Dolly-Parton
Dolly Parton escaped the struggles of her life early on thanks to her inventive and innovative imagination. Before she could read and write she began to compose the songs she wrote herself. Her first guitar was given to her when she turned eight. The singer began her singing career at an Knoxville Tenn station by the age of 11. That same year she made her first recording on Gold Band Records a tiny independent label. Even though she became a local star while in High School, she knew her ambitions were bigger. When she was graduating in 1964, she relocated to Nashville. Dumb Blonde (1967) and Something Fishy (1968) were her first two charting albums on Monument Records. Porter Wagoner began looking for women to sing for his syndicated television program at about the same as the time. Parton was hired in the year 1967 and signed by RCA Records by 1968, and became a member of the Grand Ole Opry. The show was cancelled by Wagoner, however, in 1974 due to her albums on her own like Joshua Coat Of Many Colors and Jolene beat out their collaborative albums. Parton, after the split of their collaboration with Wagoner, wrote"I Will Never Love You and made it to Number. First time, in 1974.







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