Marin Independent Journal

‘Songteller’ relates the life of an icon through her compositio­ns

- By Edith G. Tolchin

While everyone knows Dolly Parton for her golden voice—she’s been famous across seven decades—not everyone knows she favors songwritin­g to singing.

“I have often said that my songs are my children and that I expect them to support me when I’m old. Well, I am old, and they are,” writes Parton in her new book.

In the retrospect­ive, “Dolly Parton, Songteller: My Life in Lyrics,” the book features a page of lyrics with a companion page of story or photos about those lyrics. Also, while most chapters are written in the first person by Parton, the occasional chapter is by her co-writer, Robert K. Oermann. The reader should note that the lyrics begin in chronologi­cal order but later jump around between the 1970s and recent songs. In addition to relating Parton’s compelling life story, the book features many photos as well as 175 songs.

Though she began writing songs at age 5, Parton got her start as a performer at 10 singing on a radio show in Knoxville, Tennessee, and had her first recording at 13.

Parton was the first family member to graduate from high school, in 1964, and the next day she got on a bus to Nashville, Tennessee, with just her songs and some clothes. Her first songwritin­g royalty check was for $1.02 from Tree Publishing Co. in Nashville. She married Carl Dean in 1966, a man she met the day after she arrived in Nashville.

In 1969, Parton started singing on “The Porter Wagoner Show,” which she did for five years, and she was invited to join the Grand Ole Opry. She also toured with Wagoner’s group. Toward the end of her time with Wagoner, there was conflict when she felt he tried to control her career. Parton felt she needed to control her own destiny, and that ultimately led to them parting ways.

Throughout her songwritin­g career, Parton has never shied from controvers­ial themes, including suicide, war, drugs, transgende­r issues and strong women. “Whatever I write is just what comes out of me, and I refuse to be judged,” she writes.

The book is filled with interestin­g facts about the iconic Parton.

Concerning her megahit, “I Will Always Love You,” Parton sang this song to Burt Reynolds in the film “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas” in 1982. She had refused to give up half of her rights to this song to Elvis Presley, who’d wanted exclusivit­y on it. She was thrilled when Whitney Houston had a blockbuste­r hit with it in the 1992 movie “The Bodyguard.”

Though it’s not necessary to prove how prolific she is, there’s this note:

“Dolly Parton has written roughly three thousand songs. Approximat­ely 450 of them have been recorded, though not always by Dolly,” writes Oermann. In 1999, she was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame.

Because her father was illiterate, Parton started the Imaginatio­n Library before he died in 2000, which is said to have given away more than 150 million books to children.

With the new millennium, Parton earned numerous awards, including the Kennedy Center honor in 2006 and the Grammy Lifetime Achievemen­t Award in 2011.

She and husband, Carl, have been married for nearly 55 years. Her secret: “I think if you can be friends, that’s a big, big part of it . ... Being great friends is the secret of happiness.”

Last spring, when COVID-19 hit, Dolly donated $1 million to vaccine research.

While fans will be thrilled, some readers may feel the book could have easily ended at 300 pages instead of 380. But overall, “Songteller” is greater in volume, beauty and message than a typical coffee table book.

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