BIOGRAPHY
KENNY ROGERS
42 Ultimate Hits
By now, Kenny Rogers has become such an icon that it’s easy to
forget how he got there. The songs on 42 Ultimate Hits, bringing together
the top
songs of his career from the late 60s First Edition years up to his
current return to the charts, offers a crash-course reminder that Rogers
is a star
because he excels at his craft.
Just
look at the titles: “Lady,” “Ruby Don’t
Take Your Love to Town,” “The Gambler,” “She
Believes in Me,” “Islands
in the Stream,” “We’ve Got Tonight,” “Buy
Me A Rose.” Not a ditty among them. Then listen. The sweetly
raspy vocals are instantly identifiable as Kenny Rogers - he
sounds like
nobody else.
More importantly, he inhabits each song, making it vivid and
tangible. For more
than five decades, Rogers has delivered memorable songs, drawing
fans among rock, pop, soul and country audiences. .
When
one singer makes such an indelible mark, that’s not mere
luck or even simple talent. “I really, really love what
I’m doing,” Rogers
says. “People survive longer if they love what they’re
doing. Because you just don’t quit.”
Houston-born
Rogers formed his first band while in high school in 1956
and never quit making music from that point on. The
rockabilly group,
called
The Scholars, got a record deal and released two singles
that had local success, and led to a performance spot on
American
Bandstand.
Soon
afterward, Rogers
joined the Bobby Doyle Trio, playing stand-up bass in the
jazz band, and appearing
on their album. In 1966 he became a member of the New Christy
Minstrels, the popular folk group, leaving a year later to
form The First
Edition with other
members of the troupe.
The
spotlight started focusing on Rogers when the group got
their first hit, “I
Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was
In).” Within
a year the band was called Kenny Rogers and The First Edition,
and his distinctive voice led the group to both pop and
country chart success with “Ruby,
Don’t Take Your Love To Town,” written by Mel
Tillis. The double-genre success struck again with “Reuben
James,” and the group
landed their own TV variety show.
In
1974, Kenny Rogers and the First Edition disbanded, leaving
Rogers
at a crossroads. Disillusioned with the
fickleness
of the pop world,
but not
with
music itself, he searched for a direction to take his
solo career. Impressed by the loyalty of country fans that
supported
their favorite
artists long
after they had disappeared from radio, Rogers looked
to country. He’d already
had some success among country fans with the First Edition
and he was drawn to the type of story songs that populated
the genre. It was the perfect transition
for him. “Love Lifted Me,” went Top 20 in 1975,
but it was the “Lucille” that
shot him into the stratosphere. Tops at country, it also
succeeded on the pop chart, was named the CMA’s Single
of the Year and was certified Gold.
“Daytime
Friends,” “Sweet Music Man,” and “Love
or Something Like It” continued his run of success.
Then came “The
Gambler,” a story song so vivid it not only delighted
country and pop fans, it also became a TV movie, starring
Rogers himself in the title role. The movie
spawned four follow-ups, making it the longest running
miniseries franchise on television. It started Rogers
on a second career as an actor on television and
movies, including another TV movie based on one of his
hit songs, “Coward
of the County.”
Though
theoretically a country singer, Rogers dominated the pop
charts, consistently
finding songs with universal
appeal. “I’ve never considered myself
a great singer, but I am a great storyteller,” Rogers
told Billboard magazine, also noting that he feels
his strength as an artist is in finding
great songs. In the 1980s he came to embody the role
of the sensitive male, singing such romantic hits as “Through
The Years,” “She Believes
In Me,” “You Decorated My Life,” and “Lady,” the
biggest song of his career. Those songs are classics
today, sung at countless weddings, and even engraved
on tombstones.
“There
are a lot of songs that may have initial success but don’t
linger the period of time those songs have,” Rogers
says. “They do
take a different value in your heart when they have
that kind of staying power that represents your success
and represents a feeling and a thought. A song like
that becomes a part of your soul.”
As
the 1980s wound down, so did Rogers ’ chart
success. Gone from the radio, Rogers kept busy
in other ways. He would establish
himself
as a well-respected
photographer, publishing several books, and being
invited to the White House to shoot a portrait
of First Lady Hillary Clinton. He
authored
several short
stories, and appeared off-Broadway in his Christmas
musical, The Toy Shoppe which he subsequently toured.
And he never stopped making
music.
In
1999, after forming his own record company, Dreamcatcher
Entertainment, Rogers found
himself
back on the country
chart with a touching
story song about a young boy playing baseball.
When "The Greatest" got radio and video
airplay, it was greeted as a sweet comeback
from a favorite bygone singer. When the follow-up, "Buy
Me a Rose," hit #1 Rogers proved
that his talent was just as vibrant and meaningful
as it was when he first started
out.
On
42 Ultimate Hits, every great Kenny Rogers song from every
phase of his career
is included.
The
collection also has
two new songs, “We Are The
Same,” an anthemic call to focus on what
we in the world have in common rather than
pointing out our differences, and “My
World Is Over,” a
duet with new artist Whitney Duncan.
“I’ve always been like a boomerang.” Rogers says. “You
can throw me away, but you can rest assured that I’m coming back. It’s
not necessarily about success for me. It’s not about being the biggest
star in the world. I think for all intents and purposes, if you go back to the
peak of my career, I accomplished everything I wanted to accomplish. To do that
again doesn’t excite me. But to just be there and to be a force and have
people care about what you’re recording, that’s the greatest
gift you can have.”
|