
From the opening shot of LP Field, home of the NFL's Tennessee Titans, its lights gleaming against the evening sky in Nashville and its seats and field jammed with cheering Country Music fans, to the last notes fading after two hours of celebration, "CMA Music Festival: Country's Night to Rock" is a thrill ride, packed with surprise turns, sweetened with touching moments and driven by great performances captured for television.
Airing 9-11PM/ET Monday, Sept. 8, "CMA Music Festival: Country's Night to Rock" starts fast and picks the pace up immediately. Three exciting young stars host the show, which begins as two of them, Julianne Hough and Kellie Pickler, surrounded by thousands of music enthusiasts, welcome viewers and introduce the opening act, their co-host Taylor Swift.
Taylor Swift fires up the night with a sizzling rendition of "Picture to Burn," illuminated by towering images of flames that blaze across the huge LED screen at the back of the stage. With that, the cavalcade begins, with one superstar following the next, each offering a unique combination of artistry and charisma that's guaranteed to make "CMA Music Festival: Country's Night to Rock" one of the most varied concert experiences of the season.
Among the show's many highlights:
Between these musical highlights, viewers join several lucky fans as they are treated to unexpected and unforgettable access to Country Music artists.
Taylor Swift's street set is just one milestone captured on "CMA Music Festival: Country's Night to Rock." The ABC-TV cameras also take viewers into one of the fabled honky tonks along Nashville's Lower Broadway, where Gretchen Wilson nails "Don't Do Me No Good" before a fist-pumping, rafter-rattling, wall-to-wall crowd.
And a more family-oriented perspective is offered by Bucky Covington, who intersperses his romp through "It's Good to Be Young" with a tour of the Festival neighborhood and sums up the essence of what makes CMA Music Festival unique among musical events in any genre.
"CMA Music Festival is all about the chance for Country Music artists to give back to Country Music fans," Covington observes, speaking for all who donate their time and talent as Festival performers.
The giving begins on Monday night, Sept. 8, only on ABC-TV. The television special will be promoted on www.ABC.com for five days preceding the broadcast. This coverage will be posted in Webisodes: General Festival coverage, which will include events, interviews with artists and fans, performances, footage from the ABC Block Party and more; behind the scenes/making of the broadcast special, capturing the crew in action, backstage activities and similar glimpses into the technical and creative process; and After Hours with Jake Owen, who will take viewers on a tour of Nashville (including visits to music venues), interact with fans and more, along with excerpts from Owen's performance at LP Field.