HE GAVE NASHVILLE 40 #1 SONGS OVER 25 YEARS — AND NASHVILLE COULDN’T EVEN GIVE HIM A SEAT AT THE OPRY. Conway Twitty didn’t ask for favors. He let the music speak — and it spoke louder than anyone in country history. Forty #1 hits. A record that stood for two decades. “”They called him “”The High Priest of Country Music.”””” But the Grand Ole Opry never invited him in. Not once. He started in Oklahoma, not Nashville. He came from rock and roll, not the honky-tonks. And no matter how many records he broke, the insiders never fully let him through the door. His own biographer said Conway carried that chip on his shoulder until the end. When he died suddenly in 1993 at 59, Nashville waited six years to put him in the Hall of Fame. By then, his children had lost Twitty City, lost their homes, and spent over a decade in court just fighting for the right to tell their father’s story. The man with more #1 country songs than anyone who ever lived — and his own town tried to forget him. But what happened to his legacy after he closed his eyes — and who tried to erase it — is something most fans were never told.
He Gave Nashville 40 #1 Songs Over 25 Years — And Nashville Couldn’t Even Give Him a Seat at the Opry Conway Twitty never looked like the kind of artist…