Two Songwriters, Two Paths — One Shared Legacy
Loretta Lynn and Todd Snider may have carved out very different musical journeys, but both became cornerstones of the Americana songwriting tradition. Their secret? A sharp, empathetic ability to turn everyday life into lyrical gold — sometimes tender, sometimes funny, always unmistakably human. So when the two finally found themselves writing together, magic wasn’t just possible…it was guaranteed.
Todd Snider Remembers Co-Writing With Loretta Lynn
Just three days after Loretta Lynn passed away in 2022 at her Hurricane Mills home, Todd Snider honored her memory by sharing a story that was equal parts touching and hilarious. The two had been writing together inside her cabin in Tennessee when Lynn gave him an unexpected instruction.
“We were playing guitars, talking about what to write,” Snider recalled. “She said, ‘Go look in that refrigerator, Todd.’”
When he opened the fridge, instead of food, out tumbled stacks of yellow legal pads — every sheet scribbled with Loretta’s handwritten lyrics, some dating back to the 1960s. The entire fridge was packed full of them.
Then she gave the most Loretta Lynn direction possible:
“Smoke one of your doobies and go through those. See if anything jumps out at you.”
A Lyric Scrap Becomes a Song
As Snider sifted through the decades of ideas, one particular lyric caught his attention:
“I love you more than she ever will, but the only way she can get a man is steal.
I don’t know if I should tell you this or not, but she’s got everything it takes to take everything you’ve got.”
It was exactly what he’d been looking for.
When he showed it to Loretta, she replied without missing a beat:
“Oh yeah. I remember that little b**.”**
Classic Loretta — the same woman who once wrote “Fist City.”
Snider came up with a melody, and Loretta immediately approved: “That was it.”
Then, as he described, she effortlessly finished the rest, speaking as if “we” had written it together.
“She said, ‘Always keep the poetry out.’ She said they ruined lyrics,” Snider shared. “Swoon.”
Loretta Lynn Dancing at Johnny Cash’s Cabin
Snider also revealed a story about Loretta recording their song in the cabin where Johnny Cash had passed away. John Carter Cash later told him that Loretta would park her tour bus next to the cabin and sleep there.
One night at 3 a.m., John Carter heard old country music drifting in through his window. He looked outside and saw Loretta Lynn — barefoot, spinning in the grass like a teenager.
She was 80 years old.
When he asked her the next morning what she was doing, she simply said,
“I was dancing with your dad.”
The next night, she did it again.
Todd Snider’s Passing and Their Shared Legacy
Snider passed away on November 15, 2025, three years after writing that tribute to Loretta. Like her, he left behind a deeply respected body of work cherished by fellow songwriters and fans alike.
It’s comforting to imagine the two of them reunited somewhere — guitars in hand, cracking jokes, swapping stories, and filling the room with the same warmth and mischief they brought to their music.
And maybe, just maybe, Johnny Cash is there too.


