Dolly Parton has just opened her heart like a well-worn diary, pouring raw emotion into a brand-new song dedicated to her late husband, Carl Dean. With every note, every lyric, she turns love and loss into music, leaving listeners clutching their hearts and wiping away tears.

Just four days after the death of her husband Carl Dean, Dolly Parton‘s husband of nearly 60 years, the country music icon wrote and recorded a tribute for him.

“Carl and I fell in love when I was 18 and he was 23, and like all great love stories, they never end,” Parton wrote on her social media, along with an early picture of the couple and the title of her new song. “They live in memory and in song,” added Parton, “and I dedicate this to him.”

 

‘Where would I be?”

“If You Hadn’t Been There” is a heartbreaking ballad, where Parton reflects on the impact he had on her life and career and questions where she would have been without him.

If you hadn’t been there
Where would I be?
Without your trust
Love and belief
The up’s and down’s
We’ve always shared
And I wouldn’t be here
If you hadn’t been there

If you hadn’t been there
Well, who would I be?
You always see the best in me
You’re loving arms have cradled me
You held me close, and I believe

I wouldn’t be here
If you hadn’t been there
Holding my hand
Showing you care
You made me drеam
More than I dared
And I wouldn’t be hеre
If you hadn’t been there

 

Carl Dean and Dolly Parton (Photo: Dolly Parton/Facebook)

Dolly and Dean (1964 – 2025)

Parton first met Dean the day after she moved from her hometown of Sevierville, Tennessee to Nashville in 1964. “I met him the first day I got to Nashville, in 1964,” recalled Parton in an interview with Andy Warhol and Mary Moynihan for Interview magazine in 1984. “I graduated on a Friday night, went to Nashville on a Saturday morning with dirty clothes and I went to a Laundromat looking for anything but love. I had just left two boyfriends back home and I wasn’t looking to get involved because I had gone to Nashville to really get started in the business.”

Parton continued, “I met him at the Why Washy and he’s been wishy-washy ever since. We dated for two years before we got married. I often get myself in love trouble because I’m so passionate—I love so much and so deep. But Carl’s a special guy, I didn’t have any problems with him.”

The two married on May 30, 1966, during a private ceremony in Ringgold, Georgia. Throughout their marriage, Dean kept a mostly low profile, keeping their relationship as private as possible, and continued working for his asphalt paving business in Nashville. “A lot of people say there’s no Carl Dean,” Parton said in 1984, “that he’s just somebody I made up to keep other people off me.”

Though he wanted to remain mostly out of the public eye, Dean always supported Parton and her career. He even inspired some songs that Parton wrote early on, including her 1974 hit “Jolene,” inspired by an auburn-haired bank teller, who developed a crush on him in the late ’60s. Throughout the decades, Parton also penned more songs about Dean, including “Forever Love,” “Say Forever You’ll Be Mine,” “From Here to the Moon and Back,” and “Marry Me.”

Dean died on March 3, 2025, at age 82.

“He is in God’s arms now, and I am okay with that,” wrote Parton following Dean’s death. “I will always love you.”

Related Posts

Supreme Court News Could Be ‘Game Over’ for Democrats: CNN

A federal appellate court declined to pause a lower court’s ruling that challenges the Trump administration’s use of an 18th-century wartime law—the Alien Enemies Act—to deport Venezuelan…

My Own Mother Hid Her Wedding From Me, but Nothing Prepared Me for Who She Married

Alice’s life revolved around hard work and quiet sacrifice—until a late-night visit from her overbearing boss, Michael, pushed her to the edge. Exhausted and overlooked, she hoped…

110,000 Voices, One King: George Strait Turns Philadelphia Into a Sea of Country Soul — Then Stuns Fans With a Song They Thought They’d Never Hear Again It started with “Amarillo by Morning” and ended with a roar no one will forget. On May 10, at a sold-out Lincoln Financial Field, George Strait made history with 110,905 fans — but the true magic came when he dusted off “Luckenbach, Texas” after decades of silence. No frills, no warning. Just a rebel anthem, a rebel heart, and a moment that felt like church for country lovers.

 When 110,905 Fans Sang “Amarillo by Morning” with George Strait… and Then He Shocked Everyone On May 10, 2025, at Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field, something historic happened. George Strait, the…

11 Family Secrets That Read Like Hollywood Stories — But They’re All Too Real

Families often carry secrets behind closed doors—some heartbreaking, others strangely touching. From hidden grief to long-buried truths, these real stories show how loyalty and love can be…

Jennifer Lopez lashes out at Ben Affleck’s attitude and tells him “You became famous because of me”

Sources say Lopez’s comment stemmed from Affleck’s discomfort with her high-profile lifestyle. He has expressed feeling overwhelmed by the intense media scrutiny that comes with being by…

My Sister Excluded My Son from Her Wedding After He Made Her Dress, but Still Expected to Wear It – We Gave Her One Condition to Keep It

When my sister Danielle asked my 17-year-old son Adrian to make her wedding dress, he was thrilled. Sewing had been his healing craft since losing his dad….

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *