HE RECORDED OVER 500 SONGS — AND SOME PEOPLE STILL SAID MARTY ROBBINS NEVER PICKED A LANE. Marty Robbins sang country. Then pop. Then rockabilly. Then cowboy ballads that ran nearly five minutes when radio wanted three. Nashville could never quite decide what box to put him in, because Marty kept walking out of every one. Then came “El Paso.” Columbia worried the song was too long, too cinematic, too much story for radio. They pushed a shorter version. But DJs reached for the full one, and listeners followed. A dying cowboy, a jealous love, a final ride back to Rosa’s Cantina — almost five minutes of Western tragedy climbed all the way to No.1 on both the country and pop charts. Still, the criticism followed him. Too pop for country. Too country for pop. Too Western for the mainstream. But Johnny Cash said it best: “There’s no greater country singer than Marty Robbins.” Some artists pick a lane and own it. Marty Robbins refused to pick one — and somehow owned them all. Maybe the problem was never that he didn’t fit. Maybe the boxes were just too small.
He Recorded Over 500 Songs — And Some People Still Said Marty Robbins Never Picked a Lane Marty Robbins was…