THE STROKE TOOK HER VOICE AT 85. THE BROKEN HIP TOOK HER ABILITY TO STAND. AT 88, FROM A STUDIO BUILT INSIDE HER OWN HOUSE, SHE RECORDED HER FIFTIETH ALBUM AND NAMED IT STILL WOMAN ENOUGH. She was Loretta Lynn — the coal miner’s daughter from Butcher Hollow, Kentucky who married at thirteen, raised four children before twenty, and changed country music by writing the songs other women were too afraid to sing. In May 2017, a stroke ended fifty-seven years of touring overnight. Eight months later, on January 1, 2018, she fell at her Hurricane Mills ranch and broke her hip. She was 85. Most artists in her position would have called it a career. Her family told her to rest. Her doctors said she wouldn’t sing again. Loretta looked her own broken body in the eye and said: “No.” There’s a reason Loretta refused to leave Hurricane Mills after the stroke — a reason that has everything to do with the small cemetery on the property where her husband Doo was buried in 1996. In March 2021, at 88 years old, she released Still Woman Enough. Fifty albums. A title pulled from a song she’d written five decades earlier. She brought Reba McEntire, Carrie Underwood, and Tanya Tucker onto the title track — three generations of women singing back the line she’d given them. She died nineteen months later, on October 4, 2022, in her sleep at the ranch. She was 90. Her daughter Peggy was beside her. That’s not a final album. That’s a coal miner’s daughter who refused to let a stroke decide which song would be her last.

Loretta Lynn’s Final Defiance: The Story Behind Still Woman Enough Loretta Lynn spent her life turning hard facts into songs.…

THEY HELD HIS FUNERAL AT WOODLAWN FUNERAL HOME IN NASHVILLE. 1,500 PEOPLE OVERFLOWED THE CHAPEL, INTO THREE SMALLER ROOMS, AND OUT INTO THE HALLWAY. Seventeen No. 1 hits. Two Grammys. The first Grammy ever awarded to a country song. Inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on October 11, 1982 — just eight weeks before the funeral. The night before the service, the funeral home opened its doors to the public. A woman named Gloria McCann and her father drove all night from Bainbridge, Georgia, just to sign the guest book. The guest book also held names from Winston-Salem, North Carolina, and Green Bay, Wisconsin. People came from everywhere because the music had reached everywhere. On the day of the funeral, Little Jimmy Dickens — who had helped discover Robbins nearly 30 years earlier — walked past the silver casket and wept openly. Brenda Lee stood nearby wiping tears from her eyes and said: “He made every fan and every person a part of whatever he was. When the fans voted, Marty always won.” The pastor offered the only eulogy: “The doctors did an awful good job of mending Marty’s heart. Marty himself mended thousands of broken hearts each year.” Then Brenda Lee sang One Day at a Time, and the room went quiet. He was 57. Nashville had just put his name in the Hall of Fame. It had no idea it was already saying goodbye.

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THE STROKE TOOK HER VOICE AT 85. THE BROKEN HIP TOOK HER ABILITY TO STAND. AT 88, FROM A STUDIO BUILT INSIDE HER OWN HOUSE, SHE RECORDED HER FIFTIETH ALBUM AND NAMED IT STILL WOMAN ENOUGH. She was Loretta Lynn — the coal miner’s daughter from Butcher Hollow, Kentucky who married at thirteen, raised four children before twenty, and changed country music by writing the songs other women were too afraid to sing. In May 2017, a stroke ended fifty-seven years of touring overnight. Eight months later, on January 1, 2018, she fell at her Hurricane Mills ranch and broke her hip. She was 85. Most artists in her position would have called it a career. Her family told her to rest. Her doctors said she wouldn’t sing again. Loretta looked her own broken body in the eye and said: “No.” There’s a reason Loretta refused to leave Hurricane Mills after the stroke — a reason that has everything to do with the small cemetery on the property where her husband Doo was buried in 1996. In March 2021, at 88 years old, she released Still Woman Enough. Fifty albums. A title pulled from a song she’d written five decades earlier. She brought Reba McEntire, Carrie Underwood, and Tanya Tucker onto the title track — three generations of women singing back the line she’d given them. She died nineteen months later, on October 4, 2022, in her sleep at the ranch. She was 90. Her daughter Peggy was beside her. That’s not a final album. That’s a coal miner’s daughter who refused to let a stroke decide which song would be her last.