Please scroll down for the video. It is at the end of the article!

THEY BURIED IT ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE RECORD — BUT ONE SPIN OF THE VINYL CHANGED HAROLD JENKINS INTO CONWAY TWITTY.

In 1958, there was no legend.

No sold-out arenas.

No fifty number-one hits.

No velvet-voiced giant standing atop country music.

There was only a young man named Harold Lloyd Jenkins, carrying a guitar and a dream that seemed much larger than the rooms he was playing.

Night after night, he chased songs across highways and dimly lit clubs, hoping one of them might finally open a door.

Most never did.

That is what makes the story of “It’s Only Make Believe” feel almost impossible.

The song was not born in some glamorous studio surrounded by executives predicting greatness.

It began much more simply.

A few words.

A melody.

A feeling that refused to leave.

The kind of song that sounds less like writing and more like confession.

At its heart was longing.

Not the polished kind found in greeting cards and movie endings.

The aching kind.

The kind that knows the difference between love and the dream of love.

When Harold finally recorded it, he poured everything into the performance.

The voice was already there.

That deep, trembling power that could sound wounded and commanding at the same time.

But the people deciding what mattered did not immediately hear what listeners would eventually hear.

To them, it was not the star.

It was the other side.

The B-side.

The song expected to sit quietly in the shadows while another track carried the attention.

And then something happened that country music has seen more than once but never stops feeling like fate.

Someone flipped the record.

A radio DJ gave the overlooked side a chance.

Three minutes later, everything was different.

Listeners did not hear a forgotten track.

They heard truth.

They heard a young singer reaching into a place most people spend their lives trying to hide.

The loneliness.

The yearning.

The desperate hope that something imagined could somehow become real.

Suddenly, the song no longer belonged to the back side of a vinyl record.

It belonged to the world.

“It’s Only Make Believe” exploded beyond expectations, crossing borders and oceans, finding listeners far beyond the places where Harold Jenkins had once played for small crowds.

And somewhere in the middle of that whirlwind, a dreamer became Conway Twitty.

That transformation is easy to celebrate now.

History tends to make success look inevitable.

But it was not inevitable.

That is the lesson hidden inside the song.

The masterpiece was there before anyone recognized it.

The voice was there before the awards.

The emotion was there before the fame.

All it needed was one person willing to turn the record over.

When Conway Twitty passed away in 1993, country music lost one of its most unforgettable voices.

But the beauty of “It’s Only Make Believe” is that it still sounds like a beginning.

You can hear the hunger.

You can hear the hope.

You can hear a young man standing at the edge of his future without knowing that millions of people would someday know his name.

And maybe that is why the song still resonates.

Not because it became a hit.

Not because it launched a legend.

But because every listener understands what it feels like to carry something precious that the world has not noticed yet.

A dream.

A talent.

A love.

A voice.

Sometimes those things get pushed aside.

Sometimes they end up on the B-side.

And sometimes, all it takes is one person willing to listen a little closer before the whole world finally hears what was there all along.

 

Related Post

SHE STOOD WITH KITTY WELLS AND JEAN SHEPARD TO BREAK NASHVILLE’S HEAVIEST DOORS — BUT HISTORY QUIETLY REPLACED HER TRAILBLAZING CROWN WITH A WEDDING RING… To understand the weight of Goldie Hill’s legacy, you have to look at the locked doors of the early 1950s. It was a man’s world. Women were supposed to be background singers or pretty faces, not headliners. Born Argolda Voncile Hill, she carried the grit of the Texas cotton fields straight to the microphone. Alongside Kitty Wells and Jean Shepard, she formed the vanguard that forced a stubborn industry to finally make room for a woman’s voice. They called her “The Golden Hillbilly,” marketing her rural charm, but underneath the stage lights was a pioneer holding a sledgehammer. When she recorded “I Let the Stars Get in My Eyes,” she wasn’t just answering a male hit. She was claiming territory. The song soared to number one, proving that a woman’s heartbreak could command the attention of an entire country. Then came the quiet sacrifice. She married country giant Carl Smith and stepped away from the spotlight to build a home. It was her choice, but history can be cruel. Over time, the industry she helped build began to remember her merely as a devoted wife, slowly erasing the trailblazer who fought for every inch of stage. Though she is gone, her legacy cannot be untangled from the roots of country music. Every time a woman walks onto the Grand Ole Opry stage today and sings her own truth, she is walking on ground that Goldie Hill bled to pave.