Joey + Rory's Joey Martin Feek Dies at 40 After Battle With Cancer
She was not on the list.
The country music community is in mourning following the
death of singer-songwriter Joey Martin Feek, who died after a battle with
cervical cancer, according to a post on Joey + Rory’s Facebook page. She was
40.
A native of Indiana, the singer made the move to Nashville
in the late 1990s, where she met songwriter Rory Feek – who would become her
husband (in June 2002) and then duet partner. She released a solo album, Strong
Enough to Cry, on the Giantslayer label in 2005. However, as time progressed,
the two began to work together more and more – eventually performing on the CMT
show Can You Duet? in 2008. A third-place finish on the program earned them a
recording contract with Sugar Hill Records. Their first album as a duo, The
Life of a Song, was released in October 2008 and peaked at No. 10 on
Billboard’s Top Country Albums chart. The first single from the project, the
infectious “Cheater, Cheater,” garnered attention at radio as well, peaking at
No. 30 on the singles chart. The video featured a guest cameo from Naomi Judd,
one of the celebrity judges on the CMT series.
The success of their music led to winning top new vocal duo
at the 2010 Academy of Country Music Awards. Their sophomore album, simply
titled Album Number Two, also hit the top 10 on the albums chart upon its
release later that year, though they never hit the top 40 on the airplay lists
again. In fact, eight of their albums made the chart, with the most recent
being Hymns, which debuted at No. 1 on Top Country Albums and Top Christian
Albums.
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“I communicated to my wife, Joey, the good [chart] news
about ‘her record,’” Rory Feek told Billboard at the time. “I call it her project,
because the Hymns album is one that she has always wanted to make, and she’s
worked so hard to make it happen, in spite of the difficult circumstances she’s
facing. Her response, through tears, was, ‘No, honey, this is God’s record.
He’s gonna be the one that gets all the glory.’ And she’s right. Only God could
make something like this happen.”
The duo also made a name for themselves through their
countless TV appearances, including their own weekly music program on the
RFD-TV network and a successful string of commercials for Overstock.com. Both
were filmed at their home, located about an hour south of Nashville. It was
just a few miles from there that the couple established their own restaurant,
Marcy Jo’s, which Feek said was a true labor of love for the couple. In fact,
visitors to the eatery might find themselves waited on by the singer herself.
“We opened this little place down by our farmhouse about
three years ago,” she said in 2011. “It was at a time when I had nothing going
on in music, and we weren’t even singing together. It was a place that his
sister Marcy wanted to open up – it was her dream. It’s been neat to feel a
community around you that didn’t exist before. It was just an empty building.
We opened it up wanting to know who our neighbors were. We’ve been down there
for about eight years, and we only knew about four people. We opened the doors,
and hundreds of people start showing up. Then, when the TV show hit, people
from everywhere wanted to come and see our little slice of heaven.”
The singer had been waging a courageous battle against
cervical cancer since 2014. She underwent surgery for the disease that summer,
but it returned in 2015. After undergoing another round of treatments, tests
showed that the cancer had spread in October, prompting the couple to stop all
treatments. On November 9, it was announced that Hospice care had been called
in for the family following a brief hospitalization while visiting family in
Indiana the week before.
Reflecting on their sometimes unique musical style, Feek
said in 2012, “We don’t ever take ourselves too seriously. We’re human, and
just like anybody, we’re going to make mistakes. But, at the end of the day,
we’re just trying to be honest with who we are and ourselves – to keep our
marriage intact, and to go down this path together and enjoy the ride while we
have the opportunity to do so.”
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