HE RECORDED HIS LAST #1 ON SEPTEMBER 17, 1983 — NASHVILLE. NOBODY KNEW IT THEN. BUT AFTER THAT NIGHT, NO BLACK MAN WOULD HIT #1 ON THE COUNTRY CHARTS AGAIN FOR 25 YEARS. Nobody in the studio that day thought they were closing a door. It was Charley Pride’s 29th #1 — just another hit in a career built on beating odds nobody had ever beaten before. He had spent 17 years being the only Black man in most rooms he walked into, carrying country music’s biggest secret in the 1960s and then its loudest truth in the 1970s. But Nashville was changing. Country radio was moving toward crossover pop, and RCA was quietly turning its attention to newer, younger faces. The song peaked at #1 on September 17, 1983 — and then the door he had opened with a single song in Detroit in 1967 quietly swung shut behind him. It would take until 2008 for another Black artist to climb back to the top. What does it mean when a door you pried open with your own voice — closes the moment you step away?
When Charley Pride’s Last No. 1 Marked the End of an Era in Country Music On September 17, 1983, Charley…