Coe, who famously wrote “Take This Job and Shove It” for Johnny Paycheck in 1977, died at the age of 86 on Wednesday.
If you were a kid growing up in the 60s, there's a good chance you knew all four of these country songs by heart.
These three artists are all considered neo-traditionalists in country music, more or less. They are bringing old Nashville ...
Outlaw country music legend and pioneer songwriter David Allan Coe has died. He was 86.
Kacey Dirksen attends a country music festival.
Call it an attack, or an observation, but John Mayer pointed out the one issue he has with country music while sitting across from one of the biggest country music stars on the planet. Lainey Wilson r ...
Ne-Yo says Nashville welcomed him with open arms despite warnings from industry friends, and he's now working on a new ...
The Cowgays posted their first TikTok video, a clip of their debut single, “Wish I Wasn’t Gay,” and scored nearly 400,000 ...
Ballads rule the day on this week’s crop of new country releases. Music heavyweights Reba McEntire, Cody Johnson and Riley ...
Miley Cyrus returns to the top 10 on Billboard's Country Digital Song Sales chart with "Younger You," which is now credited ...
Zach Top, a breakout in country music, is up for five ACM Awards, humbly sharing his journey and love for country life as the ...
Mr. Coe, who wrote “Take This Job and Shove It” and other hits, was a transgressive exponent of the outlaw country movement ...