Enlarge this imageSinger and songwriter Ronnie Milsap is actually a new inductee into the Place New music Corridor Of Fame in Nashville, Tenn.Rick Diamond/Getty Imageshide captiontoggle captionRick Diamond/Getty ImagesSinger and songwriter Ronnie Milsap can be a new inductee into the Place Songs Hall Of Fame in Nashville, Tenn.Rick Diamond/Getty ImagesA new course of musicians was inducted Joe Carter Jersey for the State Tunes Corridor of Fame Sunday night time, with blind singer and pianist Ronnie Milsap main the team. Milsap’s vocation ranged from actively playing both equally early R&B and on the Elvis hit “Kentucky Rain” in the 1960s into the heights of solo succe s in the ’70s and ’80s. One of his biggest hits was 1980’s “Smoky Mountain Rain.” “Smoky Mountain Rain” was part of a string of cro sover hits for Milsap, as “(There’s) No Gettin’ Over Me” and “Any Day Now” were followed by 1983’s “Stranger in My House.” All of them had strong showings on the country, pop and adult contemporary Vladimir Guerrero Jr. Jersey charts. From Nashville, Blake Farmer of member station WPLN reports:”Ronnie Milsap says a fellow blind piano player the great Ray Charles gave him the boost of confidence to make it as a profe sional musician. Outside Nashville’s Country Audio Hall of Fame, the 71-year-old Milsap addre sed reporters. ” ‘It’s a long time coming,’ Milsap said. ‘And I must say it’s a wonderful thing.’ “Also inducted were bluegra s vocalist Mac Wiseman, who started off playing with Bill Monroe. He later Devon Travis Jersey started the Region Audio A sociation. “The late songwriter Hank Cochran rounded out the course. He penned hits for Patsy Cline, Eddy Arnold and George Straight. His widow accepted the Hall of Fame medallion on his behalf.” After Cochran’s death in 2010, place singer Jamey Johnson released an album called Living for a Song: A Tribute to Hank Cochran, featuring some of the wistful cla sics he wrote for other stars. Track No. 1 was “Make the World Go Away.”