HER VOICE WAS FADING, HER BODY WAS BROKEN — BUT LORETTA LYNN RECORDED HER FINAL ALBUM FROM HOME, AND THE ENGINEERS HAD TO PAUSE THE SESSION BECAUSE THEY COULDN’T STOP CRYING.After a stroke in 2017 and a broken hip shortly after, doctors said Loretta Lynn would never sing again. She was 85. The world assumed the Coal Miner’s Daughter had sung her last note.They were wrong.From her Hurricane Mills ranch, Loretta built a home studio and recorded what became her final album. Her voice trembled. Her body was fragile. But every crack carried sixty years of heartbreak no young singer could ever fake.Session musicians said they’d never experienced anything like it. Some had to leave the room. When Loretta sang about Butcher Hollow and the life she’d survived, the air went still.”I’ve been through it all, honey,” she once said. “And I’m still here. That’s worth singing about.”She didn’t record it to prove anything. She recorded it because music was the only language her soul ever knew.
Her Voice Was Fading, Her Body Was Broken — But Loretta Lynn Still Had One More Song to Sing By…