Chattanooga Times Free Press

Loretta Lynn’s vocals and feisty spirit strong on her newest album

- BY KRISTIN M. HALL

Loretta Lynn, now 86, hasn’t been touring since she suffered a stroke in 2017, but the Kentucky singer-songwriter’s creative output remains strong on her new album, “Wouldn’t It Be Nice.”

For years, Lynn has been recording her extensive catalog of songs with producing help from John Carter Cash and her daughter, Patsy Lynn Russell, ensuring that her legacy as one of America’s greatest songwriter­s and singers will continue for the next generation even as she’s had to slow down her public appearance­s. Recorded before her stroke, the album was delayed a year as she focused on her physical health.

The collection of Lynnpenned songs stays true to the country music icon’s favored subject matters, from love, heartaches, drunk husbands and angry women, but also family and spirituali­ty.

Half new songs and half previously recorded, her high Appalachia­n vocals are unmistakab­ly clear and refreshing with simple bluegrass and acoustic instrument­ation that highlights the lyric and storytelli­ng behind her nearly 60-year career. For a woman who has outlived her husband, as well as some of her children, her loneliness and pain is heartbreak­ing on a song such as “I’m Dying for Someone to Live For.”

“Ruby’s Stool” sounds like a companion to her classic “Fist City,” as Lynn’s feisty side comes out in a barroom dispute with another woman. “Wouldn’t It Be Nice” is a sorrowful plea to her late husband Doolittle to give up drinking for the sake of their relationsh­ip and contains little gems of simple and personal writing, such as “love went to waste when my sexy lace couldn’t turn your face.”

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