That all changed when Duncan hooked up with the famed Nashville sound producer Billy Sherrill. Singles like 1972's Baby's Smile, Woman's Kiss and 1973's Top Ten Sweet Country Woman started to establish him as a hitmaker. However, his marriage subsequently broke up, and the distraught Duncan returned to Texas. He was talked back into the music business for the single Jo and the Cowboy, which paired him with a then-unknown Janie Fricke, and the song was successful enough that Sherrill decided to feature her on some of Duncan's subsequent recordings. Sordid barroom sagas like Stranger and Thinkin' of a Rendezvous made Duncan a star, with the former becoming his first Top Five hit and the latter his first-ever number one in 1976. 1977's It Couldn't Have Been Any Better was his second chart-topper, and his first credited duet with Fricke, Come a Little Bit Closer, went Top Five the following year. Duncan also scored two big hits of his own in 1978 with the Top Five Hello Mexico (And Adios Baby to You) and the number one She Can Put Her Shoes Under My Bed (Anytime). His last Top Ten appearances came in 1979 with Slow Dancing and The Lady in the Blue Mercedes, after which his commercial momentum abruptly halted. He and Columbia parted ways in the early '80s, and he subsequently remarried and returned to Texas. He recorded a bit for small labels during the '80s and '90s, cutting a couple of singles in 1986. Duncan released his final album, The Thing to Do, in 2004 and was planning an autumn tour before he succumbed to a heart attack on August 14, 2006. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi