Rodney Crowell Biography | Country Music | Ken Burns

At fifteen, Rodney had his own group, touring small towns and promising to perform everything from the Beach Boys and the Beatles to R&B and – their business card said – “country, if you want it.” In his twenties, he moved to Nashville and fell in with singer-songwriter Guy Clark, who became a mentor. When a five-song cassette of his own compositions caught the attention of Emmylou Harris, recently signed with Warner Brothers, she recorded one of them, “Bluebird Wine,” for her first album and invited Rodney to join her backing band, The Hot Band.
In the late 1970s, after forming his own band, The Cherry Bombs, Rodney married Rosanne Cash and became her producer; he also continued working on his own career as a songwriter and performer. After penning hits performed by Waylon Jennings, Crystal Gayle, Bob Seger, the Oak Ridge Boys, and Highway 101, he enjoyed commercial success on his own with his 1988 album Diamonds & Dirt, which included an unprecedented five consecutive No. 1 singles.
Crowell continues to write, record, and tour, both as a solo artist and in recent joint projects with long-time collaborator Emmylou Harris. Their 2013 album Old Yellow Moon won a GRAMMY award for Best Americana Album and the Americana Music Awards for Album of the Year and Best Duo/Group. In 2006, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award in Songwriting from the Americana Music Association.
Born: August 7, 1950, Crosby, Texas
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