Introduction

Author of some of the most important and impactful country songs known to human kind, the Butcher Hollow, Kentucky-born songwriter Loretta Lynn remains an icon in the genre. Her tracks like âCoal Minerâs Daughter,â âYou Ainât Woman Enough,â âThe Pill,â and âPortland Oregonâ will live on for generations. But itâs the story of her very first song that we wanted to highlight here today.
The Pacific Northwest Beginnings
It was in the Pacific Northwest where Lynn wrote what would become her debut single while living as a young homemaker in Washington. That song, âIâm a Honky Tonk Girl,â was recorded and released in the spring of 1960. Afterwards, driving from radio station to radio station, Lynn and her then-husband Oliver promoted the tune, which would go on to hit No. 14 on the Billboard country chart.
The tune, which is ultimately about personal loss, was inspired by a woman Lynn met during her travels in Washington who drunkenly told her one night about losing all she had, crying uncontrollably all the while. Shortly after, an inspired Lynn wrote âIâm a Honky Tonk Girlâ in 20 minutes in her bathroom, using a $17 guitar that her beau had bought her to pursue her dream. In that same session, Lynn also wrote the song âWhispering Sea,â which was the B-side for the single.
Said Lynn in 2010, âI just sat down with my guitar. ⌠I was outside and leaning up against the toilet in Washington State. And I sat there and wrote âHonkey Tonk Girlâ and âWhispering Sea.ââ
On the song, Lynn sings,
Ever since you left me, Iâve done nothing but wrong
Many nights Iâve laid awake and cried
We was so happy, my heart was in a whirl
But now Iâm a honky tonk girl
So turn that jukebox way up high
And fill my glass up while cry
Iâve lost everything in this world
And now Iâm a honky tonk girl
Getting It Out There
With âIâm a Honky Tonk Girlâ fresh in hand, Lynn took the track to a fella who helped pay for the Los Angeles recording. He also had a connection to the recently founded Zero Records, which became the country iconâs first-ever label. Lynn, after all, wasnât much for vetting people. Sheâd married Oliver in 1948 after only knowing him for a month. Together, they moved from the Bluegrass State to Custer, Washington, a logging town, when Lynn was seven months pregnant.
In 1953, Lynn started to teach herself to play on the $17 guitar, fitting her lyrics to music. Shortly after, she started her first band, Loretta & the Trailblazers, playing various Washington venues. She even won a talent contest in Tacoma hosted by country icon Buck Owens, originator of the Bakersfield (California) country sound, who was also living in the Pacific Northwest at the time.
The Songâs Resonance
Lynn cut âIâm a Honky Tonk Girlâ in February 1960 at the Western Recorders Studio with the help of musician Speedy West, who played slide guitar. The song was produced by Don Grashey. It was released the next month and all the promotion was done by Lynn and her husband. She said, âWe were pitiful. ⌠Because we were too poor to stay in hotels, we slept in the car and ate baloney and cheese sandwiches in the parks. ⌠Then weâd go into the radio station and pester the DJ to play my record. We didnât care if it was a 500-watt local station or a 50,000-watt clear-channel station. Weâd hit them all. We were on the road three months.â
But in the end, it worked. It got her on Billboard and portended a groundbreaking, essential career. Check out the song here below.