FROM 1970 TO 1979, HE LIVED TWO LIVES — AND NEVER APOLOGIZED FOR EITHER. Most people knew Marty Robbins by his voice. Smooth. Steady. Built for radio. Almost no one noticed what he did when the stage lights went dark. In the 1970s, Marty climbed into race car number 42 and drove — not for trophies, not for headlines, but for the quiet kind of freedom that only noise and speed can give. Twenty-five races across the decade. No pressure. No image to guard. Just focus, motion, and the hum of an engine replacing applause. Racing was never a second career. It was air. A way to breathe between songs. While his records crossed country and pop charts and his stories traveled the world, the track gave him something music couldn’t — risk without expectation. His heart failed him three times in life. But his spirit never learned how to slow down. Engines fade. Songs don’t.
FROM 1970 TO 1979, HE LIVED TWO LIVES — AND NEVER APOLOGIZED FOR EITHER. Most people knew Marty Robbins by…