Introduction:
Loretta Lynn was already 40 years into her career when she reminded everyone that she was Still Country on her 41st album, her first since releasing Who Was That Stranger in 1988. Released in 2000, Still Country featured Lynnâs own âGodâs Countryâ and âI Canât Hear the Music,â along with a cover of John Prineâs âSomewhere Someoneâs Falling in Love,â and a majority of tracks written by guest writers.
While Lynn was working on the album, she was hit with the flu, and unable to write new material, so Randy Scruggs, who produced Still Country, also penned the opening âOn My Own Againâ and âWorking Girl,â while âMurder on Music Rowâ writer Larry Cordle contributed the lead single âCountry in My Genes.â
On the album, Vince Gill and Max D. Barnes also co-wrote the ballad âTable for Two.â
A âParty of Oneâ
In songs, Lynn always documented her life with Oliver âDooâ Lynn, who died in 1996, from his cheating and alcohol abuse with hits âDonât Come Home Aâ Drinkinâ (With Lovinâ on Your Mind),â âYou Ainât Woman Enough (To Take My Man)â and âFist City,â and others chronicling their love, including âWouldnât It Be Great?â âLove Is The Foundation,â and âIâm All Heâs Got (But Heâs Got All Of Me),â among others.
Gillâs âTable for Twoâ lyrics read like something Lynn would have written for Doo, a sentimental reminisce of a love thatâs goneâI think of you / And cry like a baby / At a table for two.
I come here each night
And take at your picture
I sit here and wonder
Just where I went wrong
There is no end in sight
No hope for the future
I miss you all over
Every night that youâre gone
Table for two
Just me and your memory
Between you and me
Itâs over and done
I think of you
And cry like a baby
At a table for two
Party of one
 âMiss Being Mrs.â
Years before they collaborated on âTable for Two,â Lynn asked Gill to join her âLoretta Lynn & Friendsâ television special in 1995. When Still Country came around, Gill felt honored to write something for Lynn.
âAs a fellow songwriter, a songwriter of your stature to think enough of one of my songs to record it,â Gill told Lynn during a live performance in 2001. âYou have no idea what it means to me.â
In 2004, eight years after Dooâs death, Lynn released âMiss Being Mrs.â on her album Van Lear Rose. The ballad described her loneliness with him and being a widow. That year, she reunited with Gill to perform a duet of âMiss Being Mrs.â during the 39th annual Academy of Country Music Awards.
When Lynn died in 2022, Gill paid tribute to her at the Grand Ole Opry with his âGo Rest High on That Mountain.â
