Country Music Icon Kenny Rogers Dies at 81
Variety
By Chris Morris
March 20, 2020
Vocalist Kenny Rogers, who dominated the pop and country
charts in the 1970s and 1980s with a string of sleekly tailored hits and won
three Grammys, has died. He was 81. Rogers
“passed away peacefully at home from natural causes under the care of hospice and
surrounded by his family,” a representative for the singer said in a statement.
Due to the national COVID-19 emergency, the family is planning a small private
service at this time with a public memorial planned for a later date.
Rogers had
announced a farewell tour in 2015 and was able to keep it going through
December 2017. In April 2018, shortly before he was to spend a few months
finishing out the tour after a break, he announced that he was having to call
off the remaining dates (including a planned appearance at the Stagecoach
Festival in California), due to unspecified “health challenges.” “I didn’t want
to take forever to retire,” Rogers
said his April 2018 statement. “I’ve thoroughly enjoyed this opportunity to say
farewell to the fans over the course of the past two years on ‘The Gambler’s
Last Deal’ tour. I could never properly thank them for the encouragement and
support they’ve given me throughout my career and the happiness I’ve experienced
as a result of that.”
A special, “Biography: Kenny Rogers,” had been announced by A&E earlier
this month, set to air April 13. The special is said to be largely built around
footage from the all-star salute Rogers received
in Nashville on
Oct. 25, 2017, just a couple of months before his final concert appearances.
Among the guests who joined him for that sentimental sendoff at the Bridgestone
Arena were Dolly Parton, Lionel Richie, Don Henley, Kris Kristofferson, Alison
Krauss, Chris Stapleton, Little Big Town, Reba McEntire, the Flaming Lips and
the Judds.
Rogers’
signature song “The Gambler” was added to the National Registry in 1978. It was
the most recent of a lifetime of honors bestowed on the singer, which included
induction into the Country Music Hall of Fame, three Grammys and six CMA
Awards.
After establishing himself commercially via rock- and pop-oriented singles with
his group the First Edition, the bearded, prematurely gray Rogers was launched into the top rank of
crossover country artists with a string of singles for United Artists Records.
His appealing, sometimes gritty voice propelled 20 solo 45s to No. 1 on the
country charts from 1977-87. Two of them, his 1980 reading of Lionel Richie’s
“Lady” and his 1983 collaboration with Dolly Parton “Islands in the Stream”
(penned by the Bee Gees), also topped the pop lists. He worked profitably with
a number of other female vocalists, including Dottie West, Sheena Easton, Kim
Carnes and Anne Murray.
Country historian Bill C. Malone noted that Rogers’ ingratiating style “has been the
chief source of his immense success. Rogers
is a consummate story-teller, with an intimate and compelling style that almost
demands the listener’s concentration. When his husky tenor voice slips down
into a raspy, gravelly register, as it sometimes does, Rogers pulls the listener even further into
his confidence.”
Rogers parlayed
his music success into a successful side career as an actor. His 1978 country
chart-topper “The Gambler” spawned five popular TV movies, while some of his
other hits also inspired small-screen features.
Rogers was
inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2013 and received a Lifetime
Achievement Award from the Country Music Association the same year.
Born and raised in Houston,
he was the fourth of eight children in a poor family. He took to the guitar as
an adolescent, and would sometimes perform with another aspiring local musician
and future star, Mickey Gilley.
His early professional career was stylistically eclectic. While in high school,
he formed a rockabilly group, the Scholars, who recorded for Carlton Records, a
local label. After a brief stint at the University of Houston,
he played bass with the jazz groups of Bobby Doyle and Kirby Stone.
After moving to Los Angeles in 1966, he joined the folk-pop unit the New
Christy Minstrels, a group that also numbered such performers as Carnes, the
Byrds’ Gene Clark, “Eve of Destruction” vocalist Barry McGuire and the Lovin’
Spoonful’s Jerry Yester among its members at one time or another.
With fellow Minstrels Mike Settle, Terry Williams and Thelma Camacho, Rogers founded the
rock-leaning group the First Edition in 1967. Fronted by Rogers (whose name
would be appended to the act’s moniker in 1969), the group notched two top-10
pop hits: “Just Dropped In (To See What Condition My Condition Was In)” (No. 5,
1968), a version of Mickey Newbury’s slice of pop psychedelia, and “Ruby, Don’t
Take Your Love to Town” (No. 6, 1969), Mel Tillis’ downbeat song about the
faithless wife of a crippled Vietnam vet.
The First Edition’s fortunes began to wane in the early ’70s, and Rogers signed a solo deal
with UA in 1976. He struck almost immediate pay dirt with “Lucille,” an
absorbing vignette about a barroom encounter with a disillusioned woman and her
estranged husband. The number became Rogers’
first No. 1 country hit and reached No. 5 on the national pop chart. It also
scored Rogers
his first Grammy, for best male country vocal performance.
Rogers also partnered with longtime female star West, and the duo racked up
three No. 1 country singles for UA and then Liberty in 1978-81: “Every Time Two
Fools Collide,” “All I Ever Need Is You” and “What Are We Doin’ in Love.”
He notched five more No. 1 solo country singles by the end of the decade. The
biggest of these were the Grammy-winning “The Gambler” (also No. 16 pop in
1978) and Rogers’
biggest hit, the backwoods narrative “Coward of the County” (also No. 3 pop in
1979). They pushed the albums “The Gambler” and “Kenny” to No. 12 and No. 5,
respectively, on the pop album charts. Each inspired a popular TV movie; Rogers would portray
Brady Hawkes, protagonist of “The Gambler,” in a series of telepics that ran
through 1994.
On the heels of a No. 1 greatest hits set in 1980, Rogers’
hits of the decade for Liberty
and RCA found him moving increasingly into pop terrain and focusing on romantic
balladry. “Lady” and “Islands in the Stream”
(the latter one of many duets with frequent partner Parton) solidified his
standing as country’s biggest crossover attraction; his rendering of Bob
Seger’s “We’ve Got Tonight” with Sheena Easton ruled the country chart and rose
to No. 6 on the pop chart. In all, he recorded 23 top-10 country hits during
the decade, five of which crossed to the pop side.
Though it failed to even dent the pop charts, “Make No Mistake, She’s Mine,” Rogers’ duet with singer-pianist Ronnie Milsap (and a
remake of a duet by former band mate Kim Carnes and Barbra Streisand) became Rogers’ next-to-last No.
1 country single in 1987. It also reaped a Grammy for best country vocal duet
performance.
Like many another star of his era, Rogers
began to fall out of fashion in the ’90s, as a younger generation of country
musicians flexing a less countrypolitan style supplanted him. He made his last
toplining appearance in a pair of telepics as reformed gambler Jack MacShayne
in 1994. In 1999, he notched a final No. 1 country hit, “Buy Me a Rose,” with
Billy Dean and bluegrass star Alison Krauss.
In the new millennium, sporadic releases on a number of independent labels and
majors Capitol Nashville and Warner Bros. Nashville performed respectably on
the country album charts but produced no major hits.
From the ’90s forward, as he maintained a busy touring schedule, Rogers increasingly
turned his attention to various entrepreneurial enterprises, opening a chain of
fast-food chicken outlets, Kenny Rogers Roasters, and a Sprint car
manufacturing firm, Gamblers Chassis.
He issued a memoir, “Luck or Something Like It,” in 2012, and a novel, “What
Are the Chances,” in 2013. That same year, he was the recipient of the CMA
Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award. He received a similar honor from CMT
with its Artist of a Lifetime Award in 2015.
Always active on the road, Rogers
announced his retirement in September 2015, not long after a widely aired
commercial for Geico insurance saw him reprising “The Gambler” for comedic
effect.
Married five times, Rogers
is survived by his last wife Wanda and five children.
ROGERS, Kenny (Kenneth
Ray Rogers)
Born: 8/21/1938, Houston, Texas,
U.S.A.
Died: 3/20/2020, Colbert, Georgia,
U.S.A.
Kenny Rogers’
westerns – actor, singer:
Flap – 1970 [singer]
Saga of Sonora
(TV) – 1973 (balladeer)
Kenny Rogers: the Gambler – 1978 (Brady Hawkes) [singer]
Urban Cowboy – 1980 [singer]
The Gambler (TV) – 1980 (Brady Hawkes) [singer]
Kenny Rogers as the Gambler: The Adventure Continues (TV) –
1983 (Brady Hawkes) [singer]
Wild Horses (TV) – 1985 (Matt Cooper)
Kenny Rogers as the Gambler, part III: The Legend Continues
(TV) – 1987 (Brady Hawkes)
The Gambler Returns: The Luck of the Draw (TV) - 1991 (Brady
Hawkes)
The Real West – 1992-1994
Dr. Quinn, Medicine Woman (TV) – 1993 (Daniel Watkins)
Rio Diablo (TV) – 1993 (Quentin
Leech)
Gambler V: Playing for Keeps (TV) 1994(Brady Hawkes)