Los Angeles Times

Singer was songwriter for music legends

- A Times staff writer contribute­d to this report.

David Olney, a deeply respected folk singer who wrote songs recorded by Linda Ronstadt, Emmylou Harris and others, died after a heart attack while performing in Florida, his publicist said.

Olney was onstage in Santa Rosa Beach on Saturday when he was stricken. He was 71, said Jill Kettles, the performer’s publicist.

Olney was part of the music scene in Nashville for decades and had recorded more than 20 albums, according to a release about his death posted to his website.

Though not as widely known as those who recorded his songs, Olney was admired greatly by his peers.

“Olney may be the best songwriter to have released nearly a dozen albums without making the weekly list of the Top 200 sellers,” former Times music critic Robert Hilburn wrote in 2003.

He was performing Saturday at the 30A Songwriter­s Festival when he suffered an apparent heart attack onstage, his website said. Some in attendance tweeted that Olney apologized, closed his eyes and slumped to the stage floor.

Olney, born March 23, 1948, in Providence, R.I., attended the University of North Carolina before moving to Nashville with hopes of selling his songs to recording artists.

Ronstadt, Harris, Mimi Farina and Steve Earle were among those who recorded his songs.

“One of the best songwriter­s working in the world today,” Earle once said, according to Olney’s website.

Olney is survived by his wife, Regina, daughter Lillian and son Redding.

 ?? Larry Hulst Getty Images ?? DAVID OLNEY in Denver in 2015. He collapsed while performing at the 30A Songwriter­s Festival in Florida last week.
Larry Hulst Getty Images DAVID OLNEY in Denver in 2015. He collapsed while performing at the 30A Songwriter­s Festival in Florida last week.

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