Dolly-Parton
Dolly Parton escaped the struggles that shaped her life at an early age by using her creative and imaginative imagination. Songs were written by her before she knew how to read and write. Once she had her first instrument at age of eight, she started performing at radio stations in Knoxville in Tennessee. The same year she released her first record on Gold Band Records a tiny independent label. She made a name on the local circuit while in high school, however she dreamed of a bigger stage. The day after she graduated in 1964 she moved to Nashville. 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 TV show syndicated by a network at about the exact at the same time. Parton signed with RCA Records and then joined the Grand Ole Opry. She took on the role in 1967. Parton left the show but in 1974, because her albums on her own like Joshua Coat Of Many Colors and Jolene outsold their collaborations. Parton recorded I Will Always Love You to Wagoner following their split. The song reached the top of the charts at. This was the first time a song hit the top spot.







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