Sometimes I think our problems are made worse by the kind of business we’re in. Playing these road shows is a weird experience.
Meaning of the quote
The musician Loretta Lynn says that the kind of work she does, like going on long tours and performing shows in different places, can make her problems even harder to deal with. She finds the experience of going on these "road shows" to be really strange and unusual.
About Loretta Lynn
Loretta Lynn was an iconic American country music singer and songwriter who had an illustrious career spanning six decades. She released multiple gold albums, scored 24 number-one hit singles, and was the most awarded female country recording artist of all time. Lynn’s life story was even immortalized in the 1980 musical film ‘Coal Miner’s Daughter’.
More quotes from Loretta Lynn
I try to visit people in hospitals when I can, smiling and joking while I’m there. But when I leave, I just start crying.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’ve been married to the same man for all this time. The way we fight sometimes, you can tell.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Really, I don’t know what I’d do with myself if I retire. Wash dishes?
American country singer (1932-2022)
I never rode in an automobile until I was 12.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Back then, we didn’t know we were poor, and people were more proud then.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I know what it’s like to be pregnant and nervous and poor.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’m not a big fan of Women’s Liberation, but maybe it will help women stand up for the respect they’re due.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’ve always been full of nervous energy, but I’m not really as happy as I seem.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’m always making Butcher Holler sound like the most backward part of the United States-and I think maybe it is.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Being on stage is the best part of my career. I just say whatever comes into my head. It’s the only time I feel grown-up and in control of things.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’ve been around a long time, and life still has a whole lot of surprises for me.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I believe in horoscopes. I was born under the sign of the Ram, which means I’m headstrong, don’t like people telling me what to do.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I was married when I wasn’t quite 14 and had four babies by the time I was 18.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I believe in education and wish I had a better one.
American country singer (1932-2022)
We still lend our old house out to relatives. They keep a guest book for my fans to sign.
American country singer (1932-2022)
The country is making a big mistake not teaching kids to cook and raise a garden and build fires.
American country singer (1932-2022)
We used to go around tipping outhouses over, or turning over corn shocks on Halloween. Anything to be mean.
American country singer (1932-2022)
The night I announced I was getting married, Daddy paced for hours on the porch.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Once in a while I get inspired and finish my act with the hillbilly hoedown.
American country singer (1932-2022)
In the long run, you make your own luck – good, bad, or indifferent.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Doo never actually made moonshine, but he hauled about an ocean of it.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I avoid going through places where there’s too much poverty.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I think Charley Pride has been one of the best things to happen to country music, to prove it belongs to everybody.
American country singer (1932-2022)
My biggest hero, Gregory Peck, was my birthday present on April 14, 1973. I just sat and stared at him.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I love people and I love to sing, and that’s what keeps me going.
American country singer (1932-2022)
My attitude toward men who mess around is simple: If you find ’em, kill ’em.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I never knew any Jews until I got into show business. I’ve found them to be real smart and good workers.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I don’t go to church regular. But I pray for answers to my problems.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I was the first woman ever named Entertainer of the Year in country music.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Because Olivia Newton-John wasn’t from Nashville, they didn’t like her winning our awards. I’ve got no complaints.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Some of my friends who know me best say they wouldn’t trade places with me for $1 million because of the pace I lead.
American country singer (1932-2022)
There’s more women stars in Nashville all the time. They’re proving they can do the job the same as a man.
American country singer (1932-2022)
When I’d tell people I like country music they’d get this look on their faces. People were kind of ashamed of country.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Do the best you can with yourself and hope for the best.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I didn’t know how babies were made until I was pregnant with my fourth child.
American country singer (1932-2022)
A woman’s two cents worth is worth two cents in the music business.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I wasn’t for Vietnam. When I told that to the hippie newspaper, all my people got nervous.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I refuse to be pushed around anymore.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’ve seen every highway in the United States, and they all look alike to me.
American country singer (1932-2022)
You ain’t supposed to get salmon when they’re swimming upstream to spawn. But if you’re hungry, you do.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’d love to travel to the Holy Land.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I don’t like to talk about things where you’re going to gt one side or the other unhappy. My music has no politics.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Doolittle looked just like a little toy soldier the first time I ever saw him.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I loved being outside. We’d hold lightning bugs in our fingers and pretend they were diamond rings.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I want more out of life than I’ve gotten.
American country singer (1932-2022)
You can’t be halfway in this business. If you don’t meet the fans, you lose all you’ve got.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I wouldn’t have dared ask God for all that He’s given me. I couldn’t have done it on my own. I thank God every day for what I have.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’m trying to lead a good Christian life, so there ain’t too much spicy to tell about me.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Who wants to be married to a grandfather?
American country singer (1932-2022)
You get used to sadness, growing up in the mountains, I guess.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Mommy smoked but she didn’t want us to. She saw smoke coming out of the barn one time, so we got whipped.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Nobody’s perfect. The only one that ever was, was crucified.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’m proud of being part Cherokee, and I think it’s time all us Indians felt the same way.
American country singer (1932-2022)
When something is bothering me, I write a song that tells my feelings.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’d love to work more with the American Indians, my people.
American country singer (1932-2022)
My life has run from misery to happiness.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I know there’s some kind of history to mountain music-like it came from Ireland or England or Scotland and we kept up the tradition.
American country singer (1932-2022)
How do you measure your value?
American country singer (1932-2022)
Me and my partner, Conway Twitty, cleaned up at the 1972 Country Music Association Awards.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I get along with all the women singers, but especially Dolly Parton. We talk the same hillbilly language.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Growing up in eastern Kentucky like I did, I’m used to having a few guns around to protect me.
American country singer (1932-2022)
When I first came to Nashville, people hardly gave country music any respect. We lived in old cars and dirty hotels, and we ate when we could.
American country singer (1932-2022)
A lot of people say I’d miss show business if I quit. I’d miss some of it. Now it’s the only life I know.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Sometimes I think our problems are made worse by the kind of business we’re in. Playing these road shows is a weird experience.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I’ve seen country music go uptown, like we say, and I’m proud I was there when it happened.
American country singer (1932-2022)
There’s always been a man telling me what to do.
American country singer (1932-2022)
When all those city folks try to fix up my talking, all they do is mess me up.
American country singer (1932-2022)
Daddy was real gentle with kids. That’s why I expected so much out of marriage, figuring that all men should be steady and pleasant.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I ain’t got much education, but I got some sense.
American country singer (1932-2022)
I won all the blue ribbons for canning at the state fair.
American country singer (1932-2022)