“YOU’VE GOT TO CONTINUE TO GROW, OR YOU’RE JUST LIKE LAST NIGHT’S CORNBREAD — STALE AND DRY.” Loretta Lynn lived by that line longer than most singers live, period. Born in Butcher Hollow, Kentucky in 1932, she was a 15-year-old wife and a teenage mother before she ever picked up a guitar. By 1970, she was a No. 1 country star with “Coal Miner’s Daughter” — the song that turned her own life into a memoir, then into an Oscar-winning film. But the cornbread line wasn’t just talk. In 2004, at age 72, when most legends were settling into tribute shows, Lynn walked into a studio with Jack White of the White Stripes and made Van Lear Rose — an album that won two Grammys and put her on rock playlists for the first time in her life. 16 No. 1 country hits. 60 years on the road. The first woman ever named CMA Entertainer of the Year. She refused to go stale. On October 4, 2022, Loretta Lynn died peacefully in her sleep at her ranch in Hurricane Mills, Tennessee. She was 90. And the unfinished song her family found on her bedside notebook is something they have only just begun to share.
Loretta Lynn Never Went Stale “You’ve got to continue to grow, or you’re just like last night’s cornbread — stale…