On one track she revived her youthful talent for setting romantic English poetry to music with John Keats' La Belle Dame Sans Merci.
[1] Al Stewart's backing group, led by Peter White with Kocjan as a member, chose the name Shot In The Dark and released an album with the same title in 1981 (RSO 2394 297).
On this Kocjan used her occasional alternative name of Krysia Kristianne and her few solo lead vocals here include "Some Towns".
[citation needed] In 1996 came the CD Tyger and Other Tales (Sentience Records 70002) with Leslie Chew and David Kronemyer which revived the Keats work along with ten other romantic English poems set to music.
She died at the age of 54 from lung cancer, on February 21, 2007,[2] in Portland, Oregon, where she had lived and worked as a singing teacher since 2000.
At the age of 19, he formed the well loved Natural Acoustic Band, taking them down to London, where 16 different record companies tried to sign them on the strength of their live work.
They eventually settled with RCA, making two highly acclaimed albums with John Denver's producer, Milton Okun.
They often supported such acts as Don McLean, Ralph McTell and Country Joe and The Fish, appearing on the prestigious Old Grey Whistle Test on BBC TV with Alice Cooper.
Tom joined Chris Simpson and Glen Stuart in Magna Carta in the early 1970s, staying constant through changing line-ups and going on to record such albums as Took a Long Time, Prisoners on the Line and Live in Bergen.
They toured extensively worldwide, appearing on television and radio throughout Europe and Scandinavia and the UK, achieving chart success in Holland with both the single and album of Took a Long Time (a song which he co-wrote with Simpson).
After leaving Magna Carta, for around 10 years Hoy toured Holland, Germany, Scandinavia, the Middle East, Central America and even The Falkland Islands with his wife Geraldine.