Introduction

John Foster, a Louisiana native and LSU student studying biology, wants to pursue pre-med to help those undergoing cancer treatment.

During his first audition on the American Idol stage, he expressed his ambition to become a “singing oncologist.”

He charmed the judges with a classic Conway Twitty song, and Luke turned his initial “no” into a resounding “yes” because of the young singer’s infectious personality and Southern charm. Watch below.

John Foster Brought The Heat To The Top 24

The young singer traveled to Hawaii after making it into the top 24.

John Foster performed a lively song titled “Callin’ Baton Rouge,” originally by The Oak Ridge Boys. His performance had the judges dancing in their seats and energized the crowd. The song is an ode to the singer’s Louisiana roots.

But was it enough for him to make it to the top 20 contestants of American Idol? Watch below.

John Foster Brought Tears To The American Idol Audience With Original Song

John Foster reached the top 20 of American Idol. He then performed his original song “Tell That Angel I Love Her.” The song is a heartfelt tribute to his two late friends, Maggie Dunn and Caroline Gill.

The emotional performance brought him to tears, and he ended it by saying, “I love you, Maggie.” While the tears fell, Carrie Underwood asked John about that ending sentence.

John shared that it was dedicated to his lost friends. He then gestured toward the audience, where Maggie Dunn’s and Caroline Gill’s parents were seated.

Some of the songs’ moving lyrics are,

“Each tear that falls on my guitar
Is a hug from afar
Lord, won’t you tell that angel I love her?
As y’all live in the stars”

According to L&M Star Productions, Foster said,

“I wrote this for the two sweet angels that were tragically taken from us on New Year’s Eve. Maggie was one of my best friends and Caroline was a good friend of mine who I regret not knowing even more. Until we meet again. So much love to everyone.”

Watch his tearjerking performance below.

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SHE DIDN’T WANT TO SING IT. SHE SAID IT MADE HER SOUND WEAK — BUT THE SONG SHE HATED BECAME THE ONE THE WORLD COULDN’T FORGET. By the summer of 1961, Patsy Cline had already survived more than most people could imagine. A childhood spent moving 19 times before she turned fifteen. A father who walked out. A house with no running water. Years of plucking chickens and scrubbing bus stations just to keep the lights on. Then, just when Nashville finally started calling her name, a head-on collision sent her through a windshield and nearly killed her. She came back to the studio on crutches, ribs still broken. Her producer handed her a song written by a young, unknown songwriter so broke he’d been working three jobs just to survive. She listened to the demo and hated it. The phrasing was strange. The melody drifted. She told him straight: “There ain’t no way I could sing it like that guy’s a-singing it.” But her producer wouldn’t let it go. He recorded the entire instrumental track without her — something almost unheard of in 1961 — then brought her back three weeks later, once her ribs had healed just enough to hold a note. She recorded the vocal in a single take. Her voice didn’t shout. It slid between the notes like someone too tired to pretend anymore — stretching syllables, pausing where no one expected, letting the silence do the work. The song reached number two on the country chart, crossed into the pop top ten, and eventually became the most-played jukebox song in American history. The young songwriter said decades later that hers was the version that understood the lyrics on the deepest possible level. She died in a plane crash less than two years later. She was thirty years old. But that song — the one she never wanted to sing — is still the thing people remember most. Do you know which Patsy Cline song this was?