Joey Feek, of country duo Joey + Rory, dies at 40 - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 12:02 AM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Entertainment

Joey Feek, of country duo Joey + Rory, dies at 40

Joey Feek, who with her husband Rory formed the award-winning country duo Joey + Rory, has died at the age of 40.

Feek had been diagnosed with cervical cancer in 2014

Joey Martin Feek, left, formed the country duo Joey + Rory with her husband Rory Lee Feek. (Chris Pizzello/Associated Press)

Joey Feek, who with her husband Rory formed the award-winning country duo Joey + Rory, has died at the age of 40.

Feek's manager Aaron Carnahan told The Associated Press that Feek died Friday at home in Indiana. She had been diagnosed with cancer.

The brunette singer from Alexandria, Ind., found success when she paired up in 2008 with her songwriter husband on the Country Music Television singing competition Can You Duet?

Joey Feek sang lead with her husband, who sported sideburns and overalls, singing the harmony parts on their traditional country songs, including "That's Important to Me."

In 2014, she was diagnosed with cervical cancer, which continued to spread despite multiple surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation treatment. Last fall, Rory Feek wrote on his blog that they had decided to end treatment.

'She is in heaven'

In a blog post Friday announcing her death, Rory Feek wrote, "My wife's greatest dream came true today. She is in Heaven."

Even after the diagnosis, the couple continued to record, and an album of hymns topped the Billboard Top Country Albums chart in March. Since her diagnosis, the music community responded by honouring the couple with award nominations. Their song "If I Needed You" was nominated for best country duo/group performance at the Grammy Awards and they are also nominated at the 2016 Academy of Country Music Awards for vocal duo of the year.

They have a 2-year-old daughter, Indiana.

Rory Feek documented their life together and later his wife's cancer diagnosis on his blog.

"Though this is, and has been, a time of many tears of sorrow, it has also been a time of countless tears of joy," Rory Feek wrote on his blog Friday. "There have been too many beautiful moments to count or even begin to share in this blog. But I try. When a person has been through as much pain and struggle as Joey's been through, you just want it to be over. You want them to not have to hurt anymore, more that you want them to stay with you. And so, it makes the hard job of saying goodbye just a little easier."

Their first album, "The Life of a Song," was a surprise hit in 2008 and earned them a spot opening for the Zac Brown Band on tour. Although their songs were never top airplay hits, the couple's plainspoken style and Joey Feek's sweet, smoky voice earned them a host of fans of traditional country and western music. And on "Cheater, Cheater" and other songs they showed they could also handle upbeat and witty material.

In a 2009 interview, Rory Feek told The Associated Press that being together all the time didn't make them get on each other's nerves.

"We're really good friends," Feek said, while cuddling his bride. "I know everybody says that, but you know, this is one of those times that everything we're doing, we are both interested in. We're both passionate about country music and we are both thrilled to be here and we really do get along well."

Beloved by country fans

In the tradition of such couples as John and June Carter Cash and Faith Hill and Tim McGraw, their blended voices and deep bonds made them beloved by fans of country music.

"We're experiencing everything together," Joey Feek told The Associated Press in 2010. "That's been the highlight of it all."

The Feeks seemed like old friends to their fans and fellow Tennesseans. They met at a songwriters night at Nashville's famed Bluebird Cafe, married in 2002 and lived on a farm in rural Pottsville, Tenn., about 72 kilometres south of Nashville. Even as their fame was rising, the two opened a restaurant inside an old general store that became a community centre. The restaurant and their community were featured in their music video, "This Song's for You." Tourists from all over would stop at Marcy Jo's Mealhouse to grab a bite to eat and maybe even spot Joey behind the counter.

They earned three nominations, including for the fan-voted new artist of the year, during the 2010 Academy of Country Music Awards and won the Top New Vocal Duo of the Year award. They followed up with "Album Number Two," in 2010, then released a Christmas album in 2011 and a collection of gospel songs, "Inspired," in 2013.

The couple were always entertaining fans from their farmhouse through their weekly television show on RFD-TV or on their radio show that aired on WSM-AM before the Grand Ole Opry, or through their farmhouse concerts.