Loretta Lynn in Omaha!
Exceptional Artists presents
Loretta Lynn
Friday, August 7, 2015 | 8:00 PM
Holland Performing Arts Center –
Peter Kiewit Concert Hall
American icon Loretta Lynn, who has delighted audiences for over fivedecades with her distinctive fusion of twang, grit and energy, makes a rare Omaha concert appearance at the Holland Performing Arts Center on Friday, August 7, at 8:00 p.m. The Coal Miner’s Daughter weaves tales of her journey from the Kentucky hills to Nashville superstardom with a tapestry of songs that helped shape the country music scene of today. Her string of hits include “You Ain’t Woman Enough (to Take My Man),” “Don’t Come Home A’Drinkin’ (with Lovin’ on Your Mind)” and her signature song, “Coal Miner’s Daughter.” She was inducted into the national Songwriters Hall of Fame in New York in 2008 and won a Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2010.
Tickets are priced at $79.25 and $64.25, and go on sale Friday, May 8, at www.TicketOmaha.com, by phone at 402-345-0606 or in person at the box office, located at 13th and Douglas streets.
Buyers beware: Ticket Omaha is the only authorized vendor for Holland Center and Orpheum performances; tickets purchased from other sources will be more expensive with higher handling fees and carry no guarantee of delivery or being honored for admission to the performance.
Loretta Lynn - Biography
“To make it in this business,
you either have to be first, great or different,” says living legend Loretta
Lynn. “And I was the first to ever go into Nashville, singin’ it like the women
lived it.”
This year marks the 50th
anniversary of Loretta’s arrival on the music scene with her 1960 debut single,
“I’m a Honky Tonk Girl.” Almost on the exact date of her golden anniversary in
show business, the Recording Academy gave her its Lifetime Achievement Award.
The honor was presented in Los Angeles on January 31, 2010. Loretta Lynn signed
her first recording contract on February 1, 1960, and within a matter of weeks,
she was at her first recording session.
In addition to being “first,”
she was also “great” and “different.” Loretta’s instantly recognizable delivery
is one of the greatest country-music voices in history. As for “different,” no
songwriter has a more distinctive body of work. In lyrics such as “Don’t Come
Home A-Drinkin’” and “Your Squaw Is on the War Path,” she refused to be any
man’s doormat. She challenged female rivals in “You Ain’t Woman Enough” and
“Fist City.” She showed tremendous blue-collar pride in “Coal Miner’s Daughter”
and “You’re Lookin’ at Country.” She is unafraid of controversy, whether the
topic is sex (“Wings Upon Your Horns”), divorce (“Rated X”), alcohol (“Wouldn’t
It Be Great”), war (“Dear Uncle Sam”), or “The Pill,” her celebration of sexual
liberation, which were among some of her songs to be banned by many radio
stations. Like the lady herself, Loretta Lynn’s songs shoot from the hip.
As millions who read her 1976
autobiography or saw its Oscar winning 1980 film treatment are aware, Loretta
is a Coal Miner’s Daughter who was raised in dire poverty in a remote
Appalachian Kentucky hamlet. Living in a mountain cabin with seven brothers and
sisters, she was surrounded by music as a child. “I thought everybody sang,
because everybody up there in Butcher Holler did,” she recalls. “Everybody in
my family sang. So I really didn’t understand until I left Butcher Holler that
there were some people who couldn’t. And it was kind of a shock.”
She famously married Oliver
“Doolittle” Lynn when she was a barely schooled child of 13. “Doo” was a
21-year-old war veteran with a reputation as a hell raiser. When she was seven
months pregnant with her first child, they moved far away from Appalachia to
Custer, Washington. By age 18, she had four children (two more, twins, came
along in 1964). Isolated from her native culture and burdened with domestic
work, she turned to music for solace.
“Before I was singing, I cleaned
house; I took in laundry; I picked berries. I worked seven days a week. I was a
housewife and mother for 15 years before I was an entertainer. And it wasn’t
like being a housewife today. It was doing hand laundry on a board and cooking
on an old coal stove. I grew a garden and canned what I grew. That’s what’s
real. I know how to survive.”
Doo heard her singing at her
chores and declared that she sounded just as good as anyone he heard on the
radio. He bought her a guitar and told her to learn how to play it and write
songs with it. Loretta says her songs were so forthright because she didn’t
know any better.
“After he got me the guitar, I
went out and bought a Country Song Roundup. I looked at the songs in there and thought, ‘Well, this ain’t
nothing. Anybody can do this.’ I just wrote about things that happened. I was
writing about things that nobody talked about in public, and I didn’t realize
that they didn’t. I was having babies and staying at home. I was writing about
life. That’s why I had songs banned.”
Doo began pushing her to perform
in area nightclubs. Executives from Zero Records heard her in a nightspot
across the border in Vancouver, Canada. She soon recorded her debut single,
“I’m a Honky Tonk Girl,” for the little label. Loretta made herself a fringed
cowgirl outfit, and she and Doo drove across the country in his old Mercury
sedan promoting the single at station after station.
Astonishingly, it worked. The
disc hit the popularity charts in the summer of 1960, and by the time the
couple made Nashville their full-time home in the fall of 1961, Loretta was
singing regularly on the Grand Ole Opry. The show’s Wilburn Brothers took her
under their wings. Teddy Wilburn helped to polish Loretta’s startlingly
original songwriting style. Brother Doyle Wilburn took a tape of her singing
“Fool #1” to producer Owen Bradley at Decca Records. Owen liked the song, but
was already working with Kitty Wells, Goldie Hill, Brenda Lee, and Patsy Cline
and said he didn’t need another female singer. Teddy told him that he couldn’t
have the song if he didn’t sign its singer. As a result, Brenda had a smash pop
hit with “Fool #1,” and Loretta got a Decca Records contract.
Like everyone else who
encountered her, Owen Bradley was smitten with Loretta’s innocence, individualism,
infectious wit, independent spirit, humorous candor, refreshing frankness, and
immense talent. In fact, he came to regard her as “the female Hank Williams.”
Loretta’s Decca chart debut came
with 1962’s “Success.” It became the first of her 51 top-10 hits and led to an
invitation to join the Grand Ole Opry cast later that year. Her fellow
Opry cast member Patsy Cline taught her how to dress, style her hair, and wear
make-up. The Wilburns began featuring her on their nationally syndicated TV series.
She sang a series of sassy domestic ditties with her childhood hero, Ernest
Tubb. As a solo, she hit her stride with “Wine, Women and Song” (1964) and
“Happy Birthday” (1965), both of them feisty, don’t-step-on-me numbers.
“She’s the spokesman for the
ladies,” observed the late Owen Bradley. “Loretta had a lot of different ideas,
and they were very fresh. Women’s lib was also coming on at that time. You have
to be in the right place at the right time. And I think Loretta was standing
right there.”
“Most of my songs were from the
women’s point of view,” Loretta wrote in her best-selling autobiography.
“That’s who I’m singing about and singing to during my shows. And the girls
know it….Most of my fan club is women, which is how I want it.” Among Loretta’s
finest moments on disc are such empowering female statements as “You Wanna Give
Me Lift” (1970), “I Wanna Be Free” (1971), “We’ve Come a Long Way Baby” (1978),
“Hey Loretta” (1973), “Love Is the Foundation” (1973), and the hilarious “One’s
on the Way” (1972). She memorably romanced and sassed Conway Twitty in a number
of hugely popular duet performances in 1970-1982.
In 1967, she began picking up
various Female Vocalist of the Year trophies. She and Conway also won a long
string of Duet of the Year awards beginning in 1971. The industry showered her
with BMI songwriting honors, Gold record plaques, a Grammy Award and other
accolades. In 1972, she became the first woman in history to win the Country
Music Association’s Entertainer of the Year trophy.
By the mid-1970s, Loretta Lynn
was an undeniable superstar. She was featured on the covers of Newsweek (1973), Redbook (1974), and many other mainstream national publications. With
her kooky humor, scrambled grammar, and unpretentious manner, she became a TV
talk-show favorite.
Loretta continued to dominate
the charts as the ‘70s drew to a close, scoring major hits with 1976’s
“Somebody Somewhere,” 1977’s “Out of My Head and Back in My Bed,” and 1979’s
“I’ve Got a Picture of Us on My Mind.” Her 1982 smash hits “I Lie” and “Making
Love from Memory” carried her into the new decade.
One of the most remarkable
things about Loretta Lynn is how she renews her creativity time and again. Two
years after she was inducted into the Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame in
1983, she was back on the charts with the hit, “Heart Don’t Do This to Me.” In
1988, the year she entered the Country Music Hall of Fame, Loretta recorded
with k.d. lang. She earned a Gold record in 1994 with Honky Tonk Angels, a trio CD with Dolly Parton and Tammy Wynette.
Doo died in 1996. Numb with
grief, Loretta admits that she was lost in a fog for more than a year. But she
came back again with a 2000 CD titled Still Country.
She also returned to the concert trail. “It’s a good thing, too,” she says.
“Because if I hadn’t, I would have been nuts by now. I would have been
completely nuts.”
Loretta published a second
memoir, Still Woman Enough, in 2002. She was honored at the Kennedy Center in 2003, yet
pushed forward again the following year by winning two Grammy Awards for Van Lear Rose,
a collaboration with rocker Jack White. Also in 2004, she published a book of
recipes and anecdotes titled You’re Cookin’ It Country.
She was inducted into the
national Songwriters Hall of Fame in New York in 2008. She may have won a
Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award in 2010, but Loretta Lynn’s life is still a
work in progress. She’s still out there on the road, still writing songs and
still recording them as only she can.
“I ain’t a star – a star is
something up in the night sky,” says Loretta Lynn. “People say to me, ‘You’re a
legend.’ I’m not a legend. I’m just a woman.”
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