Dolly-Parton

Dolly Parton escaped the struggles in her early life by using her creative and imaginative imagination. Even before learning to read or write she wrote her own music. When she got her first guitar at the age of eight, she started to play at radio stations in Knoxville, Tennessee. The same year, she recorded her debut album on Gold Band Records an independent small label. While in high school, she was able to establish herself within the community, but her ambition was bigger. She moved to Nashville shortly after her graduation in 1964. Dumb Blonde, Something Fishy and Dumb Blonde both charted on Monument Records in 1967. Porter Wagoner, a syndicated TV show host in the late '60s, was looking for a singer for his program. Parton began her career in the year 1967 and signed by RCA Records by 1968, she joined the Grand Ole Opry. She left Wagoner's show, however, in 1974 due to her albums on her own like Joshua Coat Of Many Colors and Jolene exceeded the sales of their joint albums. Following their breakup, Parton wrote the song I Will Always Love You for Wagoner and it debuted at the top spot at No. 1 for the first time since 1974.

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