Country Music People August 2018 | Page 4
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AUGUST 2018
Volume 49
Number 8
Issue 582
News
Walt Trott in Nashville
Duncan Warwick in London
Only “In America”
Editor
Duncan Warwick
Contributors
David Allan, Janet Aspley,
Donnie Ayers, Craig Baguley,
Larry Delaney, Don Cusic, Julie Flaskett,
Kelly Gregory, Michael Hingston, Tony Ives,
Spencer Leigh, John Lomax III, ,
Roland Purdy, Adrian Peel, Paul Riley,
Wayne Smart, Chris Smith, Alison Stokes,
Tom Travis, Walt Trott, Dave Watkins, Jack
Watkins
New release consultant: Steve Tidbury
Assistant editor / Special projects
coordinator
Kelly Gregory
Photographers
Patricia Presley, Barry Dixon, Billie McAleer
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4 cmp - AUGUST 2018
Charlie visiting troops in Iraq in 2016.
Grammy Award-winning entertainer
Charlie Daniels is still devoting his
efforts to the Middle Tennessee State
University (MTSU) military family centre
he helped initiate back in 2015, and
despite recent heart surgery, ably headed
up another fund-raising event June 28,
during which he presented a $100,000
check from him and his manager. Daniels’
collaboration with MTSU helped establish
a military veterans family centre on
their Murfreesboro, Tenn., campus, now
designated as the Charlie & Hazel Daniels’
Veterans & Military Family Center.
“It’s a much-needed thing,” Charlie
says, “What we’re hoping for is to set up
a chain reaction with the one here, as
a shining example for others.” Daniels,
who grew up near the Wilmington, N.C.,
shipyards, where warships were built
for World War II, has long since been
entertaining American troops at home
and abroad, cheering them with his hits
such as The Devil Went Down To Georgia
and In America. The now 81-year-old
singer-songwriter-fiddler insists, “I can’t
remember a time in my life when I didn’t
have the greatest respect and admiration
for the United States military.”
Thus, Daniels created the Journey Home
Project, a nonprofit founded in liaison
with his wife Hazel and manager David
Corlew, which began as an outgrowth
of the Charlie Daniels Scholarship for
Heroes pr