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Foster And Lloyd

Artist

Foster And Lloyd

Last updated: 2 hours ago

Foster & Lloyd stood out from the contemporary country pack in the late '80s thanks to <a href="spotify:artist:5g9qBduN6VR3dzHA8eCTEW">Radney Foster</a>'s intelligent, literate lyrics; <a href="spotify:artist:5PAFwnuBhTcXmRCJppZLn1">Bill Lloyd</a>'s flair for memorable pop melodies; and the duo's <a href="spotify:artist:4ACplpEqD6JIVgKrafauzs">Everly Brothers</a>-style close harmony singing. It was an influential mix that, in its own way, helped pave the way for country's crossover success of the '90s. Foster & Lloyd met in 1985 while working as staff songwriters for the <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22MTM%22">MTM</a> publishing firm. <a href="spotify:artist:5g9qBduN6VR3dzHA8eCTEW">Foster</a> had grown up in Del Rio, Texas, and attended the University of the South, a liberal arts college in Sewanee, Tennessee, before moving to Nashville to make it in the music business. <a href="spotify:artist:5PAFwnuBhTcXmRCJppZLn1">Lloyd</a>, meanwhile, was a native of Bowling Green, Kentucky, who loved the chiming, <a href="spotify:artist:3WrFJ7ztbogyGnTHbHJFl2">Beatlesque</a> sound of power pop nearly as much as country music. When their composition "Since I Found You" became a hit for <a href="spotify:artist:5VvcMMfn7KqIjK9zRONL0d">the Sweethearts of the Rodeo</a>, Foster & Lloyd managed to score a record deal of their own with <a href="spotify:search:label%3A%22RCA%22">RCA</a> on the strength of the demo tape they'd recorded together. Their self-titled 1987 debut was a hit, paced by the Top Ten singles "Crazy Over You," "Sure Thing," and "What Do You Want from Me This Time"; a fourth single, "Texas in 1880," made the Top 20. Their 1989 follow-up album, Faster & Llouder, received equally complimentary reviews from critics and sold fairly well, but didn't spin off hit singles in quite the same way. 1990's Version of the Truth confirmed their commercial downturn, and the duo subsequently split up to pursue solo careers. <a href="spotify:artist:5g9qBduN6VR3dzHA8eCTEW">Foster</a> recorded several solo albums during the '90s, veering between neo-traditional country and roots rock, while <a href="spotify:artist:5PAFwnuBhTcXmRCJppZLn1">Lloyd</a> returned to his power pop roots on two '90s albums of his own, also working often as a session guitarist. ~ Steve Huey, Rovi

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