Introduction:
A 15-year-old coal minerâs daughter, Loretta Lynn first met 21-year-old Oliver Vanetta Lynn (also nicknamed âDoolittle,â âDoo,â and âMooneyâ) at a pie social in Butcher Hollow, Kentucky, and married soon after in 1948. By the end of that year, Lynn was already pregnant with the first of their six children they would have together, Betty Sue (1948-2013).
The Lynnsâ tumultuous marriage, fueled by Oliverâs drinking and infidelity, lasted nearly 50 years until his death at 69 in 1996. Their union also inspired some of Lorettaâs most honest and exposed songs, some chronicling his cheating and alcohol abuseâincluding hits âDonât Come Home Aâ Drinkinâ (With Lovinâ on Your Mind),â âYou Ainât Woman Enough (To Take My Man)â and âFist Cityââand others documenting their love, including âLove Is The Foundationâ and âIâm All Heâs Got (But Heâs Got All Of Me).â
â[We had] lots of ups and downs,â said Lynn in 2010. âHe never hit me one time that I didnât hit him back twice.â
Despite their turbulent love, Lynn credited âDooâ with driving her careerâfrom purchasing her first guitar and lining up radio spots to working as her talent manager for years. âI married Doo when I wasnât but a child and he was my life from that day on,â said Lynn in her 2002 memoir Still Woman Enough. âBut as important as my youth and upbringing was, thereâs something else that made me stick to Doo. He thought I was something special, more special than anyone else in the world, and never let me forget it. That belief would be hard to shove out the door.â
Lynn added, âDoo was my security, my safety net. And just remember, Iâm explaininâ, not excusinâ⌠Doo was a good man and a hard worker. But he was an alcoholic, and it affected our marriage all the way through.â
âLet the Bottle Waitâ
In 1985, Loretta wrote her final song to Doo before his death, âWouldnât It Be Great?â Recorded in Nashville and released on Lynnâs 1985 album Just a Woman, the song is her asking her husband to say âI love youâ once moreâSay you love me just one time, with a sober mind.
âMy husband liked to drink a lot and thatâs where that song comes from,â said Lynn. ââSay you love me just one time, with a sober mind. I always liked that song, but I never liked to sing it around Doo.â
Wouldnât it be fine if you could say you love me
Just one time with a sober mind?
Wouldnât that be fine, now wouldnât that be fine?
Wouldnât it be great if you could love me first
And let the bottle wait?
Now wouldnât that be great, now wouldnât that be great?
Wouldnât it be great, hey, hey, wouldnât that be great?
Throw the old glass crutch away and watch it break
Wouldnât it be great, hey, hey, wouldnât that be great?
Lord, itâs for our sake, now wouldnât that be great?
In the name of love, whatâs a man so great
Be thinking of? In the name of love
What a man he was
âWouldnât It Be Greatâ was re-recorded by Lynn, along with Dolly Parton and Tammy Wynette on the trioâs 1993 collaborative album Honky Tonk Angels. In 2018, Lynn released her final recording of the song on her penultimate album of the same name, which was produced by her daughter Patsy Lynn Russell and John Carter Cash.
âThat song just always meant so much to me because of the lyrics âWhen my fancy lace couldnât turn your face,ââ said Lynn Russell of her motherâs song. âIt was just so powerful and was a song that needed to be recorded for this album with Loretta. It shows just how masterful my mom is with writing down her feelings.â
