DOLLY PARTON WROTE “I WILL ALWAYS LOVE YOU” TO LEAVE PORTER WAGONER — AND THE WORLD TURNED HER GOODBYE INTO A LOVE SONG. It sounded too tender to be an escape plan. Porter Wagoner gave Dolly Parton a stage, a television audience, and a doorway into country music. He helped America see her. Then the doorway became a shadow. By 1974, Dolly knew her future could not live inside someone else’s spotlight. She did not come to him with anger. She came with a song. “I Will Always Love You” was not born as a simple romance. It was gratitude with steel inside it. A thank-you. A farewell. A young woman telling the man who helped build her that she still had to leave. The world later heard devotion. Weddings heard vows. Broken hearts heard prayer. Whitney Houston turned it into something almost untouchable. Underneath all of that was Dolly in Nashville, doing something harder than singing. She was leaving without making love look like betrayal.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” DOLLY PARTON WROTE “I WILL ALWAYS LOVE YOU”…