Joe Ely, a pioneering Texas singer-songwriter who helped shape the progressive country sound and Americana genre, died Monday (December 15) in Taos, New Mexico, at the age of 78, from complications related to Lewy Body Dementia, Parkinson’s disease, and pneumonia. Raised in Lubbock and later based in Austin, Ely was renowned for his dynamic live performances and collaborations, opening for legendary acts like The Clash and the Rolling Stones, and earning comparisons to Bruce Springsteen, whom he later collaborated with on the track “Odds of the Blues,” from Ely’s 2024 album, Driven to Drive. Springsteen wrote a heartfelt post on Instagram on Tuesday, where he called Ely a “singular American singer, great musician and great artist. I was lucky enough to count Joe as a true friend and I will miss that voice and his companionship. We’ve lost an American classic.”
A founding member of The Flatlanders, Ely released multiple charting albums, including the influential 1992 LP, Love and Danger, featuring his signature cover of Robert Earl Keen’s “The Road Goes on Forever.” Honored by an induction into the Austin City Limits Hall of Fame in 2022 and celebrated at the 2025 American Music Awards, Ely’s legacy as a Texas musical icon endures. He is survived by his wife, Sharon, and daughter, Marie. (Billboard)





