Thursday, 21 August 2025

Kenny Rogers born 21 August 1938

Kenny Rogers ( August 21, 1938 – March 20, 2020) was an American singer and songwriter. He was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2013. Rogers was particularly popular with country audiences, but also charted more than 120 hit singles across various genres, topping the country and pop album charts for more than 200 individual weeks in the United States alone. He sold more than 100 million records worldwide during his lifetime, making him one of the best-selling music artists of all time.  His fame and career spanned multiple genres - jazz, folk, pop, rock, and country. He remade his career and was one of the most successful cross-over artists of all time. 

Kenneth Donald Rogers grew up poor in a Houston housing project. In 1956, while in high school, he started his first band, the Scholars. He performed “That Crazy Feeling,” his first solo single (1957), on the hugely popular music television show American Bandstand. His talent was recognized immediately, and he was signed to a small local label, Carlton Records, in 1958. In 1966 he joined the New Christy Minstrels, a folk group started by Randy Sparks in 1961. After a year Rogers and a few other Minstrels left to form their own ensemble, the First Edition. Rogers found his way into the spotlight, and the band was soon referred to as Kenny Rogers and the First Edition. 

The band played a mix of country, pop, and psychedelic music and had a few hits, including “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In),” “Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town” (written by Mel Tillis), “Reuben James,” and “Something’s Burning.” The band also hosted Rollin’ on the River (1971–73), a variety show that took place on a Mississippi riverboat set and featured guests such as musicians Kris Kristofferson, B.B. King, and Al Green; actor Jason Robards; and comedians Cheech and Chong. 

                                   

In the late 1970s Rogers hit his stride. Going solo again, he had his first major hit with the ballad “Lucille,” which won him a Grammy Award for best male country vocal performance (1977). “Lucille” was named song of the year and single of the year by the Academy of Country Music and single of the year by the Country Music Association and also made its way up the pop music charts, proving that Rogers had enormous crossover appeal. In 1978 he released his album The Gambler, the title song of which won him another Grammy for best male country vocal performance. As many of his number-one hits did in the 1970s, “The Gambler” appeared on the pop music charts as well as on the country music charts. “The Gambler” told such a vivid story that it was turned into a made-for-television movie (1980) starring Rogers, who played an expert gambler teaching a young protégé the tricks of the trade. The movie led to four sequels, all of which featured Rogers. 

He collaborated with a number of other country singers, notably Dottie West on “Every Time Two Fools Collide” (1978), “All I Ever Need Is You” (1979), and “What Are We Doin’ in Love” (1981) and Dolly Parton on the number-one crossover hit “Islands in the Stream” (1983). He teamed up with Parton again for a duet of the title song on his 2013 album You Can’t Make Old Friends. He also recorded songs with pop musicians Kim Carnes (“Don’t Fall in Love with a Dreamer” [1980]) and Sheena Easton (“We’ve Got Tonight” [1983]). His collaboration with Ronnie Milsap on “Make No Mistake, She’s Mine” (1987) topped the country music charts. 

Rogers’s string of hits tapered off in the 1990s, though he continued to record and release albums regularly, almost yearly. In 1998 he started his own record label, Dreamcatcher Entertainment, which released his albums of the next decade. In 2011 Rogers branched out and recorded a gospel album, The Love of God (rereleased in 2012 as Amazing Grace). 

In addition to writing and performing a vast collection of music over several decades, in 1978 Rogers coauthored a self-help book, Making It with Music: Kenny Rogers’ Guide to the Music Business, with Len Epand. He also published an autobiography, Luck or Something Like It—A Memoir (2012). Among his numerous awards, Rogers received the 2013 Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award from the Country Music Association, and he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame the same year. Rogers embarked on a farewell world tour in 2016 that he intended to conclude with a final concert in August 2018, but poor health forced him to cut the tour short in April of that year. 

Rogers's seven-decade career wound down in 2017, as he encountered health problems that included a diagnosis of bladder cancer. On March 20, 2020, Rogers died March 20, 2020, at the age of 81, while under hospice care at his home in Sandy Springs, Georgia. He was interred in Oakland Cemetery in Atlanta. 

(Edited from Britannica & Wikipedia) 

 

1 comment:

boppinbob said...

For “ Kenny Rogers – The Gambler (1978 United Artists)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/dBFH349f

1. The Gambler 3:32
2. I Wish That I Could Hurt That Way Again 2:55
3. King Of Oak Street 4:55
4. Making Music For Money 3:10
5. The Hoodooin' Of Miss Fannie Deberry 4:44
6. She Believes In Me 4:11
7. Tennessee Bottle 3:59
8. Sleep Tight, Goodnight Man 2:52
9. A Little More Like Me (The Crucifixion) 2:47
10. San Francisco Mabel Joy 3:36
11. Morgana Jones 3:03


For “Kenny Rogers – The Best of Kenny Rogers (2005 EMI Gold)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/dBFH349f

1-1 Lucille
1-2 Coward of the County
1-3 We’ve Got Tonight Feat. Sheena Easton
1-4 All I Ever Need is You Feat. Dottie West
1-5 Green Green Grass of Home
1-6 Do Not Fall in Love with a Dreamer Feat. Kim Carnes
1-7 Sweet Music Man
1-8 We Love Each Other Feat. Dottie West
1-9 The Son of Hickory Holler’s Tramp
1-10 Every Time Two Fools Collide Feat. Dottie West
1-11 All My Life
1-12 I Wasn’t Man Enough
1-13 My World Begins and Ends with You
1-14 You Are So Beautiful
1-15 Love the World Away
1-16 Together Again Feat. Dottie West
1-17 Let it Be Me Feat. Dottie West
1-18 You Were a Good Friend
1-19 Reuben Times
1-20 Twentieth Century Fool
2-1 Ruby, Don’t Take Your Love to Town
2-2 She Believes in Me
2-3 Desperado
2-4 Lay Down Beside Me
2-5 Blaze of Glory
2-6 Lady
2-7 You Decorated My Life
2-8 Love Will Turn You Around
2-9 I Don’t Need You
2-10 While the Feeling’s Good
2-11 Just the Way You Are Feat. Dottie West
2-12 A Love Song
2-13 Scarlet Fever
2-14 Long Arm of the Law
2-15 Share Your Love With Me
2-16 Love or Something Like It
2-17 Through the Years
2-18 Puttin’ in Overtime at Home
2-19 Laura (What’s He Got That I Ain’t Got)
2-20 You’ve Lost That Lovin’ Feelin’ Feat. Dottie West

For “Kenny Rogers & the First Edition (2020 Good Time)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/KLSZACqk

1. Me And Bobby Mcgee 02:35
2. Reuben James 02:42
3. Tulsa Turnaround 03:27
4. Always Leaving, Always Gone 02:23
5. A Poem For My Little Lady 02:36
6. Heed The Call 03:17
7. Elvira 02:34
8. Love Woman 02:45
9. We All Got To Help Each Other 02:21
10. Shine On Ruby Mountain 02:55
11. Good Lady Of Toronto 03:27
12. Sunshine 03:05
13. The King Of Oak Street 04:10
14. Something's Burning 03:50
15. Tell It All, Brother 03:21
16. Ruby, Don't Take Your Love To Town 02:56
17. Lay It Down 04:18
18. Molly 03:03
19. Camptown Ladies 02:02
20. I Was The Loser 03:05
21. Good Time Liberator 02:19
22. Where Does Rosie Go 02:14
23. For The Good Times 03:23
24. All God's Lonely Children 03:17

Available on Amazon as CD & on Bandcamp as mp3 album. (No information given if tracks are originals or later re-recordings)