by Jason AnkenyPerhaps best known in conjunction with her husband Waylon Jennings, Jessi Colter was the only significant female singer/songwriter to emerge from the mid-70s outlaw movement. Born Miriam Johnson on May 25, 1943, in Phoenix, AZ, Colter in fact affiliated herself with outlaw imagery long before the musical movement blossomed, adopting her stage name in honor of ancestor Jess Colter, a real-life train robber and counterfeiter who rode with Frank and Jesse James.Raised in a strict Pentecostal home, Colter was just a teenager when she left Phoenix to tour as a vocalist with twang-guitar innovator Duane Eddy, whom she met through her sister Sharon, the wife of producer Cowboy Jack Clement. In 1962, she and Eddy married, and after several years of extensive touring (mostly throughout Europe), the couple settled in Los Angeles in 1966. Under the name Miriam Eddy, she wrote songs for Don Gibson, Dottie West, and Nancy Sinatra.In 1968, she and Eddy divorced, and Colter returned to Phoenix. There she met Waylon Jennings, who was so taken with her voice that he invited her to record a duet with him. After helping secure Colter a record deal with his label, RCA, Jennings co-produced the tracks that would make up her 1970 debut, A Country Star Is Born; by the time of the records release, the couple had already married. Under the name Waylon and Jessi, they also issued two Top 40 singles, a 1970 cover of the Elvis Presley hit Suspicious Minds and 1971s Under Your Spell Again. Colters commercial breakthrough came in 1975 when her composition Im Not Lisa, a single from the LP Im Jessi Colter, hit number one on Billboards country charts while also making the Top Five on the pop charts; the album spawned another hit in Whats Happened to Blue Eyes. In 1976, she released two more highly successful albums, Jessi and Diamonds in the Rough.Also in 1976, Colter teamed with Jennings, Willie Nelson, and Tompall Glaser for the album Wanted! The Outlaws, which at the time of its release was the biggest-selling album in country history, and the first country album certified platinum in sales. In between spending much of the remainder of the decade on tour with her husband and Nelson, she also released the albums Miriam in 1977 and Thats the Way the Cowboy Rocks and Rolls in 1978.Colter and Jennings reteamed in 1981 for Leather and Lace, an album of duets featuring the hits Storms Never Last and the medley Wild Side of Life/It Wasnt God Who Made Honky Tonk Angels. In the same year, she released the solo album Ridin Shotgun, which produced her final chart hit in 1982s Holdin On. As the 1980s progressed, Colters success tapered off; 1985s Rock and Roll Lullaby, produced by Chips Moman, was released only on a small label. By the early 90s, she began directing her energies toward performing childrens music, and starred in the home video Jessi Colter Sings Songs from Around the World Just for Kids, which featured a guest appearance by Jennings, who recited some of his poetry. Capitol released the An Outlaw...a Lady: The Very Best of Jessi Colter anthology in 2003. It was followed by Out of the Ashes on the Shout Factory label in 2006.