Career
Signed to Warner Brothers Records in 1997, she made her debut on the United States. country charts that year with the release of her first album Back to You. lieutenant produced the hit single "What If I Said", a duet with country music artist Steve Wariner, which reached Number One in early 1998, producing not only Anita"s first Number One overall, but also Wariner"s first Number One since 1989.
Although she never entered the Top 40 on the country charts again, she recorded a second album for Warner Brothers before being dropped in 2004.
Anita Cochran was born in South Lyon, Michigan, into a family that enjoyed listening to country music She began to play guitar at an early age, and later learned to play banjo, mandolin and Dobro as well.
A local country musician, Anita"s father often took her to country music festivals. She later found work both in bands and as a solo act, and was eventually hired to manage Pearl Recording Studios, a studio in Canton, Michigan.
In 1997, after moving to Nashville, Tennessee, she was signed to Warner Brothers
Records. Released in 1997, her debut album, Back to You, was produced by her as well. She co-wrote all but one of the album"s songs and played several instruments on lieutenant
The album"s lead-off single, "I Could Love a Manitoba Like That", peaked at Number.
64, followed by the Number. 69 "Daddy, Can You See Maine". Following this song was the album"s fourth and final single, "Will You Be Here?" also at Number.
69.
Her second album, Anita, produced three singles all of which failed to reach Top 40. Foreign the first single from her third album, God Created Woman, Cochran spliced in Conway Twitty"s vocals from earlier songs of his to form a duet entitled "(I Wanna Hear) A Cheatin" Song". This song peaked at Number.
57, although the album was never released and its title track failed to chart.
In 2007, Cochran produced country music singer Tammy Cochran"s album Where I American The two singers are not related.