After more than two decades with
the Oak Ridge Boys, baritone vocalist
William Lee Golden was fired in 1986 when the other members wished to change the country band's image. He had joined the group in 1964, when
the Oaks were a gospel/folk group, and he accompanied their rise through the country charts during the '70s. In 1985,
Golden recorded the solo album
American Vagabond for MCA with help from
Booker T. Jones and
Joe Walsh. Two singles, "Love Is the Only Way Out" and "You Can't Take It With You," appeared on the country charts, but then
the Oak Ridge Boys let him go. He filed a 40 million dollar lawsuit, which was settled out of court, and then began to record with his sons
Rusty and
Chris. They moved to Mercury in 1990 and recorded the single "Louisiana Red Dirt Highway." Four years later,
Golden released an album for North/South, a division of Atlantic.
–
John Bush, Rovi