HE DIDN’T WRITE IT — BUT HE SANG IT LIKE A PROMISE KEPT — NASHVILLE, OCTOBER 1971. HE HAD BEEN MARRIED TO ROZENE FOR 15 YEARS. HE WOULD STAY MARRIED TO HER FOR 49 MORE. THE SONG HIT #1 IN DECEMBER 1971 — AND BECAME THE ONLY CROSSOVER POP HIT A BLACK COUNTRY SINGER HAD EVER CARRIED TO THE TOP 40. Nobody would have believed a song this gentle could outrun every honky-tonk anthem of the year. Ben Peters wrote “Kiss an Angel Good Mornin'” in two minutes flat. Charley Pride walked into RCA Studio B, let Jack Clement roll the tape, and sang it like a man who already knew the woman in the lyric. Because he did. Rozene Cohran had married him on Christmas leave in 1956 — a cosmetologist from Mississippi who became his manager, his compass, his whole quiet world. While Nashville tried to decide what to do with a Black man singing country, Rozene stayed home raising Kraig, Dion, and Angela. Sixty-four years. He died in her arms in December 2020. In a genre defined by leaving — what does it mean to be the man who came home every morning? And what angel never had to hear her own name to know?
He Didn’t Write It — But Charley Pride Sang It Like a Promise Kept Nashville, October 1971 did not look like the moment for a soft-spoken love song to change…