About Lee Clayton
Hometown
Russelville, AL, United States
Born
1942
Genre
Rock
Best known for penning the 1972 outlaw country anthem "Ladies Love Outlaws," singer/songwriter Lee Clayton never achieved the same level of renown as some of the artists who recorded his songs, yet he crafted some expressive, highly personal music in his own right. Among his most notable contributions after the Waylon Jennings anthem were Jerry Jeff Walker's "Lone Wolf" and Willie Nelson's "If You Could Touch Her at All," both released in the late '70s, as were two critically acclaimed solo albums, 1978's Border Affair and 1979's Naked Child. After delivering 1981's The Dream Goes On, he temporarily quit the music business, but returned in the '90s with the concert album Another Night, the studio LP Spirit of the Twilight, and the Highwaymen song "Silver Stallion."
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