In the early 80 and issue "country-crossover", I notice ears for Sylvia and Charly McClain HUTTON even GAYLE Crystal. I have discovered Juice Newton in 1985, with 'Old Flame' (an album much more "country" with a great cover of 'Hurt' and a memorable 'Let Your Woman Take Care of You'). Juice Newton was 'Dirty Looks' and synthetic pop-rock. A RONSTADT Linda had already committed this gap with the synthetic 'Mad Love' before returning to its fundamentals on the sumptuous 'Get Closer' (almost always found an album on CD). Juice Newton will return to its fundamentals in 1985, but they are there, to 'Juice' and 'qiet Lies', magnified by transferring BGO ... As for 'Dirty Looks', he deserves to be listened to in this context.
BGO number of albums reissued by Juice Newton (and, most recently, 'Old Flame' which had become a rarity in CD). All I can hope for is that this label is attacking my two favorites of this "country early 80's" divine what Sylvia Hutton and crunchy what Charly McClain (two artists whose albums are become not found on CD).