Nashville is my home, and the reason why I get to do what I love.
'I'm Sorry' was one of the first songs to come out of Nashville using strings.
Nashville's like any other hometown - after a while, it's stifling.
I love the show 'Nashville,' I mean, that's a show that's pretty incredible.
I moved to Nashville at 17 to make music, and since then I've put everything I have into doing it right.
Real folk music long ago went to Nashville and left no known survivors.
If I needed to record, I'd head to the coast or Nashville, one or the other.
If you went to school in Nashville, you were aware of all those '60s rockabilly people.
I probably had the most fun recording For Richer For Poorer in Nashville.
I think Nashville could use some better shopping!
Nashville used to have more integrity than just looking at the bottom line.
I've always been a big fan of Nashville, and I have friends that live there.
There's more women stars in Nashville all the time. They're proving they can do the job the same as a man.
All I knew when I moved to Nashville was that I wanted to make music in whatever shape and form I could.
I'm from Tennessee. My mom lives in Nashville. I'm born and bred country. That's all I listen to.
My absolute favorite meal in Nashville is sweet-potato pancakes at Pancake Pantry.
Over the years I've had more and more of an association with Nashville.
One of my pet peeves about Nashville is that it tends to be copycatted. I don't want to do that. I've got to be different.
The thing I like about 'Nashville,' it just happens to be about musicians, and all the music is practical, meaning it's performed at a concert or during a rehearsal.
Nashville has a great creative atmosphere. It's a small, close-knit music community that you can't find anywhere else.
The Smithsonian should box and preserve Tim McGraw's Nashville den for a future exhibit entitled 'Early 21st Century American Man Cave.'