Dolly-Parton
Dolly Parton escaped the struggles that shaped her life at an early age thanks to her inventive and innovative imagination. Before she learned to read or write, Dolly Parton was creating her own music. In 8 years, she had her very first guitar. At age 11 when she was 11, she began singing at the Knoxville Tennessee radio station. The first album she recorded was during the same year Gold Band Records, a small label that was an independent. In high school she established herself in the community, but her ambition was bigger. After graduating from the high school in 1964, she moved straight to Nashville. Dumb Blonde (both 1967) and Something Fishy were among her first Monument Records chart-topping records. Porter Wagoner began looking for new female vocalists for his TV show syndicated by a network at about the same at the same time. Parton got her first gig in the year 1967, signed with RCA Records by 1968, and was a part of the Grand Ole Opry. The band split in 1974 when her solo singles like Joshua Coat of Many Colors & Jolene beat out the collaborations. Parton, after the split of their relationship with Wagoner, wrote I Will Always Love You and saw it climb to Number. The first time it made it to the top spot was in 1974.
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