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Intro | American singer | ||||||
Places | United States of America | ||||||
was | Songwriter Singer | ||||||
Work field | Music | ||||||
Gender |
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Genres: | Country music | ||||||
Profiles | |||||||
Birth | 13 July 1958, Madison, Nashville, Davidson County, USA | ||||||
Death | 24 October 2003Clarksville, Montgomery County, Tennessee, USA (aged 45 years) | ||||||
Star sign | Cancer | ||||||
Family |
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Biography
Rosie Nix Adams (born Rozanna Lea Nix; July 13, 1958 – October 24, 2003) was an American singer, in the genres of country, folk, and gospel.
She was the daughter of June Carter Cash and her second husband, Edwin "Rip" Nix. After her mother married country music singer/songwriter Johnny Cash in 1968, Nix became one of his stepdaughters.
Early life
Born Rozanna Nix in Madison, Tennessee, she was called Rosie or Rosey, a daughter of June Carter Cash and her second husband Edwin "Rip" Nix. She had an older half-sister from her mother's first marriage. Later she became a stepdaughter of Johnny Cash when her mother married him in 1968.
Her first name was spelled as both "Rosie" and "Rosey", according to stepsister Rosanne Cash. Nix grew up with six siblings, including half and step-siblings.
Career
Nix started her singing career performing as a backup singer for her stepfather's The Johnny Cash Show. She also performed with David Grey, and singer Slim Whitman.
She was a semi-regular performing member of the Carter Family. She performed a duet with Cash on his 1974 single "Father and Daughter" (a remake of the Cat Stevens song "Father and Son") from the album The Junkie and the Juicehead Minus Me.
After her marriage, Adams was a background vocalist in her mother's album Press On (1999). She sang in genres of country, folk, and gospel.
Personal life and death
Nix married Philip Adams. She used the name Rosie Nix Adams as a performer.
On October 24, 2003 she and Jimmy Campbell, a bluegrass musician who played the fiddle, were found dead on a bus in Montgomery County, Tennessee. Law enforcement officials initially called the deaths "suspicious". The deaths were subsequently ruled to be accidental. They died from carbon monoxide poisoning, produced from propane space heaters in the bus that were used without ventilation.
Nix Adams was 45 years old. She was buried near her mother and stepfather, both of whom had also died earlier in the year, in the Hendersonville Memory Gardens in Hendersonville, Tennessee.