
CHARLEY PRIDE WALKED ONTO THE CMA STAGE AT 86… AND SANG THE SONG THAT CHANGED COUNTRY MUSIC FOREVER.
By then, the room already understood what it was seeing.
It was called Kiss an Angel Good Mornin’.
Simple words. Easy melody. Nothing about it sounded revolutionary.
But in 1971, the song crossed lines Nashville had spent decades protecting.
A Black man born to Mississippi sharecroppers became the voice drifting from country radios all across America.
And for a while, people listened without knowing his face.
RCA Records kept early photos of Charley Pride off album covers because executives feared some stations would stop playing the records the moment they realized he was Black.
The records kept climbing anyway.
“Kiss an Angel Good Mornin’” reached No. 1 on the country charts, crossed into pop radio, and sold more than a million copies.
Then country music had to say his name out loud.
The Country Music Association named him Entertainer of the Year.
Through every mile of it, Rozene Pride stayed beside him —
through small clubs, long drives, backstage silences,
and every door that opened a little slower for him than everyone else.
Then came November 2020.
Charley walked onto the stage at the CMA Awards and sang the same song one last time.
No speech.
No bitterness.
Just the voice.
Three weeks later, he was gone.
But somehow, that song still sounds like it never left the room…