Dolly-Parton

Dolly Parton escaped the struggles in her early life by using her creative and imaginative imagination. The songs she wrote were composed before she was able to write or read. Her first guitar was given to her at the age of eighteen. She began singing in an Knoxville Tenn station by the age of 11. In the same year, she recorded her first album with Gold Band Records an independent small label. She made a name in the local scene while at high school, but wanted to perform on a larger stage. When she was graduating in 1964, she relocated to Nashville. Dumb Blonde (both 1967) as well as Something Fishy were among her first Monument Records chart-topping records. Porter Wagoner's syndicated TV show was in need of a new singer at around this time. Parton was a part of the Grand Ole Opry 1969 after contracting in 1969 with RCA Records. In 1974, she resigned from Wagoner's Show because the success of her own songs such as Joshua Coats from Many Colors or Jolene was way ahead of their joint release. Parton recorded "I Will Always Love You" for Wagoner shortly after they separated. It hit No. The first time a song reached No.

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