pplpod
His family waited until Johnny Cash was out of town, snuck onto the grounds of his Old Hickory Lake home, and scattered Faron Young's ashes across the lawn. It's a fittingly strange ending for the Young Sheriff, the honky-tonk hitmaker who helped build country music's golden era — and then watched the industry shut its doors on him. This deep dive traces Young's string of Capitol Records hits, the Willie Nelson-penned 1961 smash Hello Walls that made him a crossover sensation, and the brutal 1991 format shift that turned traditional honky-tonk stars into relics overnight. It's a story about the dual edges of legacy: the polished art the public hears, and the messier reality behind closed doors. • Recorded the first hit version of Don Gibson's classic Sweet Dreams • Turned a young Willie Nelson's Hello Walls into a million-selling, gold-disc crossover hit • Was pushed off radio playlists when the Garth Brooks era remade country music in 1991 • His ashes were secretly scattered on Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash's lawn
300 episoder
Kommentarer
0Vær den første til at kommentere
Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af pplpod-fællesskabet!