On December 8, 2019, The 42nd annual Kennedy Center Honors took place. During that year, the list of honorees included actress Sally Field, the TV show Sesame Street musician Michael Tilson Thomas, Earth, Wind, & Fire, and singer Linda Ronstadt.

As part of the event, several tributes for each honoree were done including Tom Hanks who gave a moving speech to his onscreen mom, Field, from the movie Forrest Gump. But one of the, probably, stand-out moments was during the tribute to Ronstadt.

Linda Ronstadt Smiles As Carrie Underwood Performs “Blue Bayou” & “When Will I Be Loved” | Society Of Rock Videos

Carrie Underwood did the honor to pay tribute to a woman who she said “broke the rules and sang music that was true to her.” Underwood was witnessed performing the “Blue Bayou” while wearing an eye-catching blue sparkly dress. “Blue Bayou” was originally written and sung by Roy Orbison, but Ronstadt covered it in 1977. After she finished the song, Underwood then sang “When Will I Be Loved,” which the legend released in 1975.

Underwood has already sung this song in Ronstadt’s honor back in 2014. Together with Bonnie Raitt and Emmylou Harris, the “Cry Pretty” singer played “Blue Bayou” at the legend’s Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction that year. On December 15, 2019, the ceremony was broadcast on CBS, and Ronstadt could be seen grinning the entire time of the performance.

Watch Underwood’s 2019 performance in the video below.

0 Shares:
Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like
Read More

Some Songs Aren’t Sung To Entertain—They’re Sung Because Hearts Are Breaking.” Last night, Garth Brooks crumbled into tears live on The Kelly Clarkson Show, as the weight of tragedy became too much to hold back. The flood that shattered Kelly’s hometown wasn’t just news—it was personal. It was family. It was home. Mothers clutching empty bedrooms. Fathers staring at foundations where houses used to stand. Families ripped apart by water that came too fast, too strong, and left nothing but silence in its wake. The show was meant to raise money. But instead, it became something bigger—a sacred space for shared grief. When Garth and Kelly held the mic, they weren’t just singing. They were trembling. Crying. Praying. Their voices cracked, but they kept going, because this wasn’t about the notes—it was about the people. And when the last chord faded, the most powerful moment began: no cameras cut away. No smiles were forced. Just Garth, Kelly, and an audience too heartbroken to do anything but cry with them. This wasn’t television. It was a room full of shattered hearts, stitched together by music and love.

“There Wasn’t a Dry Eye Left”: Garth Brooks Breaks Down on Kelly Clarkson Show While Honoring Texas Flood…