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Roxie Dean

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Occupation(s)
  
Singer-songwriter

Role
  
Songwriter

Instruments
  
Vocals

Genres
  
Country


Years active
  
2001-present

Record label
  
DreamWorks Records

Name
  
Roxie Dean

Albums
  
Twenty 14

Roxie Dean httpsa3imagesmyspacecdncomimages0329b5db0

Born
  
March 23, 1974 (age 50) (
1974-03-23
)

Origin
  
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA

Labels
  
DreamWorks Nashville Valhalla Music Group

Nominations
  
Grammy Award for Best Country Song

Similar People
  
Jamie O'Neal, Don Schlitz, Richie McDonald

Roxie dean a soldier s wife


Roxie Dean (born March 23, 1974) is an American country music songwriter and singer. In 2005, she released her debut album, Ms. America. Her songwriting career includes a 2001 Nashville Songwriters Association International "Top 10 Songs That You Wish You’d Written" award for "Why They Call It Falling" (co-written with Don Schlitz), and a Grammy nomination for co-writing "When I Think About Angels."

Contents

Roxie Dean SingerSongwriter Roxie Dean Up Close Ahead Of Oxford Performance

Roxie dean when i think about angels


Early life and career

Roxie Dean Country songwriter Roxie Dean keeps waiting for that 3 minutes to

Originally from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where French was the primary language spoken in her home, Dean recalls her father playing the guitar until she would fall asleep. Before settling in her music career, Dean worked various jobs including retail sales, coordinating events for Toyota in Huntington Beach, California, and farming.

Dean wrote material during her two years at Iowa’s Graceland College on a softball scholarship and while back in Louisiana completing a journalism degree. After graduation she tried unsuccessfully to establish herself in Nashville as a country music artist. She then left for California, where she worked for Toyota. A screening of George Strait’s Pure Country motivated her return to Nashville. She began to socialize with a friend from Louisiana who was connected to music industry insiders in the city. This friend, along with Rivers Rutherford (author of Brooks & Dunn's "Ain't Nothing 'bout You", Chely Wright's "Shut Up and Drive" and Montgomery Gentry's "If You Ever Stop Loving Me", among others), helped to find her direction.

Later career

Country music producer Chips Moman offered to let Dean run his farm. While tending the farm, Dean focused on her songwriting and worked with Moman on one of her projects. She co-wrote Jamie O'Neal's number one single "When I Think About Angels", and the singles "Why They Call It Falling" by Lee Ann Womack and "Lonely" by Tracy Lawrence. Dean also worked with producer Harold Shedd and publisher Lionel Conway, then with Maverick Music. After the company went out of business, Ginny Johnson of Hamstein Productions called Dean.

She then began working with producer Buddy Cannon. James Stroud worked with her beginning in 2001, when she signed with DreamWorks Records, over which Stroud presided. Dean left the label in 2003.

Her song "A Soldier's Wife" was released through Valhalla Music Group. A portion of all of the proceeds were donated to the Armed Forces Relief Trust/Operation Helping Hand.

In 2005 Dean released her debut album Ms. America, which included "A Soldier's Wife" and her version of "Why They Call It Falling." She continued her songwriting for other artists; Reba McEntire's Room to Breathe (2003) featured "My Sister" and Sara Evans' Real Fine Place (2005) included "Coalmine", both co-written by Dean.

Roxie Dean signed an exclusive publishing contract with HoriPro Entertainment Group in 2008.

In 2013, Roxie Dean signed an exclusive publishing deal with Judy Harris Music.

References

Roxie Dean Wikipedia