Dolly-Parton

Dolly Parton escaped the struggles in her early life thanks to her inventive and innovative imagination. Before she learned to write and read, she was making up the songs she wrote herself. The first guitar she received was gifted to her at the age of eighteen. The singer began her singing career at a Knoxville Tenn station by the age of eleven. That same year, she released her first album with Gold Band Records an independent small-scale label. She made a name for herself locally while still at high school, but wanted to perform on a larger stage. She moved to Nashville following her graduation in 1964. Dumb Blonde, Something Fishy and Dumb Blonde both charted on Monument Records in 1967. Porter Wagoner, a syndicated television show host at the time was searching for a female singer for his program. Parton accepted the role in the year 1966. She joined RCA Records in 1968, and then the Grand Ole Opry was founded in the year 1969. She quit Wagoner's act in 1974, when her solo hits such as Joshua Coat of Many Colors and Jolene oversold her collaborations. Following their breakup, Parton wrote the song I Will Always Love You for Wagoner and it debuted at Number. In 1974, Parton's song"I Will Always Love You" reached No.

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