Dolly-Parton
Dolly Parton escaped the struggles that shaped her life at an early age by using her creative and imaginative imagination. Songs were written by her before she knew how to write or read. In the year she turned 8, she got her first electric guitar and began to sing at an Knoxville Tenn Radio Station. She recorded her first album within the same calendar year on Gold Band Records, a small label that was an independent. Even though she was still at school, she already made a name of herself on the local scene. Her goal was to to make music on a greater size. She relocated to Nashville shortly after her graduation in 1964. Dumb Blonde (both 1967) and Something Fishy were among her first Monument Records chart-topping records. Around this time, Porter Wagoner was looking for the next girl to perform on the show he had syndicated to television. Parton was hired in 1967 and signed by RCA Records by 1968, she joined the Grand Ole Opry. Then, in 1974, she left The Wagoner's Show due to the popularity of her solo songs like Joshua Coats Of Many Colors or Jolene was surpassing their joint albums. Parton composed I Will Always love You to Wagoner after their breakup. It reached number one. #1 for the first time since 1974.







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