AN ANTHEM BORN WAITING FOR A TIRE CHANGE. It was 1969, and Loretta Lynn found herself stuck at a local tire shop, but instead of getting impatient, she picked up her old $17 guitar and let the memories flow. For years, she’d wanted to tell the story of Butcher Hollow—of her Daddy working the coal mines, of her Mama’s hands raw from the washboard, of raising eight kids in a shack. The words just spilled out of her right there, a flood of barefoot summers and frozen creeks, and she quickly scratched down “ten verses of raw truth.” When she took that unfiltered honesty into the studio, she took charge, capturing the gravel and grace of her upbringing in a single, powerful performance that would become the anthem for every kid from the wrong side of the tracks.
About the Song Loretta Lynn’s “Coal Miner’s Daughter” stands as one of the most iconic and enduring songs in country…