Gene Cotton
Gene Cotton (born June 30, 1944 in Columbus, Ohio) is a pop and folk singer-songwriter. He is best known for his four Billboard Top 40 entries during the years 1976–1978.
2002 or 2003 Interview with Gene Cotton
Bio from Wikipedia, 1/10/2012
Cotton has been a resident of Leiper’s Fork, Tennessee since the late-1970s. He is an active member of a United Methodist Church in Franklin, Tennessee. In recent years, Cotton has scaled back his career as a singer and songwriter and spent much of his savings on a legal battle against the construction of a state highway (State Route 840) which would surround Nashville. Cotton, the father of two adopted children and one biological child, has devoted himself to helping the underprivileged of his area by motivating them in their studies and activities through a program called Kids On Stage (KOS). KOS brings in Nashville artists to run summer classes that open the doors to the arts to kids who might otherwise never see greatness or think about greatness in their arts. Most notably, Grammy Award winner Michael McDonald has performed numerous times to bring awareness and raise donations for this program under Cotton’s leadership, besides producing independent films about the plight of the poor around the world.
Cotton was instrumental in 1980s pop singer Michael Johnson’s career.
In 2001, Cotton lost a race for a seat in the Tennessee House of Representatives to Republican Glen Casada. Both Casada and Cotton campaigned on strong opposition to proposals for a state income tax.