that sounded like Chris and that's what
made him so popular. Now he doesn't really sound like

(16:09):
anybody else, and that's what a true artist is all about,
you know.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
No doubt. Take me to the Terry McBride's School of Songwriting.
I want to spend maybe a couple of minutes there too,
because every song every writer out there. You know, we've
been to Nashville three or four times this year for
different events and CRS and CMA Fest, but every artist
Terry has their own kind of personal feel or connection
with songwriting. What's yours?

Speaker 2 (16:31):
Well, I think that is the key to sort of
getting recognized in the beginning. You know, where there again,
you don't sound like everybody else. When I came to Nashville,
I was living in Austin, Texas. So you know, Tony
Brown told me, you know, when I first heard your music,
it didn't sound like everything else because one we weren't
cutting it on Music Row, and not that we were

(16:52):
against that at all, it just wasn't where I was living.
I was from Texas. You know, My songs were written
in Texas, and I was using friends and people that
we knew they were great players. So it just sounded different.
It had its own little, unique, simple country song can
a count on you? As a three chord song that
is not, you know, gonna change the world, but somehow

(17:12):
it connected with the listener, you know, so simple in
fact that the label at the beginning thought that song
would never be a hit because it was just too simple,
but the audience proved them wrong in a big way,
and that helped launch our career. That song got started
still one of our most popular and you know, most
requestioned songs that we have to this day. So yeah,

(17:33):
I just learned from people that I loved. I was
fortunate to grow up you know, outside of Austin, and
my heroes are living just down the road. Whether it
was you know, I loved those Jerry Jeff Walker albums.
You guy Clark was writing them. I loved Willie is
my hero and he was playing right down the road
at Armadilla World Headquarters. You could see him in person
there he was. It wasn't just you know, somebody on TV.

(17:57):
So that was very inspiring and very you know, encouraging
for me as a young guy trying to figure out
what am I going to do? So I just picked
and pulled and you know, all of those influences are
poured into anything I've ever done. You know, it all
comes from everything that I loved as a kid and
on we're growing up and it goes up into like

(18:18):
I started getting these books and Done cuts. Well, I
was a huge Brooks and Done fan. It's not that,
you know, when I met Ronnie. Our singing styles and
our musical styles are very similar. What we like and
what we can write. And you know, I was saying
talking to someone earlier, when I'm in the room with Ronnie,
I can create a melody, uh, you know, and Ronnie

(18:38):
can sing it, you know, like not everybody can. But
for me, we just connected in a way that was
just perfect for me as a songwriter. Stylistically, what I liked,
Ronnie could pull it off. You know. So it was
a win win for me having someone like that in
the room writing with and an artistic is that capable
of creating an incredible performance.

Speaker 1 (18:59):
You know why say Terry time. It takes takes some
people back to nineteen ninety three. We're gonna play another
one here on wsm AM six fifty Home of the
Grand Ole Opry, And here's every Sunday mornings from five
thirty am. To six am. Wake up, drink your coffee
and listen worldwide. Just turn this song right there. iHeartRadio
and of course WSM radio dot com the home of
the opry every night seven o'clock. They do some great
broadcast and have some great lineups on there. Back to

(19:20):
nineteen ninety three, Level on the Loose, Heart on the Run.
Here it is McBride and the Ride on WSAM AM
six fifty on Home the Backstage Past, powered by the
Sports Guys podcast dot com and.

Speaker 8 (19:31):
Joy somm Helterer.

Speaker 4 (19:44):
Only Won't held a tens.

Speaker 7 (19:48):
He Booter, bride on Downhill, slide Aster, the t cas
manchon you finger on out Focus not fast Clear, and
me Mom her.

Speaker 5 (20:05):
Heartest playing homeless pokers, trying to from.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
The school's fang. What's your mom?

Speaker 8 (20:15):
Dude? What you live?

Speaker 2 (20:17):
You're just a game.

Speaker 6 (20:19):
She's gotta flip like the fast pull the train off.

Speaker 2 (20:23):
The school said the sun. She's love on with.

Speaker 5 (20:27):
The herd off from the will the herd.

Speaker 9 (20:32):
On the.

Speaker 2 (20:40):
He's a fine her heartbare loves the food.

Speaker 7 (20:44):
He could lose now she's fancy food.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
She makes her roost down home.

Speaker 7 (20:50):
And she plays a game. He thinks it's bitter her
that way, and when you see her, she lights up
night beyond spark, go it ry.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
Your heart is something and you never win.

Speaker 7 (21:09):
I don't mind, you can't try span What do you
want watching big?

Speaker 8 (21:17):
You're just the game.

Speaker 7 (21:19):
She's gotta play like the Fast and the train off
the st.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
Set the Sun.

Speaker 5 (21:25):
She's love on the list with the herd on the runt,
Love on the list with the heart.

Speaker 8 (21:32):
All those.

Speaker 2 (21:40):
You're feeling to roll out of. Book up a fans
Pearence Mom her hearty fan Focus, Book up Riding from
the school, spang what do you want to watch? You
make you just the game?

Speaker 5 (22:02):
Geez got me back, Fast and train off, Still say Sun.

Speaker 8 (22:10):
With the run.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
Chain, still saying Sun.

Speaker 4 (22:20):
With the herd, making it rain from Downtown with sports
and music. It's the Sports Guys Podcast, only on Those

(22:43):
Sports Guys podcast dot Com.

Speaker 9 (22:47):
That Caden Gordon Show Today's Best Country Mix is a
two hour show playing independent and mainstream country music you
know and love. Be sure to check it out at
the Kangordon Show dot com for more information on the show,
and back.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
Here Terry mcbrian McBride The ride there too Here on
WSMAM six fifty Home with the Grandele Lotpry, Brandon Morel
Here the backstage Past, powered by the Sports Guys podcast
dot com. Police to be on this adventure now with
WSM and embarking on some new new horizons here and
good to have one of the greats of all time
join us here of us going to WSM home with
a grandel Loppery tear so Love on the Loose, Terry

(23:24):
Heart on the Run, and this nineteen ninety three told
a great story.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
Well that's one of those songs. I was fortunate to
meet this great songwriter. Costas is his name, and when
I met him, like in probably ninety one, he was
Songwriter of the Year BMI Awards that year. You know,
this is impressive way to meet a guy. But he
was also writing some of my favorite songs, a lot
of those Patty Loveless songs, Timber I'm falling in Love

(23:51):
and he had a good run with her, and so
I went to we were on tour up in Canada,
came through Montana and I spent a couple of days
with and Bozeman. We wrote going Out of My Mind
first night we met, and it was went on to
be a big hit from it. Ride the Ride. So
I struck up a little relationship of friendship with him.
He started sending me these demos and songs that he'd

(24:12):
been writing, and he had a very unique way of
doing it because he sang all the voices, all the backgrounds,
the lead, and he could stack these incredible high high harmonies.
And Love on the Loose is one of those demos.
I just loved it. It's a great song, and it
has a great feel. He's really good at finding a groove,
and I think that's one of those things that people

(24:32):
really love about that song. It's just has a great feel,
right and he kicks off, you know, it already feels
good and then you don't really care what it says,
but it happens to say something cool as well. It's
the only song I've ever known that has hocus pocus
in the in the lyrics, so you know, out of
focus and then hocus pocus. That's a heck of a rhyme.
But yeah, it's a cool song. Still love doing it today,

(24:54):
just like we do with all those songs from the
nineties and our new stuff as well. It's just it's
it never gets old for us. I hope it never
gets old for the fans. So far it hasn't and
uh yeah, those songs hold up, it's amazing.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
Hey, we got to have a little fun terry to
wrap up to as well. I got to throw in
some some sports stuff. I look, football is coming up,
you know, with training camp and you get into August,
you get the two days and all the good stuff
out there. I guess is it still the Titans for you?
Are we're talking about the Allas, the Houston Texas.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
Oh the Titans. They're heartbreakers, man, I'm trying, you know,
they're they're my you know, I live here now. Although
I'm so thankful I spent half of my time going
and coming back and forth to Texas, which those dates
are really having a lot of dates. We just added
a couple of days. So I love being And I
grew up on the Cowboys, you know, I still you know,

(25:47):
there's a side of me. I still have to root
for the Cowboys because I just grew up from that
golden era, you know. I mean we saw some great
moments as a kid. And uh, same thing with Texas
Rangers and baseball. You know, I got to do it
was games, sault, you know, amazing events just by being
in sports but yeah, I'm pulling for the Titans. I

(26:08):
don't it doesn't look great. They'd have to really turn
some things around. And the team they've lost so many people.
They had great people and couldn't make it happen. I
was at the Super Bowl the year they played the
Rams that year. If you remember that Super Bowl, amazing
where we lost by one yard at the end. It
was an incredible game. But uh, yeah, I've been a fan.

(26:30):
It's you know, pro sports is just fun. There's nothing
that beats the excitement of that. I mean, no matter
who you're rooting for, and it doesn't end there. Minor
league as well. It can be fun. It doesn't have
to be just a pro level. Heck, I'm watching like
everybody else women's basketball now, you know, Oh my gosh,
I'm pulling for Caitling go for three. You know, it's like,
holy cow, sports is That's the way it is. Rot

(26:52):
You root for whoever the underdog, for sure, and it's
it's a beautiful thing about sports. I loved some of
my favorite memories growing up. I was up played sports, always,
never grade at any one sport, but I played them
all because I just loved it. That and music is
what got me through high school.

Speaker 9 (27:07):
You know.

Speaker 2 (27:07):
It certainly wasn't my academics scores, for sure, but as
sports and music helped get me through that period. And
so I've always had a love for it and those
who can do it well, I've met a lot of
pro guys, their nerves of steel. Man, I don't know
how they do it, you know that, And whether it's
I met Golden Richards one time, if you remember him

(27:27):
from the Dallas Cowboys, you know he's had He let
me wear his Super Bowl ring for a moment there,
but he said, yeah, because I came out on the field,
I was so nervous almost threw up. He said, yeah, overwhelming,
even a guy like that, he was not prepared for it,
you know. But it's amazing what they can do. And yeah,
it's still fun. It's just fun to have a team
to root for, good or bad and ugly, and it

(27:49):
can be all that if you've hung in there long enough,
you know, well.

Speaker 1 (27:52):
I know we take the sports mentality root for the
great country artist out there too, and they're still killing
it even fifteen twenty twenty five years later too. Riding
the ride the Great Terry Bride here on WSMAM six
fifty the Home of the Grand ol Opry. The latest
single Ammarello Sky. Make sure you guys check it out
if you haven't already across all these streaming platforms. Terry,
appreciate you always. Johning us here showing us some love
and kicking us off here our new affiliation with the

(28:13):
great WSM Radio. Looking forward to this my friend, and
many more are looking forward to seeing you down the
road and catching you out there on tour.

Speaker 2 (28:20):
Oh Brandon, thanks for having me. I'm so proud of
you man. I'm excited look forward to our next visit.
I'll be listening and you take care.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
You got of course right there, Terry McBride McBride in
the ride out there to Amaillo Skoy make sure you
guys check it out across all those streaming platforms. We're
back next Sunday, five point thirty am to six am.
We'll wake you up, get a cup of coffee with
us out there too on the home of the Grand
ol Opry WSM Radio. You've been listening to the Backstage
Pass powered by the Sports Guys podcast dot com. And
we'll see you guys next Sunday.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
Take care
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