. During one of those minutes, the nation icon, who died at age 90 on Oct. 4, reflected with her trademark modesty on what she trusted her legacy would be.

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“I might want to be recollected that,” she said, “similarly as a decent person.”

Goodness, Loretta Lynn. You will be associated with so a lot of more — and your kindred legends, musical descendants, loved ones all vouched for that during “Coal Miner’s Daughter: A Celebration of the Life and Music of Loretta Lynn,” an hour and a half recognition in expressed words and song that aired live on CMT.

The occasion was held, fittingly, at the Grand Ole Opry House: Host Jenna Bramble Hager noticed that Lynn once said becoming an Opry part was “the greatest snapshot of my life.”

“Once more well, tonight,” Hager said, “even after she’s gone, she fills it.”

Indeed, the house was packed with invited visitors, yet additionally about 1,500 fans sufficiently fortunate to snag free tickets on a the early bird gets the worm basis.

Some, Hager said from the stage, had started lining up at 4 a.m. to assure they would be available for the stirring farewell. Wynonna Judd set a serious vibe at the start, asserting her vocal powers in a majestic rendering of the gospel standard, “How Great Thou Art,” backed by harmonies from the Gaither Vocal Band and her late mother Naomi’s husband, Larry Strickland.

In any case, the seriousness immediately gave way to many other states of mind that mirrored Lynn’s personality and career.

Arriving with a six-string banjo, country rocker Keith Urban put some extra twang in his voice for Lynn’s 1971 bright hit, “You’re Lookin’ at Country.” He also reminisced about being her “date” at the 2005 CMT awards, at her invitation, and how she was back making playful demands for her 87th birthday bash, an all-star recognition concert at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena in 2018.

Whenever that show was announced, Lynn mischievously mentioned Urban jump out of a cake onstage — he obliged — and on Sunday, Urban revealed that Lynn made sure of his appearance with a pointed voicemail, which he shared with the audience. “Hello, Keith, this is Loretta,” the familiar voice livened from Urban’s phone, which he held to the microphone, “and I’m having a birthday, and I want to see your butt there.” “So of course I was there,” Urban told the group. “I came running then. I came running tonight. I will always come running for Miss Loretta.”

Urban was the first of several big names tapped to perform a Lynn standard. Tanya Exhaust loaned her soul-filled voice to “Blue Kentucky Young lady.” (“Miss you, Retty,” she interjected as she sang.) And Americana star Margo Cost was a natural to sing perhaps Lynn’s most controversial hit, “The Pill,” delivering it with sassy intensity on a retro corded microphone.

Lynn’s signature song, “Coal Miner’s Daughter,” expected four ladies to do it full equity. Country supergroup the Highwomen — Brandi Carlile, Natalie Hemby and Amanda Shires, along with Brittney Spencer (standing in for Maren Morris, who had an event date) — shut the show by each taking a refrain.

(It’s a rare down home song without a melody.) The four traded lines on the fifth refrain before joining forces on the 6th.

Other song-to-singer matches must be considered fresh: Darius Rucker took on “Fist City,” Lynn’s feisty response to the tramp moving in on her husband.

And King George Strait paid his honors to the nation sovereign with her famously tart message to her boozing man: “Don’t Get back home A-Drinkin (With Lovin’ on Your Mind).”

Certainly nobody would have gotten a bigger remove from the two renditions more than Lynn, who pioneered ladies’ strengthening songs in the male-dominated kind.

Strait extended his regard and affection at song’s end, tapping his heart and pointing heavenward.

Carlile took a performance go to offer a twofold recognition with a profound performance of “She Has You,” a No. 1 hit for Patsy Cline in 1962 and a No. 1 hit for Lynn 15 years later. The song appeared on Lynn’s recognition album to her dear companion, who was killed in a private plane crash in 1963 — and Cline’s daughter, Julie Fudge, was in the audience to hear Carlile sing it.

“I’m gonna sing this for Loretta and her sweetheart Patsy up in heaven,” Carlile announced in her introduction. Minimal Big Town (minus Philip Sweet, who was sick with seasonal influenza) carried their harmonies to a profound cut on the 1993 album, Honky Tonk Angels, a collaborative venture by Lynn, Cart Parton and Tammy Wynette.

Named “Let Her Fly,” it was composed by Parton for simply such a second: “Goodness, she’s an angel/Let her fly, let her fly/She’s gone home to brilliance/To her home in the sky.” One of the evening’s most passionate ovations went to Lynn’s 23-year-old granddaughter, Emmy Russell, an as of late marked Nashville songwriter, and Willie Nelson’s son, Americana star Lukas Nelson.

The two claimed their inheritance with “Lay Me Down,” a song that Lynn and Willie Nelson duetted on her 2016 album, Round trip.

It was the only time the two Hall of Fame individuals recorded together, and the song, composed by Lynn, is a poignant acceptance of death: “When they lay me down someday/My spirit will rise, then fly away/This old world will pivot/I’ll find a sense of contentment when they lay me down.” The group lifted, as one, on the last note of the performance.

Alan Jackson, whom Lynn inducted into the Blue grass Music Hall of Fame in 2018 in one of her last open appearances, performed his own song about the here-after, “Where Her Heart Has Always Been,” which he wrote in recognition for his late mother and her own eternal love for his father.

Lynn, obviously, was married to her young life sweetheart, Oliver “Doolittle” Lynn, for 48 years before his death in 1996.

“I never let [Lynn] know this, however she reminded me a great deal of my momma,” Jackson said in his introduction. “They looked somewhat alike. Their personalities were a ton alike.

They were both real outgoing, tell you exactly what’s on their mind, yet at the same extremely sweet and genuine. … At the point when my momma passed away, I composed this song for her, and when they asked me to sing for Loretta tonight, I just felt like the words felt right, and the family was adequately kind to allow me to sing this song.”

Major celebrity Jack White, who delivered Van Lear Rose, Lynn’s 2004 Grammy-winning album, performed its title track, which Lynn composed as a recognition for her mother.

In Margo Value’s introduction, she noticed that White became captivated with Lynn and her music as a 9-year-old kid watching Coal Miner’s Daughter, the 1980 bio-pic based on her life — eventually leading to his decision to dedicate his most memorable White Stripes album to her.

The two later bonded over chicken and dumplings that the nation star cooked and served the stone ‘n’ roller at her home.

White brought all his stone chops to his performance, accompanying himself on electric guitar and showing how easily Lynn’s music transcends the nation type. Artists of other classes also loaned their voices, in spoken accolade, to Lynn’s far reaching impact.

“I’m simply amazed at the number of individuals Loretta that has united,” people pop icon Sheryl Crow said in her testimonial. “She’s such a great deal bigger than down home music.”

In his video accolade, Youngster Rock reminisced about his fellowship with Lynn and her visits to his studio. Country-turned-pop superstar Taylor Quick, in another video accolade, offered her gratitude to Lynn “for being an example for songwriters everywhere, except most specifically female songwriters … She was so ahead of her time.”

Obviously, a legion of country icons appeared on stage or in recordings to pay homage to their sovereign, among them Barbara Mandrell, Miranda Lambert, Reba McEntire, Marty Stuart and Kacey Musgraves. They reached for a wide array of descriptors to capture the completion of Lynn’s personality: gutsy, creative, interesting, wild, wise, kind, loving, practical. And they noticed her many roles: trailblazer, narrator, gifted songwriter, strong performer, spouse, mother, grandmother, sweetheart.

“She didn’t simply push boundaries for ladies in down home music — she destroyed them,” Faith Slope said in her emotional recognition. She shared the stage with husband Tim McGraw, who noticed that Lynn’s “voice and music are a part of the soundtrack of my life” even as she “made it clear she was writing songs about ladies for ladies.”

Another nation sovereign, Cart Parton, on record, recalled how she and Lynn “used to talk about our lives, how similarly we grew up.

— Phyllis (@PhyllisFontaine) November 1, 2022

[We] had a great deal of laughs, shed a ton of tears over things that we recollected about our life as a youngster and about our parents. …

We often talked about how happy [we were that] we grew up the way we did so we could compose all those wonderful songs about our lives.”

Sissy Spacek, whom Lynn personally cast to play her in Coal Miner’s Daughter, offered more personal reflections on the woman she portrayed in her Oscar-winning performance.

“I got to know basically everything there is to know about you from the by playing you,” she said on record, “and it was the greatest gift.”

Near the finish of the celebration Lynn’s daughter, Patsy Lynn Russell, and granddaughter Tayla Lynn were showered with an extensive ovation as they made that big appearance, representing Lynn’s expansive family. Tayla Lynn, the daughter of Lynn’s son Ernest Ray, focused on her grandmother’s profound, inspiring faith and its impact on her.

Russell called the evening both “incredibly emotional” and a “delight,” and she offered gratitude for the outpouring of affection and music.

“That comforts us,” she said, “because with the deficiency of our mother, we are heartbroken. It’s a particularly unfilled feeling in such countless ways.

” Yet, she added, “My mother has laid down the most incredible legacy. She has laid down such a legacy that she won’t ever leave us.”

To see it again — without commercial reprises will air on CMT at 8 p.m. ET/7 p.m. CT on Wednesday and at 11 am. ET/10 a.m. CT on Sunday.

The special will also be available on Paramount+ in early 2023.