FORGET “COAL MINER’S DAUGHTER.” THE SONG THAT TRULY DEFINED LORETTA LYNN WAS THE ONE SHE WROTE WITH FIRE IN HER EYES.Everyone knows Loretta Lynn grew up in a coal mining family in Butcher Hollow, Kentucky. But “Coal Miner’s Daughter” told you where she came from. It didn’t tell you who she was.The song that did was born backstage, ten minutes before a show. A young woman came to Loretta crying — her husband had brought his girlfriend to the concert and sat her right there in the second row. Loretta pulled back the curtain, looked at the other woman, and said: “Honey, she ain’t woman enough to take your man.”Then she walked into the dressing room and wrote the whole song before the lights came on. No rewrites. No second draft. Just fire on paper.It wasn’t “Fist City.” It wasn’t “Don’t Come Home A-Drinkin’.” It was the one that came first — the moment a coal miner’s daughter stopped being polite and started being Loretta Lynn.That song reached number 2 in 1966. But it did something no country song had done before — it let a woman fight back on the radio. And Nashville was never the same.Some artists write songs. Loretta Lynn drew a line in the dirt — and dared anyone to cross it.
Forget “Coal Miner’s Daughter.” The Song That Truly Defined Loretta Lynn Was Written in Ten Furious Minutes Most people think…