THE INDUSTRY EXECUTIVES SWORE THAT WOMEN COULD NEVER SELL RECORDS — SO ONE QUIET MOTHER STEPPED UP TO THE MICROPHONE AND CHANGED COUNTRY MUSIC FOREVER. In the early 1950s, Nashville was an exclusive boys’ club. The men in suits who ran the record labels shared a firm, unwritten rule: female singers were not a strong commercial force. They could sing harmonies in the background, but they could never headline a show or top the charts. Then came Kitty Wells. She didn’t argue with the executives in boardrooms. She simply walked into a studio and recorded “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels.” With steady, unbending dignity, she sang the absolute truth. And the response was an industry-shaking shockwave. Millions of women rushed to buy the record, making her the first female solo artist to score a number-one hit on the country charts. She proved that women could sell out shows. She proved they could carry an entire genre on their shoulders. Kitty Wells didn’t just build a legendary career. She took a sledgehammer to Nashville’s thickest glass ceiling, forcing the stubborn labels to finally open their doors. Every female country star who came after her — from Patsy Cline to Loretta Lynn to Dolly Parton — walked through the exact door that Kitty Wells forced open. She didn’t have to shout to start a revolution. She just sang, and the world had no choice but to listen.
THE EXECUTIVES IN NASHVILLE SWORE THAT WOMEN COULD NEVER SELL RECORDS — BUT WITH ONE THREE-MINUTE RECORDING, A 33-YEAR-OLD MOTHER TOOK A SLEDGEHAMMER TO THEIR GLASS CEILING. In the sweltering…