IN 1978, LORETTA LYNN AND CONWAY TWITTY STOOD AS COUNTRY MUSIC’S “WOMAN” AND “MAN” AT NUMBER ONE
It was 1978, a golden year for country music — and at the very top…
Read MoreIt was 1978, a golden year for country music — and at the very top…
Read MoreIt was 1982, and Conway Twitty — the man with the velvet voice and the…
Read MoreSometimes, all it takes is one song — one voice — to remind the world…
Read MoreBefore the rhinestones, before the smooth baritone and the heartbreak ballads that defined a generation,…
Read MoreThere are songs that whisper, and songs that wound — and then there’s “I Can’t…
Read MoreIt happened quietly, without fanfare — a night that began like so many others for…
Read MoreBy 1988, Loretta Lynn and Conway Twitty had already cemented their place as country music’s…
Read MoreIn 1973, at the height of his career, Conway Twitty did what only true artists…
Read MoreIt was a moment that could have gone either way — one simple question that…
Read MoreThe song was “The Clown,” one of Twitty’s most emotionally raw recordings. It told the…
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