VERN GOSDIN’S THIRD WIFE LEFT HIM IN 1989 — AND HE TURNED IT INTO 10 HIT SONGS. TAMMY WYNETTE SAID HE WAS “THE ONLY SINGER WHO CAN HOLD A CANDLE TO GEORGE JONES.” NASHVILLE STILL FORGOT HIM. When Vern Gosdin’s third marriage collapsed in 1989, he didn’t disappear. He went to the studio and bled. “Out of everything bad, something good will come if you look hard enough,” he said. “And I got 10 hits out of my last divorce.” He wasn’t joking. “Set ‘Em Up Joe” and “I’m Still Crazy” both hit No. 1. “Chiseled in Stone” won CMA Song of the Year. Jack Ingram called it “as sad a country song as ‘He Stopped Loving Her Today.'” Tammy Wynette once said Gosdin was “the only other singer who can hold a candle to George Jones.” But most people don’t know he’d already quit music once — walked away in the ’70s, moved to Georgia, opened a glass company. He kept a guitar in his truck. Nashville wasn’t that far away. He came back and turned his worst years into country music’s most honest recordings. Gosdin died in 2009 at 74. Never made the Country Music Hall of Fame. The voice that even legends couldn’t stop praising faded without the honor it deserved. So what happens when a man turns his worst heartbreak into his best music — and why did Nashville forget the only voice Tammy Wynette compared to George Jones?

Vern Gosdin Turned Heartbreak Into Hits — But Nashville Still Let Him Fade Away In 1989, Vern Gosdin watched his…

THEY TOLD HIM TO HIDE WHERE HE CAME FROM — SO HE SANG IT OUT LOUD AND MADE 10,000 WHITE STRANGERS CRY. Charley Pride grew up the fourth of eleven children on a cotton farm in Sledge, Mississippi — a sharecropper’s son who picked cotton before he could read. His father tuned an old Philco radio to the Grand Ole Opry every Saturday night, never knowing the boy humming along on the porch would one day stand on that same stage. When Charley first walked into the spotlight at a major concert, the crowd fell completely silent. Nobody told them the voice they loved on the radio belonged to a Black man from the Delta. He didn’t apologize. He didn’t explain. He just smiled and said he was wearing a “permanent tan” — and the room exploded. Years later, he recorded a song about that cotton farm, that dusty town, those Saturday night trips where a kid could only afford ice cream covered in road dust. The song climbed to the top of the charts in two countries — not because it was polished, but because every word sounded like it was pulled straight from the red dirt of his childhood. On stage, Charley never rushed it. He closed his eyes on the opening lines, and his voice dropped low — like a man whispering a prayer to a place he escaped but never stopped loving. It became the song that Father’s Day playlists and Mississippi homecoming events couldn’t live without — quietly reminding the world that the most powerful country music doesn’t come from Nashville studios. It comes from the fields. Do you know which Charley Pride song this was?

Charley Pride Sang His Story Out Loud—and the Crowd Never Forgot It There are some country songs that sound polished,…

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