Country music legend Charley Pride has 'no regrets' in decades-long career

The 2017 lifetime achievement Grammy award winner looks back on his memories

Growing up in Sledge, Mississippi, Pride saw the game of baseball as a way to get out of the cotton fields where his sharecropper father toiled. "When I saw Jackie Robinson go to the major leagues, I'm picking cotton alongside my dad and I said, 'boy this is going to be my way out of the cotton fields,'" Pride told Amna Nawaz on ABC News' "Live From the Couch" in between songs.

In a musical career spanning more than 50 years and numerous awards, some things are bound to be left behind.

For years, Pride, 79, played on several baseball teams in the Negro Leagues, minors, and even played in the major leagues for a few short weeks. He was a "barnstormer," traveling all over the country, playing with baseball legends like Willie Mays and Hank Aaron.

"My ambition was to go, like I say, and break all those records then set me one by the time I was 35 or 36," Pride said, but eventually he ended his professional baseball career and resorted to his other love of music. "I had a lot of fun traveling and doing what I loved to do, so I don't have no regrets."

Pride released his newest album, 'Music In My Heart', this month. "I think it's one of the finest albums I've ever made," Pride said. "I've recorded about 500 and something songs, and of that 500 I think this could go up against any of the 500 I've ever done." 'Music In My Heart is his first album in six years, and Pride said "it won't be this long again after this one."