Ray Stevens should have been celebrating. Instead, the 87-year-old country legend lay on the ground in Nashville with a broken neck and a terrifying question hanging in the air: would this be the end? Rushed to the hospital, fresh off a heart scare, his comeback seemed shattered. But then, something unexpe… Continues…
The fall could easily have been a tragic final chapter: an 87-year-old icon, already recovering from a heart attack and two stent procedures, suddenly on the floor with a broken neck. Yet doctors found no paralysis, no catastrophic damage—just strict orders for a brace, rest, and time.
, ever the showman, returned home determined to heal, his team insisting he remains mobile and upbeat. Instead of canceling his moment, he chose to walk through it. Favorites Old & New, his 13-track collection of classics and fresh songs, will still arrive on Friday, turning a health scare into an unlikely backdrop for one more act.
For fans who grew up on Everything Is Beautiful and his offbeat novelty hits, the album now feels less like a release and more like a defiant message: he’s bruised, but not finished yet. READ MORE BELOW