29 #1 HITS — AND THE LAST SONG HE EVER SANG WAS A DUET WITH THE YOUNG BLACK SINGER FOLLOWING IN HIS FOOTSTEPS Charley Pride didn’t start in country music. He started in the cotton fields of Mississippi — picking since he was seven. Then he pitched in the Negro Leagues at sixteen. The New York Yankees even gave him a shot before an injury sent him home for good. But it was country music where his voice changed everything. On November 11, 2020, at the CMA Awards, 86-year-old Charley Pride stepped onstage to accept the Willie Nelson Lifetime Achievement Award. Then he did something no one expected — he picked up the mic and sang. The song was Kiss an Angel Good Mornin’ — the same hit that made him country’s first Black superstar in 1971. Standing beside him was Jimmie Allen — a young Black artist walking the very road Charley had paved 50 years earlier. Before the first note, Charley told the crowd: “I’m nervous as can be.” In the audience, Eric Church was grinning. Ashley McBryde was dancing. And somewhere in that room, 50 years of broken barriers were standing on the same stage. Thirty-one days later, Charley Pride was gone. COVID took him at 86. He didn’t know that stage would be his last. But the man he chose to sing beside — did Charley know he was passing the torch?
29 #1 Hits, a Final Duet, and the Night Charley Pride Passed the Torch Charley Pride’s story never began with…