70 YEARS OLD. HUNDREDS OF RECORDINGS. ONE STEEL GUITAR. AND A STORY NASHVILLE WILL NEVER FORGET. Pete Finney wasn’t a household name. But behind the curtain, his steel guitar shaped the sound of country music for decades — backing Reba McEntire, the Chicks, Vince Gill, the Judds, and Patty Loveless, who he toured with for over 20 years. In 1991, while on the road with Reba, a plane crash took eight of her band members and two crew. Finney survived. He’d gotten on a different plane that night. He never made it about himself. He just kept showing up — from Doug Sahm’s band in Austin, to Michael Nesmith and the Monkees’ final tour before Nesmith’s death in 2021. He played with Beck, Shemekia Copeland, Jim Lauderdale. And on weeknights, you’d find him in tiny Nashville clubs, jamming with whoever was around. But Finney wasn’t only a player. He co-curated the Country Music Hall of Fame’s “Dylan, Cash, and the Nashville Cats” exhibition — built from his own deep research into a side of Nashville most people never knew existed. Pete Finney passed away on February 7, 2026. He was 70. And somehow, his story still feels unfinished.
Pete Finney: The Steel Guitar Player Nashville Will Never Forget Pete Finney was never the kind of musician who chased…