She has released three studio albums, three EPs and has contributed to various film, television and multi-media soundtracks and exceeded sales of 50,000 units as an independent artist.
Foster has garnered a number of awards for her songwriting skills and has written with a number Nashville, Tennessee Music Row hit songwriter's including Pam Tillis ("Mi Vida Loca", "Spilled Perfume"), Jeffrey Steele ("What Hurts The Most", "My Wish"), Natalie Hemby ("Only Prettier", "White Liar"), Liz Rose ("Teardrops on My Guitar"), Mike Reid ("I Can't Make You Love Me"), Kristen Hall of Sugarland ("Baby Girl", "Stay"), Greg Barnhill ("Walkaway Joe"), Keith Follesé ("Smile", "Lookin' for a Good Time", "I Love You"), Rob Giles (The Rescues), and Emily West ("I Hate You, I Love You", "Blue Sky").
Foster began playing the guitar at the age of eight, wrote her first song at sixteen, and won a number of talent contests at Duchesne Academy, the Catholic girls high school she attended.
After working a few odd jobs including a receptionist for the luggage company Ricardo of Beverly Hills, she decided that she wanted to move back South.
Foster began touring the United States playing colleges, clubs and radio stations and implemented a street team, allowing her to mobilize her fan base.
This board consists of some of the very best and most successful songwriters in music: Jessi Alexander ("The Climb", Miley Cyrus), Rivers Rutherford ("Homewrecker", Gretchen Wilson), Danny Wells ("Check Yes Or No", George Strait), Clay Mills ("Don't Think I Don't Think About It", Darius Rucker), Byron Hill ("Fool Hearted Memory", George Strait), Steve Bogard ("Damn Your Eyes", Etta James), and many others.
Foster performed some her original compositions for Barbara Boxer, Jim Cooper, Lamar Alexander, and other members of Congress and the Senate, in an effort to remind them the value of a song.
Foster was the keynote speaker, along with Ashley Capps of Bonaroo, at the Indiegirl Conference in Knoxville, TN, spoke to a crowd of 350 people for Tin Pan South at the Millennium Hotel in Nashville and at Belmont University's "Best Job Ever" event in September 2012.
Foster has hosted three songwriter events since 2009 called "The Writer's Share", to benefit the TJ Martell Foundation for Leukemia, Cancer, and AIDS Research.