Jessi Colter.
Depending upon the year in which you were born, what type of music you like (or the type of music your parents like/liked ... God Rest Their Souls, if they are in the "liked" category), or your basic knowledge of the history of various late 20th-century "alternative pop" musical movements, the name of Jessi Colter might be familiar to you. If it is not, it ought to be, and that is just one of the purposes of this forthcoming biography.
Jessi Colter was a truly major American recording artist for perhaps a six year span, at best, beginning in 1975. She attained a brief but unquestionable "superstar" status that is both enigmatic and tantalizing specifically because of an almost detectable decision, on her part, to walk away from a glaring limelight that she did not enjoy, a stardom she did not desire, and an industry that -- amost appallingly -- did not fight to understand and nurture her exceptional artistry ... even as she was making millions of dollars for that industry.
In her 45-year career thus far, Jessi Colter has released only nine solo studio albums*. Never the less and quite significantly, four or maybe five of those nine albums can be legitimately described as "classic" American recordings of superior caliber (I'm Jessi Colter, Jessi, Mirriam, Out of the Ashes, and a bit less likely ... Diamond in the Rough). Time-capsule worthy material. Most artists are lucky if they can produce just one 4-to-5-star original effort! Jessi, as mentioned, has at least four or five in the bag -- six, when you count the "Outlaws" album", and she isn't finished by any means. Keep in mind that her 2006 release 'Out of the Ashes' generated critical raves to rival the best of her 70's heyday.
Jessi Colter was indeed a crucial presence on that collaborative album that made undeniable history as a landmark boot-squashing statement of artistic independence. On the Wanted: The Outlaws album, Jessi Colter helped her fellow mavericks explode and then redefine the parameters of a claustrophobic, insular, often hypocritical musical genre ... a genre that claimed to include all of the wide-open, far-flung musical "contributions" of the American continent, but which was ironically tied, bound, and gagged to one city and to its interests: Nashville. As both a groundbreaking "crossover" and "outlaw" artist, Jessi Colter paved a big way for artists creating "sounds" outside the status quo, and American country music has since flourished when it has ventured into this territory (while remaining original). Colter paved the way for a veritable red-carpet of successful artists, precisely because Jessi Colter was so big doing the thing she was doing. There is documentation behind this, as if it were not evident enough to the Good Soul that looks back and wonders what made those great days of American Music actually tick.
Jessi Colter helped change the face of a genre, for the better. And her music remains true -- resurgent, revitalized, beguilingly ahead-of-its-time, perhaps more relevant than ever. Moreover, she is still creating, supposedly.
Jessi Colter is, of course, today best-known as the faithful wife and singing sidekick of uber-character/troubador Waylon Jennings. Though this is indeed an accurate appraisal of her career "status", it is also very much incomplete in terms of portraiture. Jessi Colter was, in fact, the bigger seller, more prolific songwriter, and brighter national/international "star" than her towering husband for a little while.
The great thing about Jessi Colter's career was that she burst bright and brilliantly, sometimes almost in spite of her glorious husband's "issues" and then she retreated from the very industry that sought to pigeon-hole them both ... in order to dedicate herself to her beloved husband (and, indeed, to the elaborate solving of his issues). But there is much more to be told than that.
We are indeed about to tell the Jessi Colter Story. Stay tuned.
*Jessi's 1990s kids' album will be discussed separately
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