Kenny Rogers opens up about childhood, career in memoir

Country music star Kenny Rogers offers a revealing look into his life and five-decade-long musical career in “Luck or Something Like It,” his memoir that will be released on Tuesday.

Wednesday, October 03, 2012
Kenny Rogers

Country music star Kenny Rogers offers a revealing look into his life and five-decade-long musical career in "Luck or Something Like It,” his memoir that will be released on Tuesday.From his humble beginnings in Depression-era Texas, the Grammy-winning singer paints a portrait of his road to success and how he became one of the world’s best-selling musicians with more than 120 million albums sold worldwide.Rogers, 74, whose hits include "Lady,” "The Gambler,” "We’ve Got Tonight” and "Lucille,” spoke to Reuters about his childhood, his father’s alcoholism and why he compares music to a mistress.Q: In what ways do you think your challenging upbringing has helped shaped you?A: "I think it made me more determined. One of the things I talk about in the book is the fine line between being driven and being selfish. I think there were times in my life I was so driven I became very selfish, and I’m not proud of that. I think it’s a realization I came to when I was writing this book.”Q: You also share your father’s struggles with alcoholism and its effect on you.A: "I think that one of the real tragedies in my life is that I never really got to know why my dad drank. He couldn’t really support his family and I think it just broke him down. It breaks my heart that I didn’t know that before he passed away.”"I never drank in my life. I saw it destroy him and saw it destroy other people I work with, so I made a conscious decision about this. Q: You have said: "Music, at least for me, is like a mistress, and she’s a difficult mistress for a wife to compete with.” Can you elaborate?A: "When I became driven and selfish I was so intent to follow my life that it cost me. I was gone so much from some of my marriages that there was a disconnect.”"And this may seem like an absurd statement, but every woman I married, I really loved when I married her. And I don’t blame them for the marriage falling apart. I blame myself and my chosen field of music. That’s why I say that music is a mistress, because you can’t wait to get out there to it, and usually the mistress wins in a situation like that. I’ve been married five times.”Q: So is five times (married) the charm?A: "Wanda and I have been together now for 20 years, been married 15 years. She’s 28 years younger than me, and I say this from the bottom of my heart - she is my soul mate. She knows me better than anyone else has known me. She loves what I do and I’m not as insensitive to her needs as I may have been in the past.”Q: So who is the Lucille of your famous song?A: "My mom, whose name is Lucille, got very upset because she thought (the song) was about her. So I told her it’s not about her, because she had eight kids. But she was so angry because she thought I was putting her business on the street. Roger Bowling wrote the song, and whether he knew Lucille or not is hard to tell. It’s a great story song, though.” Reuters