New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Kirt Webster, Webster Public Relations President, announces that veteran Country
Music entertainers Lacy J. Dalton and Deborah Allen have both joined the firm's roster for publicity representation.
"We are excited to add Lacy J. and Deborah to our roster. Webster Public Relations was built on representing the legends in country music and we are more than thrilled to continue adding to that tradition," says Webster.
First hitting the Country Top-40 in 1979 with "Crazy Blue Eyes," Dalton was one the most successful female vocalists of the format during the 80s with such hits as "Takin' It Easy," "Hillbilly Girl With The Blues," "Black Coffee," and the CMA-nominated anthem "16th Avenue." During her career, she has collaborated with such Country
Music Hall of Fame members as
Bobby Bare, Glen Campbell, Willie Nelson, and
George Jones. Her most recent recorded work was a tribute album to Hank Williams entitled Here's To Hank. Dalton is a 2017 inductee of the North American Country
Music Association International Hall of Fame.
A native of Memphis, Tennessee, few female vocalists have enjoyed a career as varied in the entertainment industry as Allen. She worked with iconic performers such as Tennessee Ernie Ford and
Roy Orbison before becoming a regular on a prime-time variety series hosted by Jim Stafford. A few years later, word of Allen's talent found its' way to Bud Logan, who hired her to add vocal accompaniment on several tracks from the late Jim Reeves. That exposure would lead to her own solo record deal with RCA, where she recorded one of the biggest crossover hits of the 1980s with "Baby I Lied." She also has penned hits for acts ranging from John Conlee to LeAnn Rimes, and recorded one of Prince's compositions, "Telepathy." Currently, Allen is hosting a short form radio and TV vignette which is airing on Fox affiliates across the country.