ON DECEMBER 8, 1982, RONNY ROBBINS WATCHED HIS FATHER DIE AT 11:15 PM IN A NASHVILLE HOSPITAL. HE’S SPENT THE 43 YEARS SINCE SINGING HIS DAD’S SONGS — AND HE STILL HASN’T LET GO. “I don’t sing them for the crowd. I sing them so he can still hear them.” At the time, Marty Robbins was country music’s cowboy poet — “El Paso,” “Big Iron,” the first-ever Grammy for a country song, inducted into the Hall of Fame just two months earlier. Then came the third heart attack in thirteen years. Six days in St. Thomas Hospital. Quadruple bypass. Marizona at one side of the bed, Ronny and Janet at the other. 11:15 PM. The vital signs flattened. A disc jockey on WSM broadcast the news across the country before midnight. Ronny was 33. He had his own music career once — dropped Columbia Records in the ’70s, won a Star of Tomorrow award, then walked away because he couldn’t stand the road the way his father had. But after that night, something changed. He started singing Marty’s songs. Not his own. Marty’s. On every stage. Every tribute show. Every Country’s Family Reunion taping. Forty-three years of carrying a voice that wasn’t his. Fans said he sounded exactly like his dad. But Ronny never corrected them when they called him “Marty.” He just smiled and kept singing. And there’s one song on his father’s final album — recorded weeks before the heart attack — that Ronny has never performed in public, not once…

Ronny Robbins Has Spent 43 Years Keeping Marty Robbins Alive On the night of December 8, 1982, the hallways of…

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