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Olympic gold medalist singing a new tune with music career
20-year-old already hopes to sign with a record label



Olympic gold medal gymnast Carly Patterson is singing a new tune.

Almost four years after becoming only the second U.S. woman to win the Olympic all-around title, Patterson has turned her focus to a music career. She’s already released a five-song demo CD, and hopes to finalize a deal with a record label in the next month or two.

“I finished one goal in my life and (music) was my next,” she said Tuesday. “I thought, ‘I love singing so much, I would love to pursue it.’ After the Olympics, I started getting more serious about it.”

Patterson, who turns 20 next month, comes by her talent naturally. Her father was a singer, and she said she’s been singing as long as she can remember. She appeared on the “Celebrity Duets” reality show in the fall of 2006, and released her CD last summer.

“Um, I guess kind of the style I want to go for — obviously I want to make my own, but kind of Kelly Clarkson-ish,” Patterson said, referring to the first “American Idol” winner who has gone on to commercial success.

She writes her own music, too.

“I can’t just sit down and try to do it, it doesn’t work,” she said. “I just have to be inspired just randomly. A lot of times it happens when I’m going to bed and then I’m like, ‘Great, now I have to get up.’”

Breaking into the music business isn’t easy. Though Patterson worked briefly with Joe Simpson — better known as Jessica and Ashlee Simpson’s dad — getting a record deal isn’t a given.

That’s where her “other career” comes in. Not only are record companies looking for people who can sing, but they’re looking for somebody who can sell an album. And Patterson has name recognition as well as a ready-made fan base.

“Normally they have to build up someone’s name and promote you,” she said. “I already have a fan base and a following. They look at that as a big plus.”

Patterson was just 16 when she joined Mary Lou Retton as the only American women to win the Olympic title. She had established herself as one to watch by winning the American Cup in 2003 and again in 2004, and she’d finished second to Russian star Svetlana Khorkina at the 2003 world championships.

Though she stumbled slightly on vault in the Athens all-around, her first event, she was dazzling the rest of the way. She was nearly perfect on the balance beam and uneven bars and, with the gold medal on the line, put on quite a show on the floor. She soared high above the floor on her tumbling passes and landed effortlessly, and she repeatedly flashed a bright, toothy grin.

When she finished, she jumped into coach Evgeny Marchenko’s arms.

“That night was pretty crazy. It was really surreal,” she said. “I didn’t even realize how big of a deal it was. I just thought, ‘Oh, I just won the Olympics.’ What? What does that mean?”




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