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How US megastar Luke Combs helped Britain fall in love with country music

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US country star Luke Combs has spoken exclusively to BBC News about why country music is having its moment, how his British fans are different – and the thrill of bringing Nashville to London.

Country music is hitting new heights in the UK – it is now the fastest growing genre among British listeners, hitting three billion streams alone last year.

That has not gone unnoticed by the genre’s biggest artists – including US country star Luke Combs, who boasts more than 25 million monthly listeners on Spotify and 7.5 million Instagram followers.

For Combs, the growing interest comes down to country’s universal appeal. “I just think country music is a place that everybody can go and enjoy,” the Grammy-nominated singer, 35, says.

“When I started out, there weren’t a lot of acts coming over to the UK and doing club or arena tours and putting in the work. So that was what we always tried to do. It was like, if we invest our time and our energy into coming over here, the fans over here will appreciate that.”

Combs, known for hits like When It Rains It Pours, has travelled to London as country music’s famous Grand Ole Opry relocates from Nashville, Tennessee, for a special one off-performance at the Royal Albert Hall on Friday.

The Opry is the world’s longest-running live radio show and is known the world over as the home of country music.

Stars including Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley and Dolly Parton have all performed on its iconic stage. The show is now streamed across the world six nights a week, but Friday’s historic 100th anniversary performance in London will be the first time the Opry has left the United States.

Combs says it will be something special.

“There’s a lot of hype going on. They’ve never done anything like this before. Playing at the Royal Albert Hall is a bucket list for me, and to play the Opry at the Royal Albert Hall will be insane. It’s like two epic things combined into one.”

An Opry performance consists of each artist performing up to four songs, along with some surprise collaborations. The London show, which also includes US country artists Darius Rucker and Marty Stuart, and British group Mumford and Sons, sold out in minutes when it was announced in May.

According to Combs, the UK was the right choice. “This is my sixth or seventh time in the UK and the fans here love country music. The appetite for it is here. When we started coming over here… it was just so cool to see there were this many country fans.”

He says streaming has been instrumental in introducing more people to the genre – and there is a big difference between his US fans and those based in Britain.

“Country music has become available to more people compared to when it was just terrestrial radio. In the States, we have singles that we promote to radio, which become the songs that get people drawn in.

“But when you come the UK, everyone has consumed the whole album already. It’s really awesome to come here and have the fans ask for songs that maybe wouldn’t even make the set list in the States.”

He adds: “I would say the UK fans are a very listening crowd, which I think is neat. In the States, our shows are very loud, a bit of a melee.

“The energy over here is great but everyone’s listening to the music. They’re focused on what you’re saying and what the lyrics are.”

Award-winning US singer-songwriter Ashley McBryde will join Combs on the bill for Friday’s historic show. She says other artists making the move into the genre has also helped it grow.

“There have been a lot of things that have broadened the fan base, like Post Malone and people like Jelly Roll. Just exposing us to different ears has been really helpful.”

She adds: “There’s not another city on the planet that I would name before London to do the Grand Ole Opry.”

Combs says playing for the first time on the Grand Ole Opry stage at the age of 26 in 2016 was something he will never forget.

“You make your Opry debut and your mom, dad and grandma come in town and it’s this linchpin of your whole career,” he says.

“You remember these certain moments, and your Opry debut is one of these moments that puts a feather in your cap and you just remember it forever.”

According to Opry boss Colin Reed, London’s one-off show, if successful, could lead to others in the future.

Combs adds: “I think the Royal Albert Hall is going to be a perfect venue to host this show, and I know that everybody at the Opry has been really excited about it for a long time, myself included.

“They’ve never done anything like this before but I think they’ve chosen the right place.”

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Life-saving stem cell centre welcomes first donors

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40 minutes ago

Rob Sissons, East Midlands health correspondent

imageBBC

The UK’s first stem cell collection centre strictly dedicated to transplants has started welcoming donors.

The Anthony Nolan Cell Collection Centre, based at Nottingham’s Queen’s Medical Centre (QMC), will help more people across the UK donate potentially life-saving cells to patients with blood cancers and disorders.

The Anthony Nolan charity said the centre would create 1,300 new donation slots a year, helping to tackle a “longstanding global shortage of cell collection facilities”.

Jordan, from London, said he was “proud” to be one of the first to donate. “I am really happy because today I could save someone’s life,” he added.

The centre will be run by the Anthony Nolan charity, in partnership with the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Nottingham Clinical Research Facility.

Jordan was called by the charity to donate stem cells after analysis of a saliva sample he gave nine years ago, when he signed up to the stem cell register at a freshers’ fair at the University of Exeter, proved to be a good match to a stranger.

“It is such an easy thing to do to help someone else,” he said.

“I’m not the biggest fan of needles, but I’m happy to do anything if it helps another person.”

‘Special’ feeling

Anthony Nolan has more than 900,000 people on its own register of potential donors.

It said a “longstanding global shortage of cell collection facilities” meant some patients did not receive a transplant at the best time.

Growing demand for cell-based treatments has put donation facilities at some NHS and private hospitals under more pressure than ever, it added.

According to its own data, in 2022-23, only a fifth of donors on the UK registry were able to donate on the date requested by the patient’s medical team due to capacity issues.

Not having a transplant at the right time can have an irreversible impact on a patient’s mental and physical health, said Anthony Nolan, and sometimes leave them in a life-threatening condition.

The charity said the chance of being matched from its UK-wide register was one in 800, in the first five years of being on the register.

Jordan said it felt “special” to help a stranger, for whom a stem cell transplant might be their only hope of staying alive.

“I like to think if something were to happen to me, then someone would be willing to do the same,” he added.

What is a stem cell transplant?

A stem cell or bone marrow transplant is a life-saving treatment for thousands of patients with blood cancers and disorders. It replaces damaged blood cells with healthy ones.

Stem cells are special cells produced by bone marrow, a spongy tissue found in the centre of some bones, that can turn into different types of blood cells.

Donation is simple, Nicola Alderson – chief operating officer at Anthony Nolan – said.

“You are put on to a machine that has a needle in both arms,” she said. “The blood goes through the machine which takes out the stem cells and puts the rest of the blood back through.”

The process usually takes about five hours. Once the cells are collected from the bloodstream, they are typically transplanted into the recipient within 72 hours.

Anthony Nolan said any contact between a donor and patient depended on privacy regulations of the patient’s country, and was led by the patient.

UK rules allow direct contact from two years since the last transplant, although some overseas registries may not allow contact until five years post-donation.

imageNicola Alderson stood in the Anthony Nolan Cell Collection Centre at Nottingham's Queens' Medical Centre. She is the charity's Chief Operating Officer.  Behind her two donors are giving stem cells to be sent off for transplant to unrelated recipients

Anthony Nolan co-ordinates transplants for the NHS, collecting and delivering cells to hospitals across the UK and sending cells abroad. It is involved in more than 1,000 UK transplants between donors and unrelated recipients each year and sends cells abroad to another 300 patients.

Ms Alderson said prior to the new centre, the charity had struggled to get stem cells collected “at the time the clinical community need us to”.

“It is only one in five times where we have been able to get collections to donors on the day doctors have asked for them,” she added.

She said when recipients saw a bag of stem cells, “it is an incredible moment”.

“Ultimately, that small bag can save someone’s life. It is a bag of magic,” she added.

“We will make sure [donors] have the best experience at our new centre.”

The centre has been part-funded by Omaze, which partnered with Anthony Nolan and raised £3.7m through a house prize draw in June.

It is estimated the money will help fund the centre’s work for 18 months.

Kathryn Fairbrother, director of clinical operations for research and innovation at Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust – which runs the QMC – added: “There are opportunities for Anthony Nolan and for ourselves to do research that we wouldn’t have done before.”

One of the research projects planned involves using stem cells to treat liver disease.

imageA close up image of the bag stem cells collected from Jordan's blood over more than four hours

Stem cell transplant recipients, like Raj, will benefit from the new centre.

The 32-year-old, a University of Liverpool student, received a stem cell transplant in Leicester in 2020 after being diagnosed with a rare blood cancer called myelofibrosis.

His cells came from an anonymous donor in Germany.

“I sent him an anonymous thank you letter but I haven’t tried to get in direct contact yet. I’d like to,” Raj said.

“It took me about a year and a half to two years to recover. It took quite a long time, and I was off sick from work for about a year.”

Raj added: “The Nottingham development is a brilliant set-up.

“Being able to be more efficient collecting and delivering stem cells to patients who don’t have time to wait is fantastic.”

imageRaj a 32 year old mature student at the University of Liverpool is working out in the gym. He focusses on fitness after having a successful stem cell transplant five years ago to treat his blood cancer. He is lying on the floor lifting some heavy weights

Raj would like to see more people sign up to become potential donors at Anthony Nolan.

They need to be aged 16 to 30 years old to register, and can stay on as a potential donor until the age of 61.

Potential donors send off a cheek swab sample and wait to see if they are a match for anyone.

“We need more. It is the ultimate act of kindness,” Raj added.

imageSupplied Raj having his life saving transplant at the Leicester Royal Infirmary in 2020 You can see a bag of stem cells being infused into his blood stream. Raj is lying on his hospital bed at the Leicester Royal InfirmarySupplied
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The Papers: ‘Show us your (digital) papers’ and ‘Blair ready to run Gaza’

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Former FBI director Comey indicted on two counts

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Former FBI director and prominent President Donald Trump critic James Comey has been indicted on two counts, US media reported, as the US president escalated a campaign of legal retribution against political foes.

The charges – making false statements and obstruction of justice – came days after Mr Trump took the highly unusual step of publicly urging Attorney General Pam Bondi to take action against Mr Comey and others.

“No one is above the law,” Ms Bondi said on X shortly after news of the indictment broke but without naming Mr Comey.

“Today’s indictment reflects this Department of Justice’s commitment to holding those who abuse positions of power accountable for misleading the American people. We will follow the facts in this case,” she added.

In a post on X, Attorney General Pam Bondi said ‘no one is above the law’

Mr Trump hailed the criminal indictment of Mr Comey, proclaiming “JUSTICE IN AMERICA!”

“One of the worst human beings this Country has ever been exposed to is James Comey, the former Corrupt Head of the FBI,” Mr Trump said on his Truth Social platform.

“He has been so bad for our Country, for so long, and is now at the beginning of being held responsible for his crimes against our Nation,” he added.

In a statement, Mr Comey said he was innocent and that he had faith in the US judicial system.

“My heart is broken for the Department of Justice, but I have great confidence in the federal judicial system, and I am innocent, so let’s have a trial and keep the faith,” Mr Comey said in a video message posted to Instagram.

Mr Comey is expected to surrender this morning, a CNN reporter said on X.

The indictment of Mr Comey was brought by a federal prosecutor appointed by Mr Trump just days ago, Lindsey Halligan, a former personal lawyer to the president who has no experience as a prosecutor.

Ms Halligan was appointed to the high-profile post of US attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia following the resignation last week of the previous US attorney, Erik Siebert.

Mr Siebert stepped down under pressure from Mr Trump after reportedly telling Justice Department leaders there was insufficient evidence to charge Mr Comey or New York Attorney General Letitia James.

US President Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr are pictured in the Roosevelt Room of the White House
US President Donald Trump hailed the indictment of James Comey

Ms James, like several other Democratic officials, has been accused by a close Mr Trump ally, Federal Housing Finance Agency director Bill Pulte, of falsifying documents on mortgage applications.

Mr Trump fired Mr Comey in 2017 amid a probe into whether any members of the Trump campaign had colluded with Russia to sway the 2016 presidential vote.

In August, FBI agents raided the home and office of another Mr Trump critic – his former national security advisor John Bolton – in an investigation officials said was linked to classified documents.

Mr Bolton angered Mr Trump with the publication of a highly critical book, “The Room Where it Happened,” and appears frequently on television news shows and in print to condemn the man he has called “unfit to be president.”

Since taking office in January, Mr Trump, the first convicted felon to serve in the White House, has taken a number of punitive measures against his perceived enemies and political opponents.

He has stripped former officials of their security clearances, targeted law firms involved in past cases against him and pulled federal funding from universities.

Mr Trump was the target of several investigations after leaving the White House.

The FBI raided his Mar-a-Lago home in 2022 as part of a probe into mishandling of classified documents and Mr Trump was charged by Special Counsel Jack Smith with plotting to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

Neither case came to trial, and Mr Smith – in line with a Justice Department policy of not prosecuting a sitting president – dropped them both after Mr Trump won the November 2024 presidential election.

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