Texarkana Gazette

Nashville to name street after Opry founder Bailey

- KRISTIN M. HALL

NASHVILLE, Tenn. — The city of Nashville is naming a street after Grand Ole Opry pioneer Deford Bailey, the “Harmonica Wizard” whose popularity and contributi­ons to country music and blues are still being recognized decades later.

On Saturday, Deford Bailey Avenue will be officially dedicated in the Edgehill neighborho­od of Nashville where Bailey lived most of his life until his death in 1982.

Bailey overcame huge obstacles on his way to stardom. He contracted polio as a child, which led him to learn the harmonica while he was bedridden. He came from a family of Black musicians and his music created a link between the rural “Black hillbilly music” he learned living in Smith County, Tennessee, and the contempora­ry country music that was being formed on the Opry stage.

“He traveled throughout the South with Roy Acuff, Bill Monroe and Minnie Pearl and that gang there, and he was the star of the show,” said his grandson Carlos Deford Bailey.

In 1927, Bailey’s performanc­e of “Pan American Blues,” in which his harmonica imitated the sound of a rolling locomotive, helped inspire the name “Grand Ole Opry,” and he was the first musician to hold a major recording session in Nashville in 1928. Despite his success and popularity, Bailey faced racism during the Jim Crow Era of segregatio­n in the South, especially while touring with other white Opry members.

Bailey performed on the Opry for about 16 years until 1941 when a dispute between the Opry and the performing rights organizati­on ASCAP created a rift. The Opry management forbade Bailey from performing his songs that were licensed through ASCAP, including listener favorites like “Fox Chase.” When he refused, the Opry fired him.

Bailey retired from playing profession­ally and channeled his attention to a second career as the owner of a shoeshine parlor in Nashville. His grandson remembers spending Saturdays at the parlor and recalls that his grandfathe­r often dressed very dapper — wearing suits underneath his overalls to protect them from stains.

 ?? (Marilyn Keeler Morton via AP) ?? This mid 1970s image shows Grand Ole Opry pioneer Carlos Deford Bailey. The city of Nashville is naming a street after Bailey, the “Harmonica Wizard," whose popularity and contributi­ons to country music and blues are still being recognized decades later. On Saturday, Deford Bailey Avenue will be officially dedicated in the Edgehill neighborho­od of Nashville where Bailey lived most of his life until his death in 1982.
(Marilyn Keeler Morton via AP) This mid 1970s image shows Grand Ole Opry pioneer Carlos Deford Bailey. The city of Nashville is naming a street after Bailey, the “Harmonica Wizard," whose popularity and contributi­ons to country music and blues are still being recognized decades later. On Saturday, Deford Bailey Avenue will be officially dedicated in the Edgehill neighborho­od of Nashville where Bailey lived most of his life until his death in 1982.

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