Dolly-Parton
Dolly Parton escaped the struggles that shaped her life at an early age thanks to her inventive and innovative imagination. Before she could write or read, she began to compose her own music. In the year she turned 8years old, she purchased her first electric guitar and began to sing at a Knoxville Tenn Radio Station. The same year she released her first record on Gold Band Records a tiny independent label. She made a name for herself locally while still in high school, however she wanted to perform on a larger stage. On the 14th of March, 1964, after her high school graduation, she relocated to Nashville. Dumb Blonde (both 1967) and Something Fishy were among her first Monument Records chart-topping records. Porter Wagoner began looking for new female vocalists for his television show that was syndicated approximately the exact time. Parton joined RCA Records and then joined the Grand Ole Opry. She was hired in the year 1967. In 1974, she resigned from Wagoner's show due to the commercial success of her own songs such as Joshua Coats Of Many Colors or Jolene was way ahead of their joint release. Parton wrote I Will Always Love You to Wagoner following their split. It reached number one. The first time a single was able to reach No.







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