Jessi Colter
Jessi Colter (born Miriam Johnson; May 25, 1943) is an American country music singer-songwriter best known for her contributions to the 1970s outlaw country movement and her collaborations with husband Waylon Jennings.[1][2] Her breakthrough hit, the 1975 single "I'm Not Lisa," reached number one on the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart and number four on the Billboard Hot 100, earning her a gold-certified debut album of the same name.[1][3] Born in Phoenix, Arizona, to a race-car-driving father and a Pentecostal minister mother, Colter—originally named after the biblical Miriam—began playing piano in her mother's tent revivals at age five and became the church pianist by age 11.[1][2] She adopted her stage name from an ancestor, an 1870s train robber who rode with Jesse James' gang, and at 15 sneaked out to perform in local bars before signing with guitarist Duane Eddy at 16.[1] Married to Eddy from 1962 to 1968, she wrote songs for artists including Don Gibson, Dottie West, and Nancy Sinatra during their time in Los Angeles.[1][2] Colter's solo career gained momentum after marrying Jennings in 1969 in a ceremony officiated by her mother; she signed with RCA Records and released her debut album, A Country Star Is Born, produced by Jennings.[1][3] She and Jennings recorded several duets, including the Top 40 country hits "Suspicious Minds" (1970) and "Under Your Spell Again" (1971), before switching to Capitol Records.[1] Her follow-up single "What's Happened to Blue Eyes" reached the Top 10 on the country charts in 1975, and she joined Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Tompall Glaser on the landmark compilation Wanted! The Outlaws (1976), the first platinum-certified album in country music history.[1][2] Additional collaborations with Jennings, such as the 1981 duet "Storms Never Last" (number 17 country), highlighted her versatile songwriting and vocal style blending country, gospel, and pop influences.[2][3] In later years, Colter supported Jennings through his struggles with addiction and health issues until his death in 2002, while continuing to record sporadically, including the gospel album The Psalms (2017) produced by Lenny Kaye and her memoir An Outlaw and a Lady published the same year.[1][2] As of 2025, at age 82, she remains active in the music community, contributing to projects like the 2025 posthumous Waylon Jennings album Songbird, curated by their son Shooter Jennings, which debuted on country charts, and serving as executive producer for the upcoming Country Music Hall of Fame documentary They Called Us Outlaws on outlaw country.[4][5]Early life
Childhood and family background
Jessi Colter was born Miriam Johnson on May 25, 1943, in Phoenix, Arizona.[1] She was raised in a Pentecostal household by her mother, Helen Johnson, an ordained minister and revivalist preacher who led church services and choirs, and her father, a professional race-car driver who also owned a mine.[6][2] The family environment emphasized strict religious discipline, with daily Bible study and prohibitions on secular entertainment like movies or dancing, fostering a deep spiritual foundation from infancy.[7] Colter's early involvement in church activities highlighted the musical dynamics within her family. By age six, she was singing in her mother's Pentecostal choir, where Helen's role as a revivalist singer exposed her to gospel performances and hymnody.[8] Her father supported these pursuits by encouraging her piano lessons, and her siblings—Mary Delores, Helen Lucille, David, Paul, Sharon, and John—provided additional familial backing for her budding talents in a close-knit setting.[6] At age 11, Colter took on the role of church pianist, accompanying services and reinforcing the centrality of music in her religious upbringing.[7] This childhood unfolded against the backdrop of post-World War II Phoenix, a city experiencing explosive population growth from 65,000 residents in 1940 to over 100,000 by 1950, driven by military bases, wartime migration, and an emerging economy shifting from agriculture to manufacturing and tourism.[9][10] For a working-class family like the Johnsons, this era meant modest living amid rapid urbanization, with her father's mining and racing endeavors reflecting the opportunistic spirit of Arizona's resource-based livelihoods.[6] The contrast between her insular, faith-centered home and the surrounding social transformations contributed to a worldview rooted in resilience and community.[11]Early musical influences
Colter's early musical development was deeply rooted in the Pentecostal church environment of her Arizona upbringing, where she began taking piano lessons as a young child and became the church pianist by age 11. In this role, she accompanied services multiple times a week, including tent revivals, and sang in the choir, honing her skills as both a pianist and vocalist. This immersion in sacred music not only built her technical proficiency but also instilled a profound appreciation for gospel traditions, which would later inform her songwriting and performances.[12][13][14] Through her family's involvement in the church and the vibrant local music scene in Phoenix and Mesa, Colter encountered a diverse array of influences, including gospel hymns, classical piano repertoire from her lessons, and emerging early rock and roll sounds. At age 12, she began participating in local talent shows, performing on television and demonstrating her budding talents as a singer. By her early teens, she started self-taught songwriting, composing her first original song around this time, while drawing inspiration from the rhythmic energy of rock artists and the emotional depth of classical composers. These experiences shaped her versatile style, blending spiritual introspection with secular energy.[15][16][17] In her mid-teens, Colter expanded her horizons through performances in Arizona clubs and recording sessions, including being discovered by guitarist Duane Eddy at age 16 in 1959, who produced her first single "Lonesome Road" in 1961 on Jamie Records. After her marriage to Eddy in 1962, she toured extensively and later settled in Los Angeles, where she immersed herself in the burgeoning music industry, providing backup vocals for local acts and further developing her songwriting amid the pop and rock scenes before her divorce in 1968. This period of exploration solidified her transition from church performer to aspiring professional artist.[12][15][1]Career
Early career: 1970–1974
In 1969, following her marriage to Waylon Jennings, Miriam Johnson adopted the stage name Jessi Colter, inspired by an ancestor who was a notorious 19th-century outlaw, and signed a recording contract with RCA Records, facilitated by her husband's connections in the industry.[1] This marked her transition from earlier work under her married name Miriam Eddy to a professional identity in country music, amid the evolving Nashville scene where she began establishing herself as a performer and songwriter. Colter's debut album, A Country Star Is Born, was released by RCA in April 1970, produced by Chet Atkins and Waylon Jennings, featuring a mix of covers and original material that showcased her piano-driven style and emotive vocals.[18] Early singles from this period included duets with Jennings such as "Suspicious Minds" in 1970 and "Under Your Spell Again" in 1971, both reaching the Top 40 on the Billboard Hot Country Singles chart but achieving only modest commercial traction.[1] Throughout the early 1970s, Colter built a reputation as a songwriter, contributing compositions to prominent artists including "Cry Softly" for Anita Carter in 1969 and co-writing "I Think It's Time She Learned" for Jennings' 1972 album Ladies Love Outlaws.[19] These credits highlighted her talent for introspective, heartfelt lyrics, often drawing from personal experiences, though her own recordings during this time garnered limited chart success, with the debut album failing to crack major rankings. Colter faced challenges in navigating the male-dominated Nashville music establishment, where her releases received critical notice but struggled for widespread airplay, compounded by the demands of raising a young family while supporting Jennings' rising career.[1] This period of modest visibility tested her resilience, as she balanced domestic responsibilities with session work and occasional touring, laying the groundwork for her later outlaw country prominence without immediate breakthroughs.Breakthrough success: 1975–1979
Colter's breakthrough came with the release of her single "I'm Not Lisa" on January 16, 1975, which she wrote as a poignant ballad reflecting the emotional pain of a woman confronting her partner's lingering attachment to a former lover named Lisa.[20] The track, produced by Ken Mansfield with contributions from Waylon Jennings, featured a haunting piano-driven arrangement that blended country introspection with pop accessibility, marking Colter's emergence as a distinctive voice in the outlaw country scene.[21] It topped the Billboard Hot Country Songs chart for one week and reached No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, also peaking at No. 16 on the Hot Adult Contemporary chart, making it a rare crossover success for a female country artist at the time.[22] The single propelled her debut Capitol Records album, I'm Jessi Colter, released in January 1975 and also produced by Mansfield, to commercial heights. The LP peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and No. 50 on the Billboard 200, earning gold certification for sales exceeding 500,000 copies in the United States.[23] Follow-up singles like "What's Happened to Blue Eyes" reached No. 5 on the country chart, further showcasing Colter's songwriting depth and reinforcing her solo viability beyond her association with the outlaw movement.[24] Her follow-up album, Jessi, issued in January 1976 and co-produced by Jennings and Mansfield, continued this momentum, peaking at No. 4 on the Top Country Albums chart and No. 109 on the Billboard 200, with tracks emphasizing her raw, narrative-driven style.[25] Colter's rising profile culminated in her inclusion on the landmark compilation Wanted! The Outlaws in January 1976, alongside Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Tompall Glaser, which became the first country album to achieve platinum status by the RIAA, selling over one million copies.[26] The project, drawing from previously released material, amplified the outlaw country's rebellious ethos and positioned Colter as the genre's primary female representative, challenging the male-dominated narrative.[27] Throughout 1975–1979, Colter toured extensively across the U.S., often sharing stages with outlaw peers, which helped cement her authenticity in the movement. Media appearances on shows like Pop Goes the Country highlighted her commanding performances and distinctive piano work, establishing her as a trailblazing woman in a field traditionally led by men.[28]Mid-career: 1980–2005
In the early 1980s, Jessi Colter shifted focus toward collaborations with her husband, Waylon Jennings, culminating in their duet album Leather and Lace, released by RCA Records in 1981. The project blended their signature outlaw country styles with covers and originals, featuring key tracks such as the re-recorded "Storms Never Last" and the medley "Wild Side of Life/It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels." The album peaked at number 11 on the Billboard Country Albums chart and was certified gold by the RIAA for sales exceeding 500,000 copies in the United States. Colter's solo output became sporadic during this period amid industry shifts toward pop-country and her growing family priorities. Her next studio album, Rock and Roll Lullaby, arrived in 1984 via the independent Triad Records, produced by Chips Moman at his Nashville studio; it marked a more introspective turn with rootsy arrangements but received limited commercial attention. She also contributed vocals to Jennings' projects, including guest appearances on his 1980s releases like WWII (1982) and Waylon & Company (1983), reinforcing their musical partnership while her individual releases dwindled.[29][30] By the mid-1980s, Colter largely paused her recording career to provide caregiving support for Jennings, who faced escalating health challenges including drug addiction recovery and later diabetes complications. This period of personal dedication extended through the 1990s and early 2000s, as she prioritized family amid his ongoing medical struggles, resulting in minimal new music until after his death in 2002. During this time, Colter's reconnection with her Christian faith in the early 1980s—sparked by a profound spiritual experience during a performance—began influencing her artistic outlook, leading to explorations of gospel and spiritual themes in her mid-1980s work like Rock and Roll Lullaby, which incorporated reflective, faith-tinged lyrics reflective of her evolving beliefs.[31][32]Later career: 2006–present
In 2006, Jessi Colter released her comeback album Out of the Ashes on Shout! Factory Records, marking her first solo studio effort in 22 years following the death of her husband, Waylon Jennings, in 2002. Produced by Don Was, the album features a mix of original songs and covers blending country, blues, gospel, and rock elements, with themes centered on personal loss, grief, and emotional recovery. Critics praised its gritty authenticity and Colter's resilient vocal delivery, highlighting tracks like "His Eye Is on the Sparrow" and contributions from guests including her son Shooter Jennings and Tony Joe White.[33] Colter's creative resurgence continued into the late 2010s with the release of the spiritual album The Psalms in 2017 on Legacy Recordings, where she set lyrics directly from the King James Bible's Book of Psalms to original melodies, creating spontaneous, intimate recordings that reflect her deepening faith. Produced by Lenny Kaye, the project emphasizes meditative, drone-like arrangements rather than traditional gospel, serving as a profound expression of belief and tying into Colter's evolving faith-based songwriting. That same year, she published her memoir An Outlaw and a Lady: A Memoir of Music, Life with Waylon, and the Faith That Brought Me Home, co-written with David Ritz, which explores her career, marriage to Jennings, and spiritual journey, further intertwining her personal reflections with her musical output.[34][35][36] In 2023, Colter returned with Edge of Forever on Appalachia Record Co., her first full-length collection of new country material in over a decade, produced by Margo Price and mixed by Shooter Jennings. The album fuses classic country with gospel and soul influences, featuring soaring, heartfelt tracks like "Standing on the Edge of Forever" and collaborations with Price on songs such as "I Wanna Be With You," evoking Colter's 1970s outlaw roots while showcasing her enduring vocal warmth at age 80. Reviewers noted its timeless quality and genre-blending innovation, positioning it as a vital addition to her catalog.[37][38][39] In a 2024 reflection shared via Guideposts and recounted in media outlets, Colter recounted personal anecdotes from Waylon Jennings' final Thanksgiving in 2001, describing how, amid his battle with diabetes complications, he accepted Jesus in their hospital room, marking a transformative spiritual moment that brought him peace during his last Christmas. This story underscores the couple's shared faith, which continued to influence Colter's life and work. By 2025, she served as an executive producer for the Country Music Hall of Fame's documentary series They Called Us Outlaws: Cosmic Cowboys, Honky Tonk Heroes and the Rise of Renegade Troubadours, a 12-hour exploration of the 1970s outlaw movement, narrated by Jack Ingram and featuring over 100 interviews with key figures.[31][40][5] In October 2025, Colter contributed to the posthumous Waylon Jennings album Songbird, the first of a three-album project of previously unreleased material curated and produced by her son Shooter Jennings on the Son of Jessi/Thirty Tigers label.[41] Colter has maintained an active presence through selective performances and her role as a trailblazer for women in country music, often highlighting the genre's historical underrepresentation of female voices in interviews and projects. As one of the few women in the outlaw era, she continues to advocate for greater equity, inspiring contemporary artists like Margo Price. As of 2025, no major health issues have been reported for the 82-year-old artist, allowing her to remain engaged in music and cultural preservation efforts.[42][38]Personal life
Marriages and relationships
Jessi Colter's first marriage was to rockabilly guitarist Duane Eddy in 1962.[3] The couple met when Colter, then performing as Miriam Johnson, auditioned for Eddy in her native Arizona; he produced her debut single "Lonesome Road" in 1961 before their relationship turned romantic.[1] Their union prompted a relocation to Los Angeles, where Eddy pursued his music career and Colter began writing songs for artists like Don Gibson and Dottie West under the name Miriam Eddy, laying the groundwork for her own recording pursuits.[1] The marriage ended in divorce in 1968.[3] Following her divorce, Colter returned to Phoenix, Arizona, where she reconnected with Waylon Jennings, whom she had first encountered during his touring performances in the area while still married to Eddy.[43] The two married on October 26, 1969, at Colter's mother's church, marking the beginning of a partnership that spanned over three decades and deeply intertwined their professional lives in the outlaw country movement.[3] Their shared rebellious ethos against Nashville's mainstream conventions fueled collaborative projects and helped elevate Colter's profile as a singer-songwriter, including her breakthrough hit "I'm Not Lisa" in 1975.[44] However, the relationship faced significant challenges, particularly Jennings' struggles with substance abuse, including heavy cocaine and amphetamine use, which Colter supported him through during his recovery efforts in the 1980s.[44] Jennings died on February 13, 2002, from complications related to diabetes.[45] Colter's third marriage came after two decades of widowhood, to Arlin "Whitey" Brower, a horseman and designer, in 2023.[46] The couple, who share an Arizona-based life, first met around 2015 and reconnected four years later, building a relationship rooted in mutual support amid Colter's continued musical endeavors.[46] She publicly announced the marriage in June 2023.[46]Family and later years
Jessi Colter and Waylon Jennings welcomed their only child together, son Waylon Albright "Shooter" Jennings, on May 19, 1979. Shooter has pursued a successful career as a country musician, record producer, and actor, earning Grammy Awards for his production work on albums by artists such as Tanya Tucker and Brandi Carlile; he also hosts a Sirius XM radio show dedicated to country music. Colter has collaborated with Shooter on several projects, including co-writing the gospel track "Please Carry Me Home" for her 2006 album Out of the Ashes and his contributions to mixing her 2023 release Edge of Forever.[47][48][37] Colter also became stepmother to Jennings' six children from his previous marriages: Terry Jennings (1957–2019), Julie Rae Jennings (1958–2014), Buddy Dean Jennings (born 1960), Deana Jennings (died 2015), Tomi Lynne Jennings, and Jenni Eddy Jennings (born 1968, Colter's biological daughter from her first marriage to Duane Eddy, whom Jennings raised as his own). The blended family navigated the challenges of Jennings' demanding career and personal struggles, with Colter emphasizing unity and support among the siblings, though many of the stepchildren maintained private lives away from the public eye.[47] Following Jennings' death from diabetes-related complications on February 13, 2002, Colter processed her grief through music and faith, releasing Out of the Ashes in 2006—her first album in two decades—which included songs like "The Phoenix Rises" reflecting the conscious effort to rebuild after profound loss. Influenced by her Pentecostal upbringing, she incorporated spiritual reflections into her work, such as rewriting the gospel standard "His Eye Is on the Sparrow" and crediting divine guidance for her resilience as a widow, as explored in tracks like "Fine Wine" co-written with daughter Jenni. In the early 2000s, the couple had relocated from Nashville to Colter's native Arizona, where Jennings spent his final years; Colter has remained there full-time since his passing, occasionally retreating to a Wyoming cabin in summers.[48][37][49] As of 2025, at age 82, Colter leads a quiet lifestyle in Arizona, with no reported health issues, focusing on selective appearances rather than extensive touring. She continues to preserve her and Jennings' legacy through projects like the long-in-development documentary They Called Us Outlaws, an eight-year endeavor highlighting the outlaw country era.[37]Musical style and legacy
Influences and artistic development
Jessi Colter's musical style emerged from a profound foundation in gospel music, shaped by her upbringing in a Pentecostal household where her mother, Helen Johnson, served as a preacher. From the age of five, Colter played piano at tent revivals and sang hymns, instilling in her a deep-rooted spiritual sensibility that infused her compositions with emotional depth and rhythmic fervor. This gospel influence blended seamlessly with the raw, unpolished edge of outlaw country, particularly after her marriage to Waylon Jennings in 1969, creating a signature sound that combined piano-driven melodies with themes of rebellion and authenticity.[1][50][51] Over the course of her career, Colter's artistic evolution reflected shifts in personal and spiritual priorities. In the 1970s, her work leaned toward pop-country crossovers, exemplified by the soulful balladry of hits that incorporated accessible melodies while retaining a country core. By the 1980s, she pivoted toward gospel-infused recordings, such as her 1977 album Mirriam, which drew directly from her faith to explore joyous spiritual expression. This trajectory continued into the 2010s with deeply introspective spiritual albums like The Psalms (2017), where she adapted biblical texts into original songs, and Edge of Forever (2023), which merged gospel elements with contemporary country resilience.[52][53][37] Colter's songwriting consistently wove together themes of love, loss, faith, and resilience, often employing lyrical techniques that layered personal vulnerability with universal emotional resonance. Tracks like "I'm Not Lisa" (1975) captured the ache of romantic displacement through introspective narrative and piano accompaniment, while later works such as "Fine Wine" from Edge of Forever used metaphor to convey healing after profound loss, drawing on her experiences following Jennings's death in 2002. Her faith-driven lyrics, as in the Psalm adaptations, employed repetitive, meditative structures reminiscent of hymnody to evoke spiritual endurance, highlighting her skill in balancing raw confession with poetic restraint.[51][52][37] Her artistic growth was markedly advanced through key collaborations, which not only expanded her sonic palette but also underscored her pioneering role as a female songwriter in the male-dominated outlaw country scene. Partnering with Jennings on duets and the landmark Wanted! The Outlaws (1976) album introduced her piano compositions to a broader audience, blending her gospel sensibility with the genre's defiant ethos. In later years, collaborations with producer Margo Price on Edge of Forever—including co-writing and family contributions from children Shooter and Jenni Jennings—revitalized her sound, emphasizing resilience and intergenerational continuity while affirming her enduring influence as a trailblazing voice in country music.[1][37][52]Impact and recognition in country music
Jessi Colter played a pioneering role for women in the outlaw country movement of the 1970s, emerging as one of the few female artists in a genre dominated by male performers and thereby challenging entrenched gender norms in country music.[54] Often dubbed the "First Lady" or "Queen of Outlaw Country," Colter's presence alongside figures like her husband Waylon Jennings helped redefine the possibilities for women in a scene that rebelled against Nashville's polished conventions, emphasizing raw authenticity and independence over traditional expectations of female roles in the industry.[42] Her ability to navigate this male-centric space, as detailed in her memoir An Outlaw and a Lady, underscored her resilience and artistic agency, contributing to broader shifts in how women asserted their voices in country music during an era of cultural upheaval.[54] Colter's thematic focus on independence, spirituality, and personal introspection has exerted a lasting influence on subsequent generations of country artists, particularly women pushing boundaries in the genre. Her work inspired modern singers like Margo Price, who produced Colter's 2023 album Edge of Forever and has credited the outlaw pioneer's blend of vulnerability and strength as a guiding force in her own songwriting.[37] These connections highlight Colter's role in paving the way for contemporary female artists to explore themes of self-reliance and inner life without conforming to commercial stereotypes. A cornerstone of Colter's cultural legacy is her contribution to the 1976 compilation album Wanted! The Outlaws, which featured her alongside Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Tompall Glaser and became the first country music record to achieve platinum certification, selling over one million copies.[27] This project not only solidified the outlaw movement as a genre-defining force but also positioned Colter as an embodiment of 1970s counterculture, where her piano-driven compositions and duet performances captured the era's spirit of defiance against establishment norms in both music and society.[55] The album's enduring impact was further affirmed when it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 2007, recognizing its historical significance and Colter's integral role in shaping outlaw country's rebellious ethos.[56] In the 21st century, Colter has received broader recognition as an unsung hero of country music, with tributes underscoring her foundational contributions. She was inducted into the Arizona Music & Entertainment Hall of Fame in 2023, honoring her Phoenix roots and lifelong achievements.[14] Colter is an executive producer on the forthcoming documentary series They Called Us Outlaws (announced 2022), which chronicles the movement's history and features luminaries like Willie Nelson.[57] Performances, such as her 2023 appearance at the Country Music Hall of Fame induction ceremony alongside Margo Price, continue to highlight her influence, while recent collaborations and releases have introduced her work to new audiences, affirming her as a vital, enduring figure in the genre.[58]Discography
Studio albums
Jessi Colter's debut solo studio album, A Country Star Is Born, was released in 1970 on RCA Victor and produced by Chet Atkins and Waylon Jennings. Featuring a mix of original songs and covers, it highlighted her rural, folkie country style with influences from her then-recent marriage to Jennings, including a duet on "I Ain't the One." The album did not achieve significant commercial success or chart on the Billboard Country Albums chart.[59] Her breakthrough came with I'm Jessi Colter in January 1975 on Capitol Records, co-produced by Waylon Jennings and Ken Mansfield. This album embraced the outlaw country movement, blending piano-driven ballads and rock-tinged tracks, most notably the hit single "I'm Not Lisa." It peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and No. 50 on the Billboard 200, marking her first major commercial hit.[23] In 1976, Colter released two albums on Capitol: Jessi in January, co-produced by Jennings and Mansfield, which reached No. 4 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and focused on her distinctive vocal delivery within outlaw themes; and Diamond in the Rough in October, also co-produced by Jennings and Mansfield, peaking at No. 5 on the Country chart and No. 79 on the Billboard 200, emphasizing personal storytelling and rugged country-rock elements.[59] Mirriam, released in 1977 on Capitol and produced by Waylon Jennings, shifted toward more introspective and spiritual themes, drawing from Colter's birth name. It peaked at No. 29 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, her lowest-charting release to that point, reflecting a transitional phase in her outlaw-era output.[59][60] The following year's That's the Way a Cowboy Rocks and Rolls (November 1978, Capitol, produced by Jennings and Richie Albright) leaned into cowboy and road-life narratives tied to her life with Jennings, incorporating upbeat country-rock. It did not crack the top 40 on the Billboard Country Albums chart, signaling a decline in commercial momentum amid the evolving outlaw scene.[59] Colter's 1981 release Ridin' Shotgun on Capitol, co-produced by Jennings and Randy Scruggs, explored themes of travel and resilience with a country-rock edge but failed to chart on Billboard, aligning with her mid-career slowdown.[61][62] A three-year gap followed before Rock and Roll Lullaby in 1984 on the independent Triad Records, produced by Chips Moman. This softer, lullaby-inspired album blended country with light rock elements for a more intimate feel, but it also did not chart, as Colter stepped back from recording to prioritize family and support Jennings' career.[59][63] Colter's output remained sparse through the late 1980s and 1990s, with no major solo studio releases, as she focused on personal life amid Jennings' health struggles and the couple's joint projects; a 1996 children's album, Jessi Colter Sings Just for Kids: Songs from Around the World, appeared on the Peter Pan Records label but was not a traditional country effort.[59] After a 22-year hiatus from major releases—attributed to mourning Jennings' 2002 death and raising their son—Colter returned with Out of the Ashes in 2006 on Shout! Factory, produced by Don Was. This blues-infused country album reflected on loss, redemption, and family, featuring guest appearances by her son Shooter Jennings; it peaked at No. 61 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart, her first charting release in over two decades, though it earned no sales certifications.[64][59] In 2017, The Psalms was issued on Legacy Recordings (a Sony Music imprint), produced by Lenny Kaye. This experimental, spiritual project set biblical Psalms to original music with psychedelic and gospel influences, emphasizing Colter's faith; it did not chart but received critical acclaim for its innovative approach.[35][65] Colter's most recent solo studio album, Edge of Forever, arrived on October 27, 2023, via Appalachia Record Co. and produced by Margo Price (with mixing by Shooter Jennings). Blending 1970s-style country, soul, rock, and gospel across new originals and select covers, it underscores her enduring crossover appeal in later career; it has not charted on Billboard. The six-year gap since The Psalms reflects her selective, reflective phase post-2000s resurgence.[66][39]| Album Title | Release Year | Label | Producer(s) | Peak Chart Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A Country Star Is Born | 1970 | RCA Victor | Chet Atkins, Waylon Jennings | - |
| I'm Jessi Colter | 1975 | Capitol Records | Waylon Jennings, Ken Mansfield | #1 Country, #50 Billboard 200 |
| Jessi | 1976 | Capitol Records | Waylon Jennings, Ken Mansfield | #4 Country |
| Diamond in the Rough | 1976 | Capitol Records | Waylon Jennings, Ken Mansfield | #5 Country, #79 Billboard 200 |
| Mirriam | 1977 | Capitol Records | Waylon Jennings | #29 Country |
| That's the Way a Cowboy Rocks and Rolls | 1978 | Capitol Records | Waylon Jennings, Richie Albright | - |
| Ridin' Shotgun | 1981 | Capitol Records | Waylon Jennings, Randy Scruggs | - |
| Rock and Roll Lullaby | 1984 | Triad Records | Chips Moman | - |
| Out of the Ashes | 2006 | Shout! Factory | Don Was | #61 Country |
| The Psalms | 2017 | Legacy Recordings | Lenny Kaye | - |
| Edge of Forever | 2023 | Appalachia Record Co. | Margo Price | - |
Compilation and collaborative albums
Jessi Colter has been prominently featured on several landmark collaborative albums that highlight her role in the outlaw country movement and her partnerships, particularly with her husband Waylon Jennings. These projects often blended her distinctive piano-driven style with ensemble performances, achieving significant commercial success and cultural impact.[67] In 1978, Colter contributed to the concept album White Mansions, a Civil War-themed project on A&M Records with Waylon Jennings, John Dillon, and Steve Cash. Produced by Larry Jon Wilson, it portrayed Southern characters through narrative songs blending country, folk, and rock elements, peaking at No. 3 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and earning critical praise for its innovative storytelling in the outlaw genre.[68] One of her most influential collaborations is the 1976 album Wanted! The Outlaws, which included Colter alongside Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Tompall Glaser. Released by RCA Records, the album compiled previously released tracks with four new songs to capitalize on the rising outlaw country genre. It topped the Billboard Top Country Albums chart for six weeks and became the first country album to earn RIAA platinum certification for over one million units sold.[69][70] In 1981, Colter and Jennings released the duet album Leather and Lace on RCA Records, featuring ten tracks of harmonious vocal interplay, including covers like "The Wild Side of Life/It Wasn't God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels" and originals such as "Storms Never Last." The album peaked at No. 11 on the Billboard Top Country Albums chart and No. 43 on the Billboard 200, while earning RIAA gold certification for 500,000 units sold in the United States on September 15, 1981; it also received gold status in Canada.[71][67] Following Jennings's death in 2002, Colter contributed to posthumous tribute projects honoring his legacy. She appeared on The Music Inside Vol. 1: A Collaboration Dedicated to Waylon Jennings (2011, Big Machine Records), singing "Good Hearted Woman" as a duet with Sunny Sweeney on the multi-artist tribute album produced with involvement from Colter and son Shooter Jennings. Vol. 2 of the series (2012) included her solo performance of "Mama," one of her own compositions that Jennings had admired. These volumes featured contemporary country artists reinterpreting Jennings's catalog, underscoring Colter's enduring family ties in music.[72][73] Colter's compilation albums provide retrospectives of her career highlights, focusing on her 1970s and 1980s hits. The Jessi Colter Collection (1995, Capitol Records) gathers key tracks like "I'm Not Lisa" and duets with Jennings. More comprehensively, The Very Best of Jessi Colter: An Outlaw... a Lady (2003, Capitol Nashville) compiles nine of her ten charted singles, including "What's Happened to Blue Eyes" and collaborative cuts like "Storms Never Last," offering a curated overview of her outlaw era contributions. In the 2020s, reissues such as the expanded edition of Wanted! The Outlaws have renewed interest, aligning with Colter's resurgence through family-led projects on her Son of Jessi label.[67][74]| Album Title | Release Year | Label | Key Contributors | Chart Performance/Certifications |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wanted! The Outlaws | 1976 | RCA Records | Waylon Jennings, Willie Nelson, Tompall Glaser | No. 1 Billboard Top Country Albums (6 weeks); RIAA Platinum[69][70] |
| White Mansions | 1978 | A&M Records | Waylon Jennings, John Dillon, Steve Cash | #3 Billboard Top Country Albums[68] |
| Leather and Lace | 1981 | RCA Records | Waylon Jennings | No. 11 Billboard Top Country Albums; No. 43 Billboard 200; RIAA Gold (US), Gold (Canada)[71] |
| The Music Inside Vol. 1: A Collaboration Dedicated to Waylon Jennings | 2011 | Big Machine Records | Various (incl. Sunny Sweeney, Shooter Jennings) | N/A (tribute album)[72] |
| The Music Inside Vol. 2: A Collaboration Dedicated to Waylon Jennings | 2012 | Big Machine Records | Various (incl. Jewel) | N/A (tribute album)[75] |
| Jessi Colter Collection | 1995 | Capitol Records | Solo retrospective | N/A[74] |
| The Very Best of Jessi Colter: An Outlaw... a Lady | 2003 | Capitol Nashville | Solo retrospective with duets | N/A[67] |