<p>Grammy Award winning country music singer Jody Miller has died aged 80 from complications relating to Parkinson's disease.</p>.<p>Miller passed away in Blanchard, Oklahoma on Thursday morning, according to a statement on her Facebook page.</p>.<p>Born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1941, Miller signed to Capitol Records in 1962 and released debut folk album <em>Wednesday’s Child is Full of Woe</em> a year later.</p>.<p>Her 1965 pop-country crossover hit record <em>Queen of the House</em> reached no 5 on the Hot Country singles and no 12 on Billboard’s Hot 100 charts. The song also won her a Grammy Award for Best Country & Western Vocal Performance.</p>.<p>Her teen protest track <em>Home of the Brave</em>, also released in 1965, was her best-selling US single despite being banned by some radio stations, according to the statement.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/arun-bali-donned-many-hats-and-excelled-in-all-1151387.html" target="_blank">Arun Bali donned many hats and excelled in all</a></strong></p>.<p>“Jody Miller’s talent cannot be overstated. She had this innate, God-given ability to interpret and to communicate with the most beautiful tones and inflection," Miller’s longtime representative Jennifer McMullen said in the statement.</p>.<p>"She made it look and sound so easy that it sometimes takes a moment to realize the greatness of what you are hearing. But she was just as authentic and exceptional in her own life as she was on stage and on record."</p>.<p>Miller started recording with Epic Records in the 1970s in Nashville, Tennessee, and scored a string of Hot Country chart entries, including for songs <em>He's So Fine</em>, <em>Baby I’m Yours</em> and <em>There’s a Party Goin’ On</em>.</p>.<p>She retired in the early 1980s and later began a gospel music ministry in the early 1990s.</p>.<p>Miller later performed with her daughter Robin and her grandchildren as Jody Miller and Three Generations, releasing the song <em>Where My Picture Hangs On the Wall</em> in 2018.</p>
<p>Grammy Award winning country music singer Jody Miller has died aged 80 from complications relating to Parkinson's disease.</p>.<p>Miller passed away in Blanchard, Oklahoma on Thursday morning, according to a statement on her Facebook page.</p>.<p>Born in Phoenix, Arizona in 1941, Miller signed to Capitol Records in 1962 and released debut folk album <em>Wednesday’s Child is Full of Woe</em> a year later.</p>.<p>Her 1965 pop-country crossover hit record <em>Queen of the House</em> reached no 5 on the Hot Country singles and no 12 on Billboard’s Hot 100 charts. The song also won her a Grammy Award for Best Country & Western Vocal Performance.</p>.<p>Her teen protest track <em>Home of the Brave</em>, also released in 1965, was her best-selling US single despite being banned by some radio stations, according to the statement.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/entertainment/entertainment-news/arun-bali-donned-many-hats-and-excelled-in-all-1151387.html" target="_blank">Arun Bali donned many hats and excelled in all</a></strong></p>.<p>“Jody Miller’s talent cannot be overstated. She had this innate, God-given ability to interpret and to communicate with the most beautiful tones and inflection," Miller’s longtime representative Jennifer McMullen said in the statement.</p>.<p>"She made it look and sound so easy that it sometimes takes a moment to realize the greatness of what you are hearing. But she was just as authentic and exceptional in her own life as she was on stage and on record."</p>.<p>Miller started recording with Epic Records in the 1970s in Nashville, Tennessee, and scored a string of Hot Country chart entries, including for songs <em>He's So Fine</em>, <em>Baby I’m Yours</em> and <em>There’s a Party Goin’ On</em>.</p>.<p>She retired in the early 1980s and later began a gospel music ministry in the early 1990s.</p>.<p>Miller later performed with her daughter Robin and her grandchildren as Jody Miller and Three Generations, releasing the song <em>Where My Picture Hangs On the Wall</em> in 2018.</p>