“Well, how many times have I heard his version and heard my version? I do know that, over 30 years, I’ve started singing it slightly different myself. When asked if Rogers sang the melody exactly as he had written it, Schlitz hedges, but probably isn’t really sure. It’s like you’re in the train with them…pure classic.” “I’ve never heard a song that painted a picture so clearly. “The first time I heard ‘The Gambler,’ it floored me!” Thompson said. Even though he wasn’t even a year old when “The Gambler” went to radio, the fact that someone his age is influenced by the song is a testament to its power. Josh Thompson is a new country star, a guy from the Wisconsin woods who wears his cap backwards and actually sings about John Wayne. Then I remember thinking how wrong I was.” “I remember thinking that, frankly, it wasn’t much of a song. “When I heard it in ’77 or whenever, I don’t know who it was by, but it wasn’t Cash or Bare,” Fischer said. And, in perhaps the greatest sign of success in a capitalistic marketplace, International Game Technology’s “The Gambler” slot machine continues to be revamped for major casinos and private owners alike.īobby Fischer was an established Nashville record promoter and songwriter when Rogers hit with “The Gambler.” He still remembers the first time he heard the song, but doesn’t even know whose version it was. He even performed the song on The Muppet Show.
The album The Gambler has since sold more than 30 million units worldwide, and the song spawned a series of five Emmy-winning television specials featuring Rogers as gambler Brady Hawkes. Rogers won a Grammy for Best Male Country Vocal Performance, and Schlitz won a Grammy for Best Country Song.
1 on the country charts and appeared on charts around the world. It made its way into the hands of Butler and Rogers, and when Rogers recorded it, it rose to No. The song had its old-guard champions on Music Row, though, and they believed in Schlitz and his quirky, too-long, no-love-story song. “I finally settled on the eight lines of the last verse,” Schlitz continues, “what I now call my ‘Guy de Maupassant’ ending. I spent about six weeks trying to figure out what was gonna happen after the chorus.” I didn’t write a last verse, had no idea what was gonna happen, thought it was an interesting story but it was a throwaway.
I walked from his office over on Music Row to my apartment, and in that 20 minutes I wrote most of it in my head. Schlitz had been in Nashville for only a couple years when he wrote “The Gambler.” “I wrote it in August of ’76,” he says, “walking home from a meeting with my mentor, Bob McDill. No one could have predicted that Rogers’ recording of “The Gambler” would create, essentially, an entire industry based on one song by an unknown songwriter from North Carolina. But some on Music Row in late 1978 felt that, at 40, Rogers was on his way out. Rogers was already on a roll from the success of “Lucille” and his work with Dottie West.
But when Kenny Rogers and producer Larry Butler finally recorded “The Gambler,” Schlitz was able to quit walking to his graveyard shift computer operator job and start driving to work as a professional songwriter. Even the songwriter himself, Don Schlitz, cut it, as well as other people whose names are a distant Music Row memory. Under the name “Charlie Tango,” Conway Twitty’s son, Michael Twitty, cut it.