by Kim Kilpatrick
May 14, 2010 7:58 PM
Last week the media was just starting to report that several prominent country musicians, such as Brad Paisley and Keith Urban, expected to lose instruments and most of their touring equipment to the Nashville flood. The damage was done when the rising Cumberland River invaded Soundcheck Nashville, a storage and rehearsal space that at least 600 musicians rely on. This week reports of the actual, as opposed to the anticipated, damage started to come in.
In the end, musicians had to wait three days for flood waters to recede before they could attempt to enter their storage units at Soundcheck. When they did go in, they had to don rubber boots and gloves and wade through puddles. According to The Tennessean, salvagers found around 1,000 guitars, 2,000 amplifiers, and hundreds of drum sets that were damaged or destroyed.
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Tags: nashville, tennessee, flood, cumberland river, brad paisley, keith urban, soundcheck nashville, storage, salvage, instruments, guitars, drums, amplifiers, musicians hall of fame, jimi hendrix, johnny cash, peter townshend, the who, ed beaver, lightning chance, joe chambers, grand ole opry, chet atkins, patsy cline, hank williams, the everly brothers, john jorgenson, elton john, jason aldean, rich redmond, raul malo, the mavericks, john hobbs, joe glaser, glaser instruments, george gruhn
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