Dolly-Parton
Dolly Parton escaped the struggles of her life early on by using her creative and imaginative imagination. Before she could write or read, she began to compose the songs she wrote herself. In the year she turned eight, she bought her first electric guitar and started singing at the Knoxville Tenn Radio Station. The that same the year that Gold Band Records was an independent label. While still in highschool, she made her name locally but dreamed about having a bigger stage. She moved to Nashville following her graduation in 1964. Dumb Blonde (1967) and Something Fishy (1968) were her two first charting albums on Monument Records. Porter Wagoner, a syndicated TV show host at the time, was in search for a girl to sing for his program. Parton became a member of Grand Ole Opry 1969 after signing in 1969 with RCA Records. In 1974, she resigned from Wagoner's show due to the commercial success of her solo songs like Joshua Coats from Many Colors or Jolene was outstripping their joint releases. Following their breakup, Parton wrote the song I Will Always Love You for Wagoner and it climbed to the top spot at No. First time, in 1974.







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