Dolly-Parton

Dolly Parton escaped the struggles in her early life thanks to her inventive and innovative imagination. The songs she wrote were composed before she could write and read. The first guitar she received was gifted by her mother when she was eighteen. She began singing in an Knoxville Tenn station by the age of eleven. The first album she recorded was in the same calendar year on Gold Band Records, a tiny independent label. While she was popular in the local scene while she was at the high school years, her goals were bigger. She relocated to Nashville the day after graduating in 1964. The first charting record she had on Monument Records included Dumb Blonde and Something Fishy both in 1967. Porter Wagoner had been looking for female performers to perform on his show syndicated by him at this point. Parton was hired in 1966, she joined RCA Records in 1968, and then the Grand Ole Opry was founded in 1969. The year 1974 was the first that she opted to walk away from Wagoner's band because the popularity of her individual records such as Joshua Coat, Many Colors and Jolene had outstripped their collaborative efforts. Parton composed "I will Always Be Loving You" to Wagoner shortly after they separated. The song was ranked No. The first time in 1974.

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