THE DOCTORS KEPT MENDING MARTY ROBBINS’ HEART. MARTY KEPT GIVING IT AWAY. Marty Robbins had his first heart attack in 1969, but slowing down never seemed to fit the man. He went back to the road, back to the stage, back to the race car, back to singing gunfighters, drifters, lovers, and lonely men as if every story still needed one more verse. By 1982, his heart had already warned him more than once. On October 11, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Less than a month later, he climbed into a race car for what would become the final NASCAR run of his life in Atlanta. Then, on December 2, his heart failed again. Doctors performed a quadruple bypass. Six days later, Marty was gone at 57. Fifteen hundred people came to say goodbye at Woodlawn Funeral Home in Nashville. Johnny Cash was there. Charley Pride. Roy Acuff. Eddy Arnold. Brenda Lee sang “One Day at a Time” while the rooms overflowed with people who understood what had been lost. The doctors had mended Marty’s heart more than once. But maybe the truth was simpler. He had spent his whole life giving pieces of it away.
The Doctors Kept Mending Marty Robbins’ Heart. Marty Kept Giving It Away. Marty Robbins lived like a man who never…