“NOWADAYS HISTORY ONLY GOES AS FAR BACK AS GARTH’S FIFTH ALBUM.” RONNY ROBBINS SAID IT OVER 20 YEARS AGO — AND COUNTRY MUSIC STILL HASN’T FULLY ANSWERED HIM. Ronny Robbins is the son of Marty Robbins — the man behind “El Paso,” “Big Iron,” hundreds of songs, two Grammys, and a voice Johnny Cash once placed above almost everyone in country music. But when Marty died in 1982, Ronny did not spend his life chasing his father’s shadow. He spent it protecting it. Columbia had once released his own music under the name Marty Robbins Jr., as if even his identity had to stand inside his father’s. Later, Ronny stepped away from chasing hits and helped guard Marty Robbins Enterprises, making sure the songs, the name, and the legacy did not get flattened into nostalgia. Then he said the line Nashville still ought to sit with: “Nowadays history only goes as far back as Garth’s fifth album.” That was not bitterness. It was warning. Because when a genre forgets the people who built it, it does not just lose old songs. It loses the map back to itself.
“Nowadays History Only Goes as Far Back as Garth’s Fifth Album.” Ronny Robbins Said It Over 20 Years Ago —…