NASHVILLE SAID HE WAS TOO COUNTRY — SO RANDY TRAVIS WASHED DISHES UNTIL THE WHOLE TOWN HAD TO HEAR HIM. Randy Travis did not arrive in Nashville looking modern. In the early 1980s, country radio was leaning smoother, shinier, less rural. Randy’s voice sounded older than the room — deep, plain, stubbornly traditional. Labels passed. Too country, they said. Too throwback. Too far from where the business thought it was going. So he stayed close enough for them to be wrong. At The Nashville Palace, Randy worked in the kitchen. Cook. Dishwasher. Whatever kept him near the stage. Lib Hatcher managed the place and kept pushing him forward while the town kept closing doors. Then people started hearing him. Not in a boardroom. Not through a polished industry pitch. In a room where plates were cleared, tourists wandered in, and a young singer with a voice from another decade stepped up and made the noise go quiet. By the time Nashville finally listened, the insult had become the selling point. Too country was exactly what country music needed. Some singers get discovered because the town opens a door. Randy Travis had to wash dishes behind it until the door got tired of staying shut.
“Scroll down to the end of the article to listen to music.” NASHVILLE SAID RANDY TRAVIS WAS TOO COUNTRY —…