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 episodes
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