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Born Donald
Eugene Lytle, in Greenfield, Ohio on May 31, 1938,
Johnny was playing guitar at the age of six and
singing professionally at the age of fifteen. He
knew then what his dream was, and this is when he
began to search for his Star. He once said, “He’d
sing until he was too old, and then he’d hum.”
That statement made in the early 1980’s summed up
Johnny Paycheck’s renewed dedication to his music
and his new career.
Johnny worked with such country
music greats as Faron Young, Ray Price and Porter
Wagoner, and began receiving recognition as a very
good songwriter. His early credits include his
composition of one of Tammy Wynette’s first great
hits, Apartment #9, and a great hit for Ray Price,
“Touch My Heart.” Johnny was nominated for two
Grammy Awards for (“Don’t Take Her, She’s All I’ve
Got” & “Take This Job and Shove It”), and was
recognized with a Lifetime Achievement Award from
Broadcast Music, Inc. (BMI).
On February 18,
2003 Johnny Paycheck passed away at the age of 64.
He was reported to be “bedridden in a nursing home
with emphysema and asthma.”
Courtesy of Imusic
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