Just one day before the Judds were set to be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, and just 18 days after the mother-daughter country duo had announced their farewell tour, the bands Naomi Judd has died at age 76. Wynonna Judd and her sister, actress Ashley Judd, announced Naomis the shocking news Saturday in a statement that read: Today we sisters experienced a tragedy. We lost our beautiful mother to the disease of mental illness. We are shattered. We are navigating profound grief and know that as we loved her, she was loved by her public. We are in unknown territory. The statement did not provide any other details about their mothers passing.
Naomi Judd was born Jan. 11, 1946, in Ashland, K.Y., and gave birth to her first child, Christina Ciminella (later renamed Wynonna Judd), at age 18. Naomi raised both Wynonna and Ashley as a single mother following her divorce from her first husband, while living on welfare and studying to become a nurse. Naomi and Wynonna formed the Judds in the early 80s, and thanks to Naomis tireless promotion, the duo signed to RCA/Curb Records in 1983. The Judds went on to become one of the most successful acts in country music history, scoring 20 top 10 country hits (including 14 No. 1s, eight of which were consecutive); winning five Grammys, eight Academy of Country Music Awards, and nine Country Music Association Awards; and selling more than 20 million albums.
The Judds disbanded in 1991 after Naomi was diagnosed with Hepatitis C, but they went on a farewell tour that was top-grossing tour of that year an was the most successful musical event in cable pay-per-view history. Wynonna Judd then embarked on a successful solo career, but the Judds occasionally reunited; among their more high-profile reunions were performances at the Super Bowl XXVIII halftime show in 1993, the Stagecoach festival in 2008, and the All in for the Gambler concert, the final Nashville concert by Kenny Rogers.
Poster Comment:
Not that I ever gave a shit, just always though they were younger than I.