Dolly-Parton

Dolly Parton escaped the struggles of her life early on by using her creative and imaginative imagination. Prior to learning how to write and read Dolly Parton had already begun to compose her own music. Her first guitar was given by her mother when she was eight. She started singing at the Knoxville Tenn station by the age of 11. Her first album was recorded in the same calendar year with Gold Band Records, a tiny independent label. In high school She made her mark in the local community, yet she yearned for having a bigger stage. She relocated to Nashville the day after graduating in 1964. Dumb Blonde (both 1967) and Something Fishy were among her first Monument Records chart-topping records. Porter Wagoner began looking for female singers to join his television show that was syndicated around the exact as the time. Parton accepted the job in 1967 signed with RCA Records in 1968 and became a member of the Grand Ole Opry in 1969. The year 1974 was the first when she made the decision to quit Wagoner's show because the success of her own solo records such as Joshua Coat, Many Colors and Jolene was outstripping their joint efforts. Parton following the breakup of their collaboration with Wagoner she wrote the song"I'll Always Be Loved" by You and saw it climb to Number. It was the first time that a song reached No.

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