NASHVILLE SAID A BLACK MAN COULDN’T SING COUNTRY MUSIC. CHARLEY PRIDE BECAME ITS BIGGEST STAR. In 1965, country radio wouldn’t play a Black artist. Period. RCA Records hid his face on album covers. Sent him to small towns first — let the music hit before the photo did. They were afraid of what America would do. Charley Pride walked onto those stages anyway. No anger. No protest signs. Just a guitar, a voice, and 36 number-one hits that nobody could argue with. He played the Grand Ole Opry while some venues still had segregated seating. The audience didn’t care. They stood up anyway. Jim Reeves’ widow once told him: “Charley, you’re the only Black man who could have done this.” He didn’t do it by fighting the system loudly. He did it by being so undeniably good that the system had nothing left to say. By 1971, he was the best-selling RCA artist in the world — behind only Elvis. Behind. Only. Elvis. The CMA gave him Entertainer of the Year. Then they gave him a lifetime achievement award four decades later — because one trophy wasn’t enough. Some men break down walls. Charley Pride walked through them like they were never there. The full list of records he broke — and the one award that almost didn’t happen — is a story most country fans have never heard.
Nashville Said Charley Pride Couldn’t Sing Country Music. Charley Pride Made Nashville Listen. In the mid-1960s, country music had a…