Fans lined up for hours and wore their bandanas to pay tribute to the artist who helped define the character of our city.
The singer’s appearance on a local PBS TV show five decades ago transformed the city, its culture, and American music.
The Red-Headed Stranger kicked off the longest running music television show in history in 1974. At 91, he returned to ...
Austin City Limits” (ACL) is set to mark 50 years since its first taping with Willie Nelson and Family set to perform during ...
The Nashville star talks to Vanity Fair about 40 years of the patriotic standard, what it was like when Donald Trump started ...
Young patients and their families got hands-on experience with some heavy machinery at the 78 Development. Clayco says this ...
Journal Star reporter L. Kent Wolgamott remembers Kris Kristofferson, who died Sunday. In 1986 the singer spent two months ...
Kris Kristofferson was always my hero. From my student days, his music clicked with me. He put words on my feelings better ...
Willie Nelson is the last living Highway Man, and he says that in his incidental goodbye to Kris Kristofferson in the song ...
Kris Kristofferson was an outspoken activist in support of social causes, including the release of Leonard Peltier and championing farm workers.
Kristofferson, who died Sept. 28, was a Rhodes Scholar and an Army Ranger before taking a chance at songwriting. "Me and Bobby McGee" is perhaps his most famous song. Originally broadcast in 1999.