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Latest revision as of 19:24, 26 December 2024
Canadian singer-songwriter and television personalityLoma Lynn Rowlinson (formerly Mathias), known professionally as Loma Lyns, is a Canadian singer-songwriter and television personality.
Career
Her single "Red Handed" was a Top 40 hit on the Canadian country charts in 1990, and her single "Countin' on You This Time" was a Top 40 hit in Europe. She also had chart success in 1998 with "Love Me, I'm Alive", the theme song for the Canadian Special Olympics which she co-wrote with Chuck Labelle. She has shared the stage with many country music celebrities, has appeared on CBC, CTV and performed on the last season of the Tommy Hunter Show as an upcoming artist and also sang back-up for country superstar Colin Raye. She has performed at festivals and clubs across Canada and into the U.S. In the early 90s her music video "Who's the Stranger" garnered airtime on Canada's CMT.
A Whitefish Lake Ojibway from Northern Ontario, Canada, Loma has also been a host of television programming on the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, and co-host of the hit series "Cooking With the Wolfman" and was for years the host of the documentary series "Aboriginal Voices".
Honors
In 2017 she was inducted into the Northern Ontario Opry Hall of Fame.
Personal
Loma and her husband are parents of eight children, and have been foster parents of a number of First Nations children. They reside in the region of the Greater City of Sudbury, Ontario. Loma continues to write and co-write music and still performs live on stage a few times a year.
Discography
Albums
Year | Album |
---|---|
1990 | Red Handed |
1994 | Who's the Stranger |
1998 | Lake of Tears |
Singles
Year | Single | CAN Country | Album |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | "Who's the Stranger" | 85 | Who's the Stranger |
References
- Keillor, Elaine; Archambault, Timothy; Kelly, John M. H. (2013-03-27). Encyclopedia of Native American Music of North America. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-05506-5.
External links
This article about a singer-songwriter from Canada is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |
- 20th-century Canadian singer-songwriters
- 20th-century Canadian women singers
- 20th-century First Nations people
- 20th-century indigenous women of the Americas
- Canadian women country singers
- Canadian country singer-songwriters
- Canadian television hosts
- Canadian women television hosts
- Canadian Ojibwe people
- Living people
- People from Sudbury District
- First Nations women singers
- Ojibwe musicians
- Canadian singer-songwriter stubs