
The Opry 100 celebration brought together nearly 40 of the genreâs biggest stars, most of whom are members of the hallowed institution. Among those in attendance was Alan Jackson.
Alan Jackson was invited to join the Grand Old Opry in 1991, one year after he first performed in the iconic circle. He sang âHere In The Real World,â the title track of his debut album, for his first Opry performance in 1990.

Roy Acuff and Randy Travis welcomed Alan to the sacred family the following year.
Immediately after his official induction, Jackson visited talk show Nashville Now where he talked to guest host Charlie Chase about the memorable moment.
âHard to believe 6 years ago I was carrying a bucket of mail over there every day for about $5 an hour,â Alan said, adding his feelings about being a new member. âItâs an honor. Iâm ready proud because itâs a great institution. I donât know if country music would exist without it.â
He told Chase that he almost got choked up when joining the Opry because he was so excited and proud.
âYou think about the people who have stood on that piece of wood that came out of the Ryman Auditorium. From Roy Acuff ⊠and Hank Williams. I could sit here and name names all night. Itâs just an incredible feeling of the history.â
During Wednesdayâs Opry 100 birthday celebration, Alan Jackson sang his 1992 hit, âChattahoochee.â
Alan Jackson returned to the Grand Ole Opry stage to help celebrate its milestone birthday. Jacksonâs appearance was especially poignant due to the fact that he is making few public appearances outside of his final concert tour.
âChattahoocheeâ was released as the third single from Jacksonâs third studio album, A Lot About Livinâ (And A Little âBout Love). The song was included in Alanâs The Greatest Hits Collection, where he shared the story behind the tune he wrote with Jim McBride.
âJim McBride and I were trying to write an up-tempo song and Jim came in with the line âway down yonder on the Chattahoochee.â It kind of went from there,â Jackson wrote. âWe never thought it would be as big as itâs become.â