đ¨ JUST IN: The One Song Dolly Parton Says Gave Her âThe Best Break of My Lifeâ â and Why It Still Matters Today âĄML


Most of Dolly Partonâs greatest songs were inspired by major turning points in her life.
And if they werenât about career-altering pivotal moments, they were about the people and situations that formed the fabric of her existence, like her family, or growing up in a household where the energy was lively but the resources were limited.
Geese covering ‘Roadrunner’ by The Modern Lovers live in Boston
One of the most notable examples of this is Partonâs intimate ode to finding love and belonging without the material means, âCoat of Many Colorsâ. The song was an immense labour of love for Parton, exploring the connection between the coat itself and the broader themes of familial values and resilience through troubled times. Itâs no surprise, therefore, why it remains her favourite out of the thousands of songs that sheâs written.
What makes these songs resonate with Parton long after sheâs written them isnât just how personal they feel, but how she can still sing them with the same level of intensity and reverence as she did back then, knowing that they still mean as much, if not more. As she once told Mojo of âCoat of Many Colorsâ, â[It speaks well of] my spiritual values too. I can always sing that sincerely from my heart.â
Another major song came when Parton parted from her mentor and iconic country singer, Porter Wagoner. Parton joined Wagonerâs show, The Porter Wagoner Show, at just 21 years old in 1967, and, although there would eventually be frictions that both of them struggled to look past, moving on from Wagoner was one of the hardest things that Parton ever had to do.

So hard, in fact, that she wrote one of her best songs about it â âI Will Always Love Youâ. One of the biggest stories around this song is usually the one where Parton rejected an offer from Elvis Presleyâs team to let him cover it. But, while thatâs a pretty big decision to make and definitely worthy of note in some discussions, her reasons were always about what the song meant to her, and less about denying a potential hit by the King himself.
More than that, however, it summarised everything anybody would ever need to know about Partonâs relationship wth Wagoner, and how she always felt appreciative of everything that they did together, even if sometimes they didnât see eye to eye. It says a lot, too, that, of all of Partonâs achievements, being allowed to sing wth Wagoner on her first-ever single, âThe Last Thing on My Mindâ, is the one she feels the most grateful for.
âIt was a really humbling experience, and it was a wonderful night with Porter, knowing that Porter was such a big part of country music,â Parton told The Boot while celebrating her 50th anniversary as a member of the Grand Ole Opry a few years back. âSo that was the best break of my life, ever,â she went on. âAnd Porter and I were together all the time. We were very prosperous together, very productive, and we sang great together. So I thank him every day.â
When Parton pursued her own path, she knew it would be a challenge. After all, Wagoner had a heavy hand in shaping the early stages of Partonâs career, pushing her to a new level of greatness and teaching her things that she still thinks about to this day. But most of her best career moments have been marked by such immense transformation, usually when she makes the jump from one fruitful situation to another, no matter how much it stings her heart to move on.
As she puts it in the song: âBittersweet memories / Thatâs all Iâm taking with me / Goodbye, please donât cry / We both know that Iâm not what you need / But I will always love youâŚâ



