Ernest Tubb Record Shop Closes AGAIN Amid Management Change


The ongoing saga of the historic Ernest Tubb Record Shop on Lower Broadway in Nashville just hit another devastating snag. On Thursday afternoon (1-15), the musicians scheduled to perform on the Record Shop’s multiple stages in the coming days and weeks all received a text message.

“Hi, this is the Ernest Tubb Record Shop. ETRS is undergoing a switch in management groups, and during this transition we will be closed effective today. We are sorry for the last minute notice. At this time [we] don’t have any further information. We appreciate your contributions to Tubb’s very much.”

Traditional country artist Jay Bragg who had numerous gigs on the calendar at the Record Shop upcoming went by the location, and it was all locked and closed. Though there is no confirmation of what might be in store for the property next, or who the new management might be, the situation does not seem promising for keeping the original Ernest Tubb Record Shop concept going.

The newly-redesigned location had a soft opening on October 13th, 2025, and then a grand reopening on November 13th with Marty Stuart, Vince Gill, Wynonna, and other country music dignitaries performing.

However, both the soft and grand re-openings seemed strangely under-publicized and quickly announced. According to sources, management might have been looking to rebrand the Record Shop as early as two weeks after its opening.

“They did open during a really slow season,”
Jay Bragg tells Saving Country Music. Bragg regularly plays on Lower Broadway. “This is the slowest season now. I think they were quickly having second thoughts about if traditional country would be sustainable on Lower Broadway.”

For the last decade, the Record Shop located at 417 Broadway has been in peril in one capacity or another, from bare shelves and mismanagement in the 2010s, to being purchased by the owner of Robert’s Western World across the street during the pandemic in hopes of revitalization, to then being sold off in an estate dispute between the new owners and the previous owner David McCormick, resulting in the closing of the Record Shop’s doors in the spring of 2022.

But then hope was renewed when a group of investors that included Nashville studio musician Ilya Toshinskiy, Ernest Tubb’s grandson Ernest Dale Tubb III, and others stepped up to buy the property for  for $18.3 million in July of 2022. They promised at the time that the Ernest Tubb Record Shop would return.

But after years of waiting, and rumors that the property would just become another multi-story Lower Broadway bar, folks began worrying all over again. Why it took three years to reopen a property on lucrative Lower Broadway seemed curious.

All of those concerns were alleviated though after the reopening, with both patrons and the artist booked to play the location praising the new performance space and the record shop relocated to the second floor. The first floor had an electric stage in front, and a more acoustic stage i nthe back where the Midnite Jamboree shows happened previously. The new Record Shop also served food, and had a private events space.

There is no confirmation of what the future might hold for the property located at 417 Broadway, who the new management is, if they will move away from the Ernest Tubb Record Shop concept and turn it into just another Lower Broadway bar, or new management will continue the historic business. Stay tuned to Saving Country Music as this story develops.

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First opened in 1947 on Commerce St. as a retail enterprise for country legend Ernest Tubb, the Ernest Tubb Record Shop moved to its more iconic location on Broadway in 1951. Frustrated at the lack of country records stocked at many retail establishments across the country, Ernest Tubb decided to open up the store right around the corner from the Ryman Auditorium where the Grand Ole Opry was held. The location also became the venue for the Midnite Jamboree—the official/unofficial afterparty of the Opry every Saturday night.

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