Libbi Bosworth

[2] She turned 17 in Beverly Hills, and worked for a short time at Francis Ford Coppola's Zoetrope Studios.

[1] In her formal education Bosworth trained with rock and jazz at the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts.

Inspired by a Rosanne Cash tape, Bosworth went to Galveston, and then returned again to Los Angeles, which featured a burgeoning roots music scene with Lucinda Williams, Mandy Mercier, and Dwight Yoakam, among others.

While in Los Angeles, Bosworth met her first husband, guitarist Bill Dwyer, and they began playing country music.

In 1995 she broke into national radio airplay with her contributions from two compilation albums, Austin Country Nights (Baby, Maybe Then I'll Love You) and True Sounds of the New West (It's Late).

Perhaps the least-known of all the acts on the bill, she won over the crowd with her crystal clear vocals and classic Nashville-style songs.