Joey+Rory - Teaching Me How To Love You (Live In Columbia, TN/2018)

Introduction:

“Teaching Me How to Love You” is a poignant country ballad recorded by the American husband-and-wife duo Joey+Rory. The song was written by Martin Dodson and released on January 1, 2018, as the lead single from their posthumous album, “His and Hers.”   

Joey+Rory, comprising Joey Martin Feek and Rory Lee Feek, gained widespread recognition through their appearances on the CMT reality show “Can You Duet” in 2008. Their heartfelt harmonies and genuine connection captivated audiences, leading to a successful recording career. Sadly, Joey’s battle with cervical cancer tragically cut their journey short. She passed away on March 4, 2016, leaving behind a profound impact on the country music world.   

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67 YEARS IN HIS FATHER’S SHADOW — UNTIL THE DAY HE WALKED OUT OF IT. For nearly seven decades, Marty lived under a name that echoed louder than his own voice. The world didn’t see a man — it saw a legacy. “Merle’s son.” The heir. The continuation. The pressure was relentless: sing like him, write like him, become him. Behind the curtain, though, Marty was fighting a private war. “I used to believe that if I didn’t rise to my dad’s level… I was failing everyone,” he admitted. “I felt like a ghost trailing behind a giant.” The cruel irony? He never lacked talent. His voice was richer, more weathered, carved from lived experience rather than imitation. He toured relentlessly. He wrote songs with quiet gravity. He carried stages on his own terms. But comparison is a thief — and for years, it stole his confidence, muting a voice that deserved to be heard. Living next to a legend like Merle Haggard isn’t inspiration — it’s suffocation if you’re not careful. Every note Marty sang was measured against history. Every performance dissected through the lens of legacy. The applause never felt fully his. And then, at 67, something broke — or maybe something finally healed. No more chasing a ghost. No more trying to resurrect a myth. No more shrinking inside a famous last name. Today, Marty stands not as an extension of Merle Haggard, but as a man who survived the weight of it. “I’m done trying to be my father,” he says. “I don’t want to be the next Merle Haggard. I want to be Marty — and sing what’s true.” After 67 years, he didn’t inherit the crown. He took back his name.