K. T. Oslin

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KT Oslin
Background information
Birth name Kay Toinette "K.T." Oslin
Born 15 May 1941 (1941-05-15) (age 67)
Origin Crossett, Arkansas, United States
Genre(s) Country
Years active 1981 - Present
Label(s) RCA
Website http://www.ktoslin.net/

Kay Toinette "K. T." Oslin, (born May 15, 1941, Crossett, Arkansas) is a Grammy Award-winning country music singer and songwriter.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Kay T. Oslin was born in Crossett, Arkansas, but soon after her birth her family moved to Memphis, Tennessee and then to Houston, Texas. Oslin considers Houston her hometown. She attended Methodist-affiliated Lon Morris College in Jacksonville, Texas.

Oslin initially performed as a folk singer with Guy Clark and then moved to New York where she performed as a chorine in Off Broadway and Broadway shows.[citation needed] She soon began doing advertising jingles, which led to appearances in a number of television commercials.

She began writing songs, some of which have been recorded by country artists Dottie West, Gail Davies, Sissy Spacek, and The Judds.[citation needed]

In 1987, after a brief run with Elektra Records, she broke through with RCA Records and went to win the Country Music Association Song of the Year award for "80s Ladies". Oslin also earned the Female Vocalist of the Year honors and a Grammy Award for the song. Additional hits included "Come Next Monday", "Hey Bobby", "Hold Me", "Mary and Willie", "Do Ya", "This Woman", "Didn't Expect it to Go Down This Way", and "I'll Always Come Back."

By the early '90s, Oslin branched out into acting, taking roles on Paradise, and Evening Shade with Burt Reynolds. On the big screen she co-starred in The Thing Called Love with Sandra Bullock and River Phoenix.

In 1995, Oslin had coronary artery bypass surgery.

Her 2001 album, Live Close By, Visit Often was produced by Raul Malo who also wrote several of the songs.

She ranked #37 in "CMT's 40 Greatest Women in Country Music" in 2002.[1]

[edit] Discography

[edit] Singles

Year Song US Country Album
1981 "Clean Your Own Tables" -
1982 "Younger Men" -
1987 "Wall of Tears" 40 80's Ladies
1987 "80's Ladies" 7 80's Ladies
1987 "Do Ya" 1 80's Ladies
1988 "I'll Always Come Back" 1 80's Ladies
1988 "Hold Me" 1 This Woman
1989 "Hey Bobby" 2 This Woman
1989 "This Woman" 5 This Woman
1988 "Money" 13 This Woman
1989 "Didn't Expect It to Go Down This Way" 23 This Woman
1990 "Come Next Monday" 1 Love In a Small Town
1990 "Two Hearts" 73 Love In a Small Town
1991 "Mary and Willi" 28 Love In a Small Town
1991 "You Call Everybody Darling" 69 Love In a Small Town
1991 "Cornell Crawford" 63 Love In a Small Town
1993 "A New Way Home" 64 Greatest Hits
1996 "Silver Tongue And Goldplated Lies" - My Roots Are Showing
2001 "Live Close By, Visit Often" 53 Live Close By, Visit Often

[edit] Albums

Year Album US Country US 200 RIAA
1987 80's Ladies 1 68 Platinum
1988 This Woman 2 75 Platinum
1990 Love In a Small Town 5 76 Gold
1993 Greatest Hits: Songs From An Aging Sex Bomb 31 126
1993 A New Way Home - -
1996 My Roots Are Showing 45 -
1997 Super Hits - -
1998 At Her Best - -
2001 Live Close By, Visit Often 35 -
2002 RCA Country Legends - -

[edit] References

  • Millard, Bob. (1998). "K.T. Oslin". In The Encyclopedia of Country Music. Paul Kingsbury, Editor. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 396-7.

[edit] External links

Adapted from the article K.T. Oslin from Wikinfo, licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.