The Country Music Hall of Fame grew to 152 members on Sunday, Oct. 22 when Patty Loveless, Tanya Tucker and Bob McDill were officially inducted into the historic Hall of Fame rotunda.
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McDill, who penned "Good Ole Boys Like Me," "Come Early Morning," "Amanda," "Don't Close Your Eyes," "Gone Country" and many more, was inducted into the Songwriter category. The Beaumont, Texas-raised songwriting legend was honored with performances from Charley Crockett ("Louisiana Saturday Night"), Dean Dillon ("All the Good Ones are Gone") and Jamey Johnson ("Good Ole Boys Like Me") before being inducted by Country Music Hall of Fame member and fellow songwriter Don Schlitz, who called McDill his hero.
After reflecting on his appreciation for fellow songwriters and artists, McDill shared some advice for aspiring lyricists.
"No. 1: Members of the music buying public are probably smarter than you think they are," McDill said. "No. 2: The money you earn from a song is in direct inverse proportion to the number of co-writers, and No. 3: When the great Henry Mancini was asked where he got his inspiration, he said 'every morning at 9 a.m. at the piano.'"
Loveless, who was inducted into the Modern Era category for her genre-defining voice and hits such as "If My Heart Had Windows," "Blame it On Your Heart," "You Don't Even Know Who I Am" and "Here I Am," was honored by bluegrass phenoms Sister Sadie, featuring Loveless' longtime fiddle player Deanie Richardson. The band took the stage to perform "Sounds of Loneliness," which Loveless wrote and recorded for her self-titled 1986 album and later recorded for her 2001 bluegrass album Mountain Soul.
Rock Hall of Famer Bob Seger then shocked the crowd (and Loveless herself) when he took the stage to perform Loveless' 1996 hit "She Drew a Broken Heart." (Seger and Loveless previously collaborated on Seger's "The Answer's in the Question.")
Loveless' friend and frequent collaborator Vince Gill then performed another of the Kentucky native's many '90s staples, "Lonely Too Long," before returning to the stage to induct Loveless. Gill recounted the first time he met the singer, which happened to be when she was in line to get his autograph at Nashville's Fan Fair.
"Patty came up and said 'Hey, I like what you do. I'm an artist and we're gonna sing together some day.' And, boy, did we," Gill said.
Gill and Loveless would go on to collaborate on a string of hits, including "When I Call Your Name," "Go Rest High On That Mountain" and "Timber I'm Falling in Love."
"It always felt like [she] was the little sister I always wanted to sing with," Gill said. "That's what I see -- what I hear -- in her voice, that blood harmony that I yearned for my whole life. That's what we sound like together."
Gill went on to remark on his time touring with Loveless, their deep bond and Loveless' incredible talent.
"The career she's had is magical because I think Patty possesses maybe the most authentic voice I might have ever heard," he said.
Loveless was clearly emotional during her speech, reflecting on her late brother Roger Ramey, who passed away in 2022.
"This was always a dream of ours as young kids coming to Nashville," Loveless said. "When I would walk through the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum when it was over on 16th avenue...it just felt so comforting to walk among those and to be a part of those now -- it truly is an honor."
Tucker, who broke through as a teenager for her powerhouse voice and stage presence and racked up six No. 1 records before the age of 18, was inducted into the Veterans Era Artist category.
Wynonna Judd performed "Delta Dawn," which Tucker recorded when she was just 13. years old.
Jessi Colter and Margo Price then took the stage to perform Tucker's "It's a Little Too Late," and were even joined on stage by Tucker herself for the song's final notes.
Brandi Carlile, who co-produced Tucker's While I'm Livin', her first album in a decade, performed Tucker's "Two Sparrows in a Hurricane," which the country legend has likened to her parents' love story. Carlile, a lifelong fan of Tucker's, shared how proud she was to see the country icon take her rightful place in the hall of fame.
"You've carved out an ass-kicking path for every tough little girl," Carlile said. "You carved out that path for me and I'm never gonna stop trying to make it up to you. But I'll be able to sleep tonight because I just watched Tanya Tucker get inducted in the Country Music Hall of Fame."
Country Music Hall of Famers Brenda Lee and Connie Smith inducted Tucker, each remarking on her show-stopping talent and fierce friendship.
"She's one of the most giving, loving, kind-hearted people that I know," Lee said of Tucker. "If she is your friend, she is your friend. She is loyal; she's trustworthy -- two things this business doesn't know about...She is the epitome of what a friend is."
During her speech, Tucker reflected on the support of her late father, Beau Tucker, who was instrumental in helping to launch her career.
"He was my first fan," Tucker said of her father. "He blessed me with my mother, Juanita, too. A few years after 'Delta Dawn,' I asked her 'How did you follow this man? It'd be crazy betting your whole future on a 9-year-old girl.' She said 'Tanya, your daddy believed in you and I believed in him.'"
See more photos from the evening below.