In Memoriam: Country Stars Who Died In 2025 – RIP: 39 Country Stars and Celebrities We Lost In 2025

Very few Country Music Hall of Fame artists died in 2025 but that’s not to say no one famous is included on this in memoriam list.

Songwriting legends, influential television personalities and at least three country music husbands died this year. It was a particularly sad year at the Grand Ole Opry as both its oldest member and its most heralded member died in the span of a few months.

Dolly Parton’s husband Carl Dean died in March and that was really the first time the community stopped to mourn together. While never seen and rarely spoke of, the legendary singer made it clear that her husband’s support was crucial to her success.

Dolly Parton - Essential Dolly Parton
Compact Discs

Dolly Parton – Essential Dolly Parton

Two months later, the leader of another famous family would pass after a long illness. Duck Dynasty star Phil Robertson is one of at least four television celebrities featured here. If you loved shows like Dukes of Hazzard and Hee Haw (especially Hee Haw) you had reason to mourn this year.

While we didn’t include athletes from ball sports on this list of stars who died, we did share the stories of NASCAR driver Greg Biffle, who died on Dec. 18 in a plane crash (one of two on this list). Also featured are a trio of rodeo legends, including the “Super Looper.”

As you scroll through list of country stars and celebrities who died in 2025, pause to remember the accomplishments and impact of your favorites. This list is followed by an even sadder collection of stars. May we all pray that nobody ends up on that list in 2026.

Remembering the Country Stars Who Died in 2025

Several of the Grand Ole Opry’s most well-known stars are included among nearly 40 stories of country singers who died in 2025.
The year was also hard on celebrities attached to popular TV shows. Here is a list of the most notable deaths from this year, including several iconic songwriters, beloved hitmakers and famous spouses.

Gallery Credit: Sterling Whitaker

Greg Biffle Celebration of Life Memorial
Greg Biffle Celebration of Life Memorial

Jared C. Tilton, Getty Images

Greg Biffle

NASCAR driver Greg Biffle died at age 55 on Dec. 18 when a plane he owned crashed near a regional airport in North Carolina. His wife, son, daughter and three others were also aboard the airplane. The cause of the crash was still being investigated as the year ended.
Stu Phillips
Stu Phillips

Jason Kempin, Getty Images

Stu Phillips

Canadian performer Stu Phillips died at age 92 on Dec. 25, 2025. The “Kathy Keep Playing” singer was the Grand Ole Opry’s oldest member, having been inducted in 1967. “Vin Rosé,” “Bracero,” and “Juanita Jones” were a few more of his hits.
Joe Ely Dead
Joe Ely Dead

Jason Kempin, Getty Images

Joe Ely

Singer and songwriter Joe Ely died on Dec. 15, 2025 after a battle with Lewy body dementia, Parkinson’s disease and pneumonia. The country and rock star was 78 years old. He’s known for his work with the Flatlanders and as a genre-blending solo artist. In the 1990s, he earned a CMA nomination for his work in a country supergroup called Buzzin’ Cousins.
Raul Malo Cancer The Mavericks Cancel Shows
Raul Malo Cancer The Mavericks Cancel Shows

Rich Fury, Getty Images

Raul Malo of The Mavericks

The Mavericks’ co-founder and lead singer Raul Malo died on Dec. 8, 2025 after a battle with cancer. He was 60 years old but his death was not a surprise to those who’d followed him over the last 18 months. Malo was very open about his journey, sharing a progression that was all-but-terminal just months before he passed.
While he built a group of loyal fans as a solo artist, his biggest commercial success came in the 1990s when the Mavericks released genre-blending songs like “What a Crying Shame” and “Here Comes the Rain.”
Todd Snider
Todd Snider

Erika Goldring, Getty Images

Todd Snider

Americana singer Todd Snider died after a short illness on Nov. 14, 2025. The 59-year-old had made news weeks earlier when he claimed he was assaulted near a hotel in Salt Lake City. He’d later be arrested for disorderly conduct and making threats and cancel his tour.
The “Talkin’ Seattle Grunge Rock Blues” singer was a bit of a cult hero who used satire in place of traditional jingles and arrangements. His social media team shared that he was experiencing breathing problems and had been diagnosed with walking pneumonia a few days before his death.
Brett James Songs
Brett James Songs

Terry Wyatt, Getty Images

Brett James

Country songwriter Brett James died on Sept. 18, 2025 when a plane he was piloting crashed in western North Carolina. His wife and stepdaughter were also killed in an accident that devastated the country music community.
James was one of the most successful and popular songwriters of the last 20 years, with hits recorded by Kenny Chesney, Carrie Underwood, Dierks Bentley and more. Late in his career he released a solo project but during a touching CMA Awards tribute, he was remembered for his impact on mainstream country music.
Bobby Kerr Dead
Bobby Kerr Dead

@TotalFeeds, YouTube

Bobby Kerr

Rodeo legend Bobby Kerr died of esophageal cancer at age 67 on Sept. 5, 2025. He was a star during his prime but his legacy is the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame, which he founded with his wife Susan in 1997.
Robby Turner Dead Dies
Robby Turner Dead Dies

@aretee, YouTube

Robby Turner

Robby Turner was best known as Waylon Jennings’ steel guitar player during the height of the legend’s career. Vince Gill, John Prine, Randy Travis and Chris Stapleton were just a few of the other artists he worked with across his career.
Brandon Blackstock Kelly Clarkson
Brandon Blackstock Kelly Clarkson

Frazer Harrison, Getty Images

Brandon Blackstock

Brandon Blackstock is remembered as Kelly Clarkson’s husband but he made a great impact in country music as manager for Blake Shelton, Rascal Flatts and more. He died on Aug. 7, 2025 after a three-year battle with skin cancer. News of his death was a shock as few were aware he was even sick until a day prior when Clarkson canceled a professional engagement to be with her kids.
Jeannie Seely Funeral Details
Jeannie Seely Funeral Details

Terry Wyatt, Getty Images

Jeannie Seely

Grand Ole Opry legend Jeannie Seely’s death was a result of an intestinal infection but she’d undergone several surgeries in recent years to treat issues compromising her comfort.
The 85-year-old enjoyed commercial success in 1966 with a song called “Don’t Touch Me” and would go on to chart several more hits. A career in film added to her resume but she’s best remembered as being one of the most lovable stars of the Opry, having played the stage more than any artist in history. Seely’s death on Aug. 1, 2025 came just months after her husband Gene Ward died in Dec. 2024.
Sandy Pinkard Dead Dies
Sandy Pinkard Dead Dies

Warner Bros Records

Sandy Pinkard of Pinkard & Bowen

James “Sandy” Pinkard recorded parody versions of many of country music’s biggest hits after a career writing songs for Mel Tillis, Anne Murray and more. As part of the comedic country duo Pinkard & Bowden, he enjoyed success throughout the mid-1980s. His death on July 26, 2025 came at age 78.
The Dukes of Hazzard Cast
The Dukes of Hazzard Cast

CBS via Getty Images

Rick Hurst

Actor Rick Hurst was best known as Deputy Cletus Hogg on the 1980s TV show Dukes of Hazzard. His death on June 26, 2025 was unexpected and his loss immediately grieved by cast-mates like Ben Jones.
gailard-sartain-dead
gailard-sartain-dead

KOTV/YouTube

Gailard Sartain

Hee Haw actor Gailard Sartain died on June 19, 2025 after a career in TV and film. On the famous country music variety show, he played characters like Sheriff Orville P. Bullmoose, Maynard in the general store sketches and Orville in Lulu’s truck stop.
Later he’d join projects like Walker, Texas Ranger and three Ernest films.
Brian Wilson
Brian Wilson

Kevin Winter, Getty Images

Brian Wilson

Brian Wilson was 82 years old when he died on June 11, 2025. The Beach Boys visionary was one of the most iconic entertainers of several generations and he made a big impact on all forms of music, including country. His cause of death was not revealed but he’d been diagnosed with dementia in 2024.
Lorrie Morgan Randy White Dead Dies
Lorrie Morgan Randy White Dead Dies

Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Randy White

Lorrie Morgan’s husband Randy White died on June 1, 2025 after a battle with mouth cancer. The 72-year-old was the singer’s sixth husband and they’d been together for 17 years (married almost 15).
Phil Robertson
Phil Robertson

Getty Images

Phil Robertson

Duck Dynasty patriarch Phil Robertson died on May 25, 2025 at age 79. The TV star had an oversized impact on his fans as his story of redemption after a troubled early life touched those who followed him deeply.
Robertson had been dealing with several health issues (including Alzheimer’s) in recent months so the news was not shocking to those who’d followed. It happened as a Duck Dynasty reboot was filming but it did not make Season 1.
tony-haselden-dead
tony-haselden-dead

YouTube@WilHodge

Tony Haselden

Tony Haselden was a member of the rock group LeRoux before becoming an acclaimed country songwriter and producer. “That’s My Story” (Collin Raye), “It Ain’t Nothin’” (Keith Whitley) and “You Know Me Better Than That” (George Strait) are three of his most well-known songs. His cause of death was not reported.
Haselden was 79 years old when he died on May 16, 2025.
johnny rodriguez dies dead 2025
johnny rodriguez dies dead 2025

YouTube/@kiii

Johnny Rodriguez

’70s country superstar Johnny Rodriguez died on May 9, surrounded by family. He was 73.
Rodriguez was one of the first Hispanic country singers to score any mainstream success. His run of hits began in 1973 with “Pass Me By (If You’re Only Passing Through)” and included “You Always Come Back (To Hurting Me),” “Ridin’ My Thumb to Mexico,” and “That’s the Way Love Goes.” The Texas Country Music Hall of Fame inducted Johnny Rodriguez in 2007.
Priscilla Pointer
Priscilla Pointer

Peter Kramer, Getty Images

Priscilla Pointer

Dallas star Priscilla Pointer died on April 28, according to her daughter, actress Amy Irving.
“Priscilla Pointer, acclaimed stage television and film actress, and mother of David, Katie, and Amy Irving, died peacefully in her sleep at the age of 100, hopefully to run off with her 2 adoring husbands and her many dogs,” she writes. “She most definitely will be missed.”
Though Pointer appeared in a number of prominent films including CarrieLooking for Mr. GoodbarBlue VelvetThe Falcon and the Snowman and more, she made her career as a character actor.
Dallas was a major standout on her resume, as she began appearing on the iconic nighttime soap opera in 1981, at the height of its success.
She played Rebacca Barnes Wentworth, the long-estranged mother of Victoria Principal’s character, Pamela Ewing.
Her character died in 1983 during Season 6.
Principal turned to Instagram to remember Pointer, writing, “Priscilla Pointer, my favorite TV mama & a wonderful woman, passed away today. My sincere condolences to Amy Irving & all of Priscilla’s family. Always a special place in my heart. RIP.”
roy cooper dies dead 2025
roy cooper dies dead 2025

Resistol, YouTube

Roy Cooper

ProRodeo Hall of Fame member Roy Cooper, known in the rodeo world as “The Super Looper,” died in a house fire at his North Texas home on April 29. He was 69 years old.
A professional rodeo performer who competed in the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA) for two decades, Cooper won the All-Around world championship in 1983, the PRCA’s Rookie of the Year Award in 1976 and six Tie-Down Roping championships over the course of his career.
lulu roman dies dead 2025
lulu roman dies dead 2025

Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Lulu Roman

Hee Haw star Lulu Roman died on April 23, 2025.
The actress, comedian and gospel singer was with the show from beginning to end, but her time on the show was interrupted by a conviction on drug charges in 1971.
She’d later convert to Christianity and release more than a dozen Gospel-themed albums.
Roman was 78 at the time of her death.
david briggs dies dead 2025
david briggs dies dead 2025

Courtesy of the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum

David Briggs

Keyboardist David Briggs, a member of the legendary group of studio musicians the Nashville Cats, died in April of 2025. He was 82 years old.
“David Briggs could play keyboards in any style,” Hall of Fame CEO Kyle Young said in the statement. “For more than four decades, his deft touch graced countless country, R&B, pop and rock recordings.”
Though he played in multiple genres, Briggs focused on country, working with major stars including Willie Nelson, Reba McEntire, Dolly Parton, Kenny Chesney and Shania Twain.
Briggs became a member of the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 1999, and he was inducted into the Musicians Hall of Fame in 2019.
larry bastian dies dead 2025
larry bastian dies dead 2025

Kevin Dietsch, Getty Images

Larry Bastian

Larry Bastian, an acclaimed Nashville songwriter who wrote hits for Garth Brooks and many more, died on April 6 in California. He was 90 years old.
Conway Twitty (“Saturday Night Special”), Sammy Kershaw (“Yard Sale”) and Craig Morgan (“Look at Us”) are three more artists who had hits with a Bastian composition.
Janie Fricke, David Frizzell (with Merle Haggard), Reba McEntire, George Jones, Neal McCoy and Rhett Akins are also among the many artists who recorded Bastian’s songs over the years.
al pearce dies dead 2025
al pearce dies dead 2025

Pitwall Productions, YouTube

Al Pearce

Al Pearce, a legendary NASCAR reporter and a member of the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame, died on April 9, 2025. He was 82 years old.
Pearce was a correspondent for the Newport News Daily Press from 1969 until his retirement in 2004. He also wrote for Autoweek from 1973 until his retirement, and continued to occasionally write stories for that publication until nearly the end of his life.
Pearce covered the Daytona 500 for a whopping 56 consecutive years.
Pearce won an array of auto-racing journalism awards, including the American Motorsports Media Award of Excellence. He was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 2003 and the Virginia Sports Hall of Fame in 2012.
colt ford father dies dead
colt ford father dies dead

Isaac Brekken, Getty Images

Colt Ford’s Father, Paul Heyward Brown

Colt Ford turned to social media to reveal that his father, Paul Heyward Brown, died on April 8.
Brown was 89 years old. He died holding the hand of his wife of 62 years, Elizabeth.
dylan grant dies dead 2025
dylan grant dies dead 2025

Dylan Grant, Facebook/ABC News/X

Dylan Grant

Professional bull ride Dylan Grant died after sustaining injuries at the Wharton County Youth Fair Xtreme Bulls event in Wharton, Texas, on April 3. He was 24 years old.
According to a statement from the Professional Rodeo Cowboys Association (PRCA), Grant was competing in the second round of the event when he was bucked off a bull.
After that, he was trampled by the bull, according to an interview his father Wade Grant gave to ABC News the following day.
dick damron dies dead 2025
dick damron dies dead 2025

Westwood International Records

Dick Damron

Canadian country music legend Dick Damron died on March 25 at the age of 91.
The Canadian Country Music Hall of Fame member had hits in four different decades, and he also wrote songs recorded by Charley Pride, George Hamilton and more.
Damron was 91 years old.
Jack Lilley
Jack Lilley

YouTube, Teleguru/Instagram

Jack Lilley

Little House on the Prairie alum Jack Lilley died in March of 2025 at the age of 91.
The beloved actor played multiple roles on the hit series. Melissa Gilbert, who starred as Laura Ingalls on the show, shared the news of his passing on Instagram, calling him one of her “favorite people.”
doug kiker american idol dies
doug kiker american idol dies

YouTube/American Idol

Doug Kiker

Doug Kiker, who shot to viral fam as the “singing garbageman” on American Idol Season 18, died on March 13 of unspecified causes. He was 32.
Kiker caused a stir after singing Rascal Flatts’ “Bless the Broken Road” on Idol in 2020. He went on to Hollywood Week before washing out of the singing competition.
dolly parton husband dead
dolly parton husband dead

Rich Fury, Getty Images / via Dolly Parton

Dolly Parton’s Husband, Carl Dean

Dolly Parton’s husband of nearly 60 years, Carl Dean, died on Monday, March 3, 2025, in Nashville.
“Carl and I spent many wonderful years together. Words can’t do justice to the love we shared over 60 years,” Parton said in a statement. “Thank you for your prayers and sympathy.”
Dean was 82 years old.
Ryan Whyte Maloney
Ryan Whyte Maloney

Gabe Ginsberg, Getty Images

Ryan Whyte Maloney

Ryan Whyte Maloney made it all the way to the finals when he competed on Blake Shelton’s team on The Voice Season 6.
People confirmed Whyte Maloney died by suicide on Tuesday (Jan. 28), citing the Clark County Coroner in Las Vegas. He was 44 years old.
According to reports, Whyte Maloney shot himself and took his own life very suddenly after arguing with his girlfriend. He had harmed himself and contemplated suicide previously.
Garth Hudson
Garth Hudson

Alberto E. Rodriguez, Getty Images

Garth Hudson

Garth Hudson was the last remaining member of The Band, securing his influence in both rock and country music. He died on Jan. 21, 2025, at a nursing home in Woodstock, N.Y., at the age of 87.
Daryl Schiff, Martina McBrides Father
Daryl Schiff, Martina McBrides Father

Ethan Miller, Getty Images

Daryl Schiff, Martina McBride’s Father

Martina McBride’s father, Darryl Schiff, died on Jan. 14, 2025, at the age of 86. The country star turned to Instagram on Jan. 18 to share the sad news, writing, “I really don’t have the right words. My dad passed away Tuesday night. Our hearts are broken.”
According to McBride, “He was 86 and had an amazing life. He was a third-generation family farmer. He was also the leader of our family band, The Schiffters.”
She would remember her father as being instrumental in her own musical development, adding that he passed away “suddenly and peacefully at his home.”
Kenny Law
Kenny Law

YouTube.com/Discovery

Kenny Law

Everett Kenneth “Kenny” Law was a popular figure on Moonshiners since Season 8 and cousin to Henry Law. The Discovery show announced his death with a post to social media on Jan. 16. He was 68 years old.
Henry Law told TMZ that Kenny had heart troubles and diabetes and had recently been hospitalized due to a blood infection.
Melba Montgomery
Melba Montgomery

YouTube@HeyHey1956

Melba Montgomery

Melba Montgomery scored a number of country duet hits with George Jones and others, as well as a No. 1 solo hit with “No Charge.” She died in Nashville on Jan. 15 at the age of 86.
In a post to Facebook, Montgomery’s daughter, Melissa, reveals that the singer-songwriter battled dementia prior to her death.
Buck White
Buck White

Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Buck White

Buck White was best known as the founder of the Grammy Award-winning bluegrass group the Whites. He died on Jan. 13, 2025. He was 94 years old.
Peter Yarrow
Peter Yarrow

Chip Somodevilla, Getty Images

Peter Yarrow

Peter Yarrow was known to music fans as one-third of the seminal folk group Peter, Paul & Mary. He died on Jan. 7 at his apartment in Manhattan after a four-year battle with cancer. He was 86 years old.
Sammy Thurman Brackenbury
Sammy Thurman Brackenbury

The Women’s Professional Rodeo Association (WPRA), YouTube

Sammy Thurman Brackenbury

Legendary rodeo rider Sammy Thurman Brackenbury died in December 2024, according to a statement from the Women’s Professional Rodeo Association (WPRA), but her death was not widely reported until January of 2025. The pioneering barrel racer won the World Championship in 1965, and she was inducted into the Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame in 2019. She was 91 years old at the time of her death.
Wayne Osmond
Wayne Osmond

Ethan Miller, Getty Images

Wayne Osmond

Wayne Osmond was one of the founding members of the Osmonds, who enjoyed decades of success in popular music in various permutations. The family band also launched the careers of Donny and Marie Osmond.
Wayne Osmond died on Jan. 1, 2025, after suffering a massive stroke. He was 73 years old.

R.I.P.: 40 Country Singers and Songwriters Who Died Too Soon

These country singers had so much more to give. See 40 country singers who died much too soon: Keith Whitley, Mindy McCready, Troy Gentry and more.

Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes

Conway Twitty, 59
Conway Twitty, 59

Central Press/Getty Images

Conway Twitty, age 59: Abdominal aneurysm

Conway Twitty broke through with 1958’s rock ‘n’ roll smash “It’s Only Make Believe.” In 1965, he went country full time, giving us hits like “Hello Darlin'” and “Tight Fittin’ Jeans.” During his lifetime, he made history by having more No. 1 hits than any artist in history. Conway became ill after a show in Branson, Mo., and died of an abdominal aneurysm on June 5, 1993 at the age of 59.
Charlie Robison, 59: Cardiac arrest
Charlie Robison, 59: Cardiac arrest

Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Charlie Robison, 59: Cardiac arrest

Texas singer and songwriter Charlie Robison was known for albums like Bandera and Step Right Up. He was also married to the Chicks’ Emily Robison from 1999 to 2008.
On Sept. 10, 2023, he died due to complications from a cardiac arrest.
Gary Stewart, 59: Suicide
Gary Stewart, 59: Suicide

RCA

Gary Stewart, 59: Suicide

Gary Stewart was known as the “King of Honky-Tonk” before his death by suicide in 2003. The “Out of Hand” singer had just one No. 1 hit (“She’s Actin’ Single (I’m Drinkin’ Doubles)” in 1975), but maintained a successful commercial career into the mid-’80s. His death came just one month after his wife died. A depressed Stewart died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in his Florida home.
Dottie West, 58
Dottie West, 58

Hulton Archive/Getty Images

Dottie West, 58: Car accident

While on her way to perform at the Grand Ole Opry, the “Country Sunshine” singer found herself stuck on the side of the road after her Cadillac stalled. An 81-year-old neighbor spotted Dottie West and offered her a ride. Fearful she was running late, she urged the driver to speed, and he lost control of the vehicle while exiting at the Opryland ramp at 55 MPH. West, only 58 years old at the time, underwent several surgeries, but died on the operating table on September 4, 1991.
country star deaths 2022
country star deaths 2022

2911 Media

Jeff Carson, 58: Heart attack

Country hitmaker Jeff Carson died on March 26, 2022 after suffering a heart attack. The singer was best known for his 1995 No. 1 hit “Not on Your Love” and his ACM Award-winning track “The Car.”
Marty Robbins, 57
Marty Robbins, 57

Sony

Marty Robbins, 57: Heart failure

Marty Robbins racked up a string of hits in the 1950s with “Singing the Blues” and “A White Sport Coat (And a Pink Carnation).” In May of 1982, Marty was in the Top 10 with “Some Memories Just Won’t Die.” In October of that year, Billboard recognized him with the Artist Resurgence Award. Then, just seven weeks before he died, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. The “El Paso” storytelling legend died of heart failure on December 8, 1982 at the age of 57.
Eddie Rabbitt, 56
Eddie Rabbitt, 56

Paul Natkin, Getty Images

Eddie Rabbitt, 56: Lung cancer

Eddie Rabbitt started his career writing “Kentucky Rain” for Elvis Presley and “Pure Love” for Ronnie Milsap. Soon, he was singing his own smash hits “I Love a Rainy Night” and “Drivin’ My Life Away.” Consistently recording and touring in the final stages of his life, Eddie kept his battle with lung cancer private. As a matter of fact, only a few immediate family members even knew of his passing until the funeral was over. Eddie, 56 at the time, died on May 7, 1998.
Chris LeDoux, 56
Chris LeDoux, 56

AP

Chris LeDoux, 56: Liver cancer

Garth Brooks helped Chris LeDoux reach the mainstream by dropping his name in the hit “Much Too Young (To Feel This Damn Old).” A successful rodeo performer, he built a cult following on the circuit selling his own self-produced albums. LeDoux was signed to Capitol Records in 1991 and gave us hits like “Whatcha Gonna Do With a Cowboy” and “Cadillac Ranch.” LeDoux died of liver cancer on March 9, 2005 at the age of 56. Brooks honored him by recording the song “Good Ride Cowboy.”
Roger Miller, 56: Lung and throat cancer
Roger Miller, 56: Lung and throat cancer

Mercury Nashville

Roger Miller, 56: Lung and throat cancer

“King of the Road” singer Roger Miller was a perennial Grammy winner (11 total), known for his big voice and sharp pen. He was also a big cigarette smoker who even wrote songs about the habit. He died in October 1992, not long after the discovery of a tumor.
Tammy Wynette, 55
Tammy Wynette, 55

Tammy Wynette Facebook

Tammy Wynette, 55: Cardiac arrhythmia

The First Lady of Country Music died on April 6, 1998. In 1999, Tammy Wynette’s body was exhumed in an attempt to settle a dispute. After no autopsy was conducted and the cause of death was listed as a blood clot, her daughters grew suspicious and filed a wrongful death lawsuit against her doctor and husband/manager, George Richey, claiming they were responsible for her death at the age of 55. The coroner declared that she died of a cardiac arrhythmia. In May 1999, George Richey was dropped from the wrongful death lawsuit.
John Denver, 53: Plane crash
John Denver, 53: Plane crash

Gijsbert Hanekroot/Redferns via Getty Images

John Denver, 53: Plane crash

John Denver was a wildly successful folk artist whose forays into country music earned him the genre’s most prestigious awards. “Take Me Home, Country Roads” and “Rocky Mountain High” are two songs that still live on in the 21st century. “Thank God I’m a Country Boy” (1975) is one of his three No. 1 hits on the country airplay charts. The New Mexico native (real name Henry John Deutschendorf Jr.) died at age 53 on October 12, 1997 when his plane crashed in California. He was the only person on board.
Keith Gattis, 52: Tractor accident
Keith Gattis, 52: Tractor accident

Spring Hill Funeral Home

Keith Gattis, 52: Tractor accident

Hit country songwriter Keith Gattis died in a tractor accident outside his Nashville home on April 24, 2023. The 52-year-old penned radio hits for George Strait, Kenny Chesney and many more. Many turned out for a tribute and fundraiser for him that fall.
Lari White, 52: Cancer
Lari White, 52: Cancer

Kevin Winter, Getty Images

Lari White, 52: Cancer

Lari White’s success as a country singer came in the 1990s with songs like “That’s My Baby,” “Now I Know” and “Stepping Stone.” She’d transition to studio work as a successful producer and songwriter, working with Toby Keith, Tammy Wynette and more. On January 23, 2018, she died after a short battle with peritoneal cancer.
Roy Orbison, 52: Heart attack
Roy Orbison, 52: Heart attack

John Hercock, Central Press, Getty Images

Roy Orbison, 52: Heart attack

Roy Orbison was a rock, rockabilly and pop-country star in the 1960s who scored hits like “Only the Lonely” and “Oh, Pretty Women.” The Texas native died in Hendersonville, Tenn., in December 1988 after suffering a heart attack.
Townes Van Zandt, 52: Heart attack
Townes Van Zandt, 52: Heart attack

Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images

Townes Van Zandt, 52: Heart attack

Townes Van Zandt was a songwriting icon in the 1970s and ‘80s, with his biggest cut probably being “Pancho and Lefty,” as recorded by Willie Nelson and Merle Haggard. He’s a tremendously influential songwriter, with Steve Earle calling him a mentor and going as far as to name his son after him. His death on January 1, 1997 was officially cardiac arrhythmia, but a lifetime of drug and alcohol use led him there.
Troy Gentry, 50
Troy Gentry, 50

Terry Wyatt, Getty Images

Troy Gentry, 50: Helicopter crash

A helicopter crash killed Montgomery Gentry’s Troy Gentry on Sept. 8, 2017. The singer and one other person on board a helicopter were killed when it crashed in Medford, N.J., where Montgomery Gentry were set to perform that night.
Cowboy Copas, 49: Plane crash
Cowboy Copas, 49: Plane crash

Michael Ochs Archives, Getty Images

Cowboy Copas, 49: Plane crash

Cowboy Copas was a Grand Ole Opry member and big star in the 1940s, with songs like “Filipino Baby” reaching the upper portions of country charts. His career cooled into the 1950s, but he was still a steady presence until his death on March 5, 1963. Lloyd Estel Copas was on board the plane that also killed Patsy Cline when it crashed in Camden, Tenn. All three famous country singers on board died much too young.
Kyle Jacobs, 49: Suicide
Kyle Jacobs, 49: Suicide

Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Kyle Jacobs, 49: Suicide

Kyle Jacobs was a revered songwriter and husband to Kellie Pickler. The country music community was shocked by his death on Feb. 17, 2023. The 49-year-old talent died by suicide at his Nashville home.
Lefty Frizzell, 47: Stroke
Lefty Frizzell, 47: Stroke

GAB Archive/Redferns Via Getty Images

Lefty Frizzell, 47: Stroke

Lefty Frizzell is a Country Music Hall of Fame inductee who died too young. He’s considered one of the all-time great country vocalists and a pioneer in country. Among his No. 1 hits were “I Want to Be With You Always, “Give Me More, More, More (Of Your Kisses)” and (his last, in 1964) “Saginaw, Michigan.” “Long Black Veil” is probably the song that music fans know best today — the often-covered ballad tells a dark love story, and while Frizzell didn’t write it, he was the first to popularize it (in 1959). Lefty Frizzell died on July 19, 1975 after suffering a stroke. A lifetime of alcohol addiction problems led to his poor health.
Daryle Singletary, 46
Daryle Singletary, 46

Giant Records

Daryle Singletary, 46: Blood clot

Singletary died at his Nashville area home on Feb. 12, 2018. His unexpected passing came as he was working on new music. The Georgia-raised singer was best known for ’90s hits like “Too Much Fun” and “Amen Kind of Love.” Sources would later tell Taste of Country and the Boot he had a blood clot that led to his death.
Gene Clark, 46: Heart attack
Gene Clark, 46: Heart attack

Keystone, Getty Images

Gene Clark, 46: Heart attack

Gene Clark founded the Byrds, who were instrumental in forming a country-rock and folk sound in the late 1960s and early ’70s. He never had commercial success as a country artist, but held down a very important, if misunderstood, time in country music.
A few months after the Byrds were made Rock and Roll Hall of Famers in 1991, Clark’s health started to decline. His death that May was labeled a heart attack, but drug and alcohol use contributed heavily to his passing.
Mel Street, 45: Suicide
Mel Street, 45: Suicide

Polydor

Mel Street, 45: Suicide

Mel Street was something of a regional star in Virginia and West Virginia, but songs like “You Make Me Feel More Like a Man” and “Forbidden Angel” earned some national exposure.
Throughout his short life he was dogged by clinical depression, perhaps leading to heavy alcohol use. In October 1978, on his 45th birthday, he killed himself. Four posthumous projects would extend his popularity, and a greatest hits package even sold a half-million copies via TV advertisements.
Ricky Nelson, 45: Plane crash
Ricky Nelson, 45: Plane crash

Hulton Archive, Getty Images

Ricky Nelson, 45: Plane crash

While primarily a rock and pop singer, Ricky Nelson’s rockabilly style did earn him him some country music success in 1958 when songs like “Stood Up,” “My Bucket’s Got a Hole in It” and “Poor Little Fool” cracked the Top 10. On December 31, 1985, Nelson was one of seven passengers on a plane that crashed while trying to make an emergency landing.
Busbee (Michael James Ryan) / 43 / Glioblastoma
Busbee (Michael James Ryan) / 43 / Glioblastoma

Getty Images

Busbee (Michael James Ryan), 43: Glioblastoma

Songwriter and producer Busbee died on Sept. 29, 2019, months after being diagnosed with a rare brain cancer called glioblastoma. He’d worked extensively with Maren Morris, Carly Pearce, Keith Urban and many more. He left behind a wife and three children.
Kevin Sharp, 43: Complications due to cancer
Kevin Sharp, 43: Complications due to cancer

Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

Kevin Sharp, 43: Complications due to cancer

“Nobody Knows” and “If You Love Somebody” hitmaker Kevin Sharp battled cancer before he became successful as a country singer. In fact, he used his story of overcoming long odds to become a motivational speaker after his commercial country success faded. Sharp’s death at age 43 came from complications from past stomach surgeries and digestive issues. His mother would describe the cause as “complications due to cancer.”
Elvis Presley, 42: Heart attack
Elvis Presley, 42: Heart attack

Hulton Archives, Getty Images

Elvis Presley, 42: Heart attack

Elvis Presley’s too-short life and unexpected death have been well-chronicled, and his success on country charts requires his inclusion on this list of stars who died young. Presley died on August 16, 1977 of a heart attack, which doctors would say was likely brought on by a prescription drug addiction.
Hawkshaw Hawkins, 41: Plane crash
Hawkshaw Hawkins, 41: Plane crash

GAB Archive/Redferns, Via Getty Images

Hawkshaw Hawkins, 41: Plane crash

“Slow Poke” singer Hawkshaw Hawkins was also on board the plane that killed Patsy Cline and Cowboy Copas on March 5, 1963.
Ira Louvin, 41: Car accident
Ira Louvin, 41: Car accident

Michael Ochs Archive, Getty Images

Ira Louvin, 41: Car accident

Along with brother Charlie, Ira Louvin is a Country Music Hall of Famer known for hits and Grand Ole Opry appearances in the 1950s and ’60s. He died in June 1965 when his car was hit by a drunk driver.
Jim Reeves, 40
Jim Reeves, 40

Keystone/Getty Images

Jim Reeves, 40: Plane crash

Jim Reeves first appeared at No. 1 with “Mexican Joe” in 1953 and placed 46 songs on the Billboard charts before he died in a plane crash in Nashville. More impressively, his widow worked with RCA Records to keep his music alive, and he racked up 33 posthumous hits, including the No. 1 songs “Distant Drums” and “Blue Side of Lonesome.” The crooner of “He’ll Have to Go” was piloting his own plane when he crashed at the age of 40 on July 31, 1964.
Joey Feek, 40: Cancer
Joey Feek, 40: Cancer

Frazer Harrison, Getty Images

Joey Feek, 40: Cancer

Joey Feek and her husband Rory were Joey + Rory, a successful country duo who recorded from 2008 to her death in 2016. She was diagnosed with cancer in May 2014, months after giving birth to a daughter named Indiana. Surgery cleared her of cancer, but a year later she was diagnosed with colon cancer, which became terminal. She died on March 4, 2016.
Justin Townes Earle / 38 / Accidental Drug Overdose
Justin Townes Earle / 38 / Accidental Drug Overdose

Matt Winkelmeyer, Getty Images for Stagecoach

Justin Townes Earle, 38: Accidental drug overdose

Celebrated Americana singer and songwriter Justin Townes Earle died young in late August of 2020, shocking friends, family and the country music industry. The 38-year-old Earle was the son of Steve Earle, but musically, he did all he could to separate himself from his father. The younger Earle was a recording artist since 2007 and a tireless road act; he left behind a wife and 3-year-old daughter.
Mindy McCready, 37
Mindy McCready, 37

Brad Barket, Getty Images

Mindy McCready, 37: Suicide

“Ten Thousand Angels” hitmaker Mindy McCready was a star in the spotlight, but her life wasn’t without tragic shadows. An abusive relationship, custody battle, drugs and alcohol plagued the singer, and after attempting suicide multiple times, McCready took her own life with a firearm in February 2013. She was 37 years old.
Rabon Delmore, 36: Lung Cancer
Rabon Delmore, 36: Lung Cancer

GAB Archives, Redferns / Getty Images

Rabon Delmore, 36: Lung Cancer

The Delmore Brothers (Alton and Rabon) are Country Music Hall of Fame artists known as being pioneers in the 1930s. Rabon died of lung cancer in 1952, while older brother Alton would die at age 58, in 1964.
Jimmie Rodgers, 35: Tuberculosis
Jimmie Rodgers, 35: Tuberculosis

Getty Images

Jimmie Rodgers, 35: Tuberculosis

Jimmie Rodgers is considered the Father of Country Music and “The Singing Brakeman” after a movie role. He had a heavy influence on legends like Hank Williams and was thus part of the very first class of the Country Music Hall of Fame, in 1961.
That came long after his death however. He’d suffered from tuberculosis for several years when in 1933 he suffered severe and immediate health problems in New York City. He’d still maintained a heavy recording schedule despite obvious problems. He’d die in a hotel after a coughing fit and hemorrhaging.
Keith Whitley, 33
Keith Whitley, 33

Ebet Roberts/Redferns

Keith Whitley, 33: Alcohol

Keith Whitley’s star was on the rise when he “drank himself to death” on May 9, 1989. At the time, Whitley was enjoying his third No. 1 single with “I’m No Stranger to the Rain,” ironically a song about overcoming depression and alcoholism. “Miami, My Amy” became his first Top 20 hit, leading the way for “When You Say Nothing at All” and “Don’t Close Your Eyes.” Whitley was just three years into a marriage to Lorrie Morgan when he died young, at just 33 years old.
Don Rich, 32: Motorcycle accident
Don Rich, 32: Motorcycle accident

YouTube

Don Rich, 32: Motorcycle accident

Don Rich is as responsible for inventing the Bakersfield sound as Buck Owens. The two were very close when in 1974, Rich rode his motorcycle into a center divider on Highway 1 in California. Owens would later say his music life ended that day.
Luke Bell, 32: Drug overdose
Luke Bell, 32: Drug overdose

Rick Diamond, Getty Images

Luke Bell, 32: Drug overdose

Singer and songwriter Luke Bell died in August 2022 after going missing several days earlier in Tucson, Ariz. Bell signed a record deal with Thirty Tigers in 2016 and released his self-titled album later that year, which quickly garnered critical acclaim.
Off the stage, Bell suffered from bipolar disorder. Weeks after his death, the cause would be determined to be accidental fentanyl overdose.
Patsy Cline, 30
Patsy Cline, 30

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Patsy Cline, 30: Plane crash

Patsy Cline only had nine songs on the Billboard country charts before her tragic death in a plane crash on March 5, 1963 at age 30. Like Jim Reeves, Cline’s music lived on with several chart entries after her death, including “Sweet Dreams” and “Always.” However, she was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1973. It is reported that Cline actually had premonitions of her death and revealed them to close friends Loretta Lynn, Dottie West and June Carter in 1962.
Hank Williams, 29
Hank Williams, 29

Getty Images

Hank Williams, 29: Drugs and alcohol

Although he died much too young at the age of 29, Hank Williams Sr. did live to see himself become a major country music star when 33 of his songs hit the charts while he was still alive. However, it seemed like no one at the time would realize the impact his songwriting would have on American music in the years to follow. He was born with a spinal deformity, spina bifida occulta, that would lead to his addiction to painkillers. The lethal combination of alcohol and prescribed drugs ended his life on January 1, 1953.
Gram Parsons, 26: Drugs and alcohol
Gram Parsons, 26: Drugs and alcohol

Ginny Winn, Getty Images

Gram Parsons, 26: Drugs and alcohol

It would take several hundred words to explain why Gram Parsons is such an influential country and rock artist. He was part of the Byrds and the Flying Burrito Brothers before going solo. His partnership with Emmylou Harris is what ties him to country music. He died on Sept. 19, 1973, after consuming a lethal amount of drugs and alcohol.