HE WAS DYING IN THE STUDIO — AND STILL RECORDED 12 SONGS IN HIS FINAL WEEK ALIVE. Jimmie Rodgers didn’t wait for country music to exist — he invented it. A former railroad brakeman from Mississippi, he walked into a Bristol, Tennessee recording session in 1927 and changed American music forever. They called him “The Singing Brakeman.” Then “The Father of Country Music.” Both names stuck. 13 years of recording. Over 100 songs. The first artist ever inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. But tuberculosis had been eating him alive since his twenties. By May 1933, he was so weak between takes that he had to rest on a cot in the studio. He recorded his final sessions in New York — then died two days later at 35. Some artists retire when things get hard. Jimmie Rodgers sang until his lungs literally gave out — and the genre he built from nothing is still standing.
Jimmie Rodgers Recorded Until the End — And Country Music Still Lives Inside Those Final Songs Before country music had…