These early '70s renditions capture the "First Lady of Country Music" during her hitmaking prime.
Rod Brakes is a music journalist with an expertise in guitars. [Guitar World](https://www.guitarworld.com/author/rod-brakes) (opens in new tab), [Guitar Player](https://www.guitarplayer.com/author/rod-brakes) (opens in new tab) and [MusicRadar](https://www.musicradar.com/author/rod-brakes) (opens in new tab) in addition to specialist music books, blogs and social media. [here](https://target.georiot.com/Proxy.ashx?tsid=105416&GR_URL=https%3A%2F%2Famazon.com%2FLoretta-Lynn%2Fe%2FB000APZXL6%3Ftag%3Dhawk-future-20%26ascsubtag%3Dguitarplayer-gb-1251104200021427200-20) (opens in new tab). [autobiography](https://target.georiot.com/Proxy.ashx?tsid=105416&GR_URL=https%3A%2F%2Famazon.com%2FCoal-Miners-Daughter-Loretta-Lynn-ebook%2Fdp%2FB084MDJMFV%3Ftag%3Dhawk-future-20%26ascsubtag%3Dguitarplayer-gb-1377103520250609200-20) (opens in new tab), a 1980 [biographic film](https://target.georiot.com/Proxy.ashx?tsid=105416&GR_URL=https%3A%2F%2Famazon.com%2FCoal-Miners-Daughter-25th-Anniversary%2Fdp%2FB0009R1TJ0%3Ftag%3Dhawk-future-20%26ascsubtag%3Dguitarplayer-gb-1384400215636566500-20) (opens in new tab) of the same name became one of the year’s highest grossing movies. [Coal Miner's Daughter](https://target.georiot.com/Proxy.ashx?tsid=105416&GR_URL=https%3A%2F%2Famazon.com%2FCoal-Miners-Daughter-Various-Artists%2Fdp%2FB00004C4Q6%3Ftag%3Dhawk-future-20%26ascsubtag%3Dguitarplayer-gb-1248046472512226600-20) (opens in new tab) album. Further success came in 1967 following the release of the single “Don't Come Home A-Drinkin' (With Lovin' on Your Mind).”
Loretta Lynn poses for a portrait wearing a blue denim suit with cows in the background leaning up against a fence in circa 1972.By Michael Ochs Archives/Getty ...
An industry erupted to try to bring people out of the hollows and into the modern world. From the time Appalachia became the face of rural poverty, it’s been a metaphor for progress and its absence. For most of the 20th century, critics of modernity depicted it as an idyllic place where traditional lifestyles have been preserved, while social reformers saw it as proof of social exclusion and the perils of capitalism. She wrote about love, anger, and a certain milieu so well because she lived it, and it turned her into a sort of global ambassador for Southern women. Lynn and her music embodied one chapter of that transformation and what it meant for regular people, especially women, across America. Lynn’s honky-tonk sometimes can seem much rawer and sonically remote from the current-day country charts, but she has always been an icon and a touchstone for younger artists, in part because she has been such a constant presence in the industry.
Loretta Lynn, one of the iconic voices in country music, has died at the age of 90. In a statement, her family said she passed away peacefully at her ...
What she did for feminism, and women’s rights in a time period, in a genre of music that was the hardest to do it in, is just outstanding and will live on for a long time. In 2013, she was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Barack Obama. She stopped touring in 2017 after a stroke and suffered a broken hip after falling at home the following year. She confessed that the relationship was occasionally violent, although she stressed that she gave as good as she got – the couple stayed together for 48 years until Oliver’s death in 1996. Loretta’s pie was won by the 21-year-old soldier Oliver Lynn – a month later, they married and moved to Custer, Washington, where they raised four children. In a statement, her family said she passed away peacefully at her “beloved ranch in Hurricane Mills” in Tennessee on the morning of 4 October.
A spokeswoman for white, rural, working-class women, Loretta Lynn used music to articulate the fears, dreams, and anger of women living in a patriarchal ...
Lynn gave them a social and political voice, and helped make country music a genre relevant to the complexities of women’s lives. Lynn’s legacy lives on in the music of [The Conversation](https://theconversation.com) under a Creative Commons license. Nonetheless, the recording became her biggest seller in 1975 and furthered Lynn’s reputation as a spokeswoman for white rural working-class women. She grew up in poverty in a small Kentucky [mining town](https://www.jstor.org/stable/3051817?mag=loretta-lynn-more-than-a-great-songwriter), marrying and starting a family as a teenager before reaching unprecedented heights of commercial success as a recording artist of modern country music. It also addressed the right for women to take control over their bodies and reproduction. It was a rare foray into the topic of women’s reproductive rights for country music. Meanwhile, the song arrangements of Owen Bradley of Decca Records directed Lynn’s musical talents to a broad audience. “Personally, I think you should prevent unwanted pregnancy rather than get an abortion. In typical fashion, though, Lynn approached the issue from the perspective of a rural working-class woman: [Kitty Wells](https://www.latimes.com/local/obituaries/la-me-kitty-wells-20120717-story.html), [Jean Shepard](https://www.tennessean.com/story/entertainment/music/2016/09/25/country-music-hall-famer-jean-shepard-dead-82/76568704/), and other women in country music who were willing to speak up about the concerns of American women. [death at the age of 90](https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/04/arts/music/loretta-lynn-dead.html) marks the end of a remarkable life of achievement in country music.
The then-ascendant guitar hero helped a legendary singer find her voice once again, and create the most critically and commercially successful album of her ...
Though she had found great success in 1993 with her Honky Tonk Angels collaboration with Dolly Parton and Tammy Wynette, the steady stream of solo country hits Lynn had enjoyed for decades had largely dried up. "She was like a mother figure to me and also a very good friend at times. Though White's blues and hard-rock touchstones are obvious in his music, and quite well-documented, there's a clear strain of country that runs through his work with the White Stripes and Raconteurs. In the early 2000s, Lynn and White found themselves on opposite career trajectories. You can watch the performance in full below. "I almost felt like she didn’t even realize it, you know.
Trump-loving country legend resented sexism but rejected feminism — and that's how a lot of red-state women live.
A "strong" woman is a woman like the one Loretta Lynn portrays in her music: She accepts male dominance and is proud of herself for surviving it. To them, male chauvinism is like the weather; it can't be changed and it does no good to challenge it. [Tom Roland at Billboard writes](https://www.billboard.com/music/country/loretta-lynn-dead-country-progressive-trailblazer-1235149928/) about "the progressivism at the heart of her songs" that he argues portray women as "strong, self-directed adults willing and able to stand up for themselves at a time when the culture generally discouraged it." But at the end of the day, they also don't want to be called "man-haters," which is absolutely what's coming at you if you speak up for feminist values too forcefully. But they also assume that a woman's lot in life depends on securing and keeping a man, even at the cost of throwing down with other women while he gloats in the corner. Instead, the narrator celebrates the fact that now she can go out with her husband instead of staying at home with a baby, making it easier to block him from having sex with other women. [Slate critic Carl Wilson](https://slate.com/culture/2022/10/loretta-lynn-dead-pill-coal-miners-daughter.html) astutely notes, the song "One's on the Way" captures this dynamic in Lynn's music well. [Yes, she said in 2016](https://www.cbc.ca/news/entertainment/loretta-lynn-1.6605381), "I didn't write for the men; I wrote for us women." As someone who is not a tourist in the country music world, however, I don't see Lynn as a contradiction in any way. Lynn's music is the music of resignation. I didn't want to hear the pseudo-intellectual assertion that you must "separate the art from the artist" in response, a claim rooted in half-remembered English lit classes. I did not look forward to people calling her a "feminist," simply because she had a brash sound and tough-girl lyrics — or even because her songs are often about how much men suck.
CMT Remembers: Loretta Lynn special airs before the 1980 movie starring Sissy Spacek. PBS repeats its American Masters biography/documentary.
Tonight’s episode examines Washington’s legacy and how her family has coped after tragedy. Her death was originally ruled a suicide but her family fought for seven years to have the case reexamined, and someone was eventually charged with her murder. ‘Fire Country’ (9 p.m., CBS) We hear the story of beloved mother and teacher Lyntell Washington, murdered in 2016 in Louisiana. ](https://www.newsobserver.com/entertainment/tv/warm-tv-blog) ‘Dateline NBC’ (9 p.m., NBC)
Family and friends said farewell to country music icon Loretta Lynn on Friday as she was laid to rest on her ranch grounds in Hurricane Mills.
Country music star Loretta Lynn died Oct. 4 at the age of 90. Her life story was made famous in the film Coal Miner's Daughter. She had 16 No.
She plays a writer who wants to reboot an old family sitcom from the early 2000s — but make it darker and edgier. She spoke with Terry Gross in 2010. Best Of: Loretta Lynn / Rachel Bloom
Country music icon Loretta Lynn died at the age of 90 and the singer had reportedly planned her funeral service before her death.
The Grammy winner reportedly also asked her children and grandchildren to perform at her funeral. She was reportedly planning to put one of her Nashville homes up for sale. [WKRN.com](https://www.wkrn.com/news/local-news/surreal-loretta-lynn-laid-to-rest/) reported that Loretta was laid to rest on Friday, October 7th, on her ranch grounds in Hurricane Mills. “She wants all of her fans to be able to attend, and there’s plenty of room at the ranch.” As per the outlet, her friends revealed at the time that the singer was settling her estate before her death. [Loretta Lynn](/en-gb/topic/loretta-lynn/) passed away at the age of 90 on Tuesday, October 4th, and the renowned singer had reportedly planned her funeral service before her death.
At the peak of her fame in the 1960s and 1970s, Lynn was part of a key change in the politics of country music — a change akin to the shifting partisan ...
That would have thrown the election to the House of Representatives, where the outcome was far from clear. He did win two Southern states, and had he won a few more he could have denied Nixon needed to win an outright majority in the Electoral College. In the years of Lynn's early career, in the 1960s and 1970s, when those folk and rock heroes were increasingly identified with causes of the left, the issues drove away many traditional Democrats. Lynn was always about the private pride made public, and the sweetness of the bond. For generations, those voters had been the bedrock of the Democratic Party. With the Great Depression and the New Deal in the 1930s, Democrats had greater appeal in the rest of rural America, even while remaining strongest in the rural South. Before World War II, country music was often called "hillbilly," according to the authoritative historian of the genre, Bill C. Country music artists seemed to be circling the wagons in defense of America as they – and their fans – remembered it. Trump was able to tap the feisty, often defensive spirit that has long informed the Appalachian region (broadly defined) that spawned much of what Americans came to call "country western." Bush had been born in New England and raised in Washington, D.C., as the son of a senator from Connecticut, Bush went from a super-elite private prep school to Yale. After Navy service and a few years in Midland, Texas, setting up an oil business, he moved to the Silk Stocking section of Houston and from there back to Washington, where he was a member of Congress, director of the CIA, chairman of the Republican Party and Ronald Reagan's vice president. (The 2016 Democratic nominee had alienated some country music fans with what seemed a slighting reference to the phrase "Stand By Your Man," the title of Tammy Wynette's ethos-defining song about marriage.
Keith Urban knows how to throw one heck of a homecoming party. The longtime hitmaking country singer and his band returned Friday to Bridgestone Arena, ...
[Tyler Hubbard, formerly of country-pop hitmaking duo Florida Georgia Line,](https://www.tennessean.com/story/entertainment/2022/09/02/florida-georgia-line-officially-split-fully-embarking-solo-careers-retrospective/7969959001/) followed Andress with a new set of songs, including his debut solo single "5 Foot 9" and "Dancin' In The Country," among others. [Ingrid Andress ](https://www.tennessean.com/story/entertainment/2022/09/28/ingrid-andress-caitlyn-smith-lainey-wilson-showcase-star-making-songs/69523598007/)opened the show with a half-hour set that included an only-in-Nashville surprise: "Body Like A Backroad" singer Sam Hunt. He showcased the guitar playing that helped build his elastic sound with a jazz-inspired jam during "God Whispered Your Name" and an extended take on "Long Hot Summer." "Did you have a good time?" "I hope I get to see you a whole lot sooner than it's been. Combs stepped on stage to sing lead vocals on an acoustic take of his turn-your-luck-around tune, but that role actually went to the Bridgestone Arena audience eager to belt every line.