Nedra Talley Ross, last surviving member of the Ronettes, dies aged 80
21st October 1964: Ronnie Bennett, Nedra Talley, and Estelle Bennett aka the Ronettes in October 1964. Picture: George Stroud/Getty Images
Nedra Talley Ross, the last surviving member of the 1960s pop band the Ronettes, has died aged 80.
Talley Ross, who was one part of the band with her cousins Ronnie Spector and Estelle Bennett, died at home, announced her daughter Nedra K Ross announced on Sunday.
âAt approximately 8:30 this morning our mother Nedra Talley Ross went home to be with the Lord,â she wrote.Â
âShe was safe in her own bed at home with her family close, knowing she was loved. Thank you Lord.â
Born in Manhattan in 1946, Talley Ross first began performing with her cousins Ronnie (born Veronica Bennett) and Estelle when they were teenagers. Ronnie formed the Ronettes in 1957. They earned a residency at a local club and a record deal, but early singles failed to chart.
Their careers took off in 1963 after Estelle cold-called the office of producer Phil Spector, who recently had a run of huge hits. According to Ronnie Spectorâs memoir, when the trio launched into a version of Frankie Lymonâs , Phil Spector jumped from his piano and exclaimed, âThatâs the voice Iâve been looking for!â
Though the Ronettes released just one studio album, they were both popular and enduring. Sporting an iconic look including beehive hairdos, they had their first big hit with (which also reached the UK top five), followed by others that didnât quite match its commercial success but still reached the US Top 40 and deepened their legend, including , , and Â
âOur songs sang to boys, where other girl groups sang about boys,â Talley later said when asked about the groupâs appeal.
was famously used in many films including and ; the songwritersâ agency BMI once calculated that had been played in 3.9m feature presentations on radio and television since 1963, or âthe equivalent of 17 years back to backâ.
The Ronettes had three songs included, alongside other Spector-produced acts, on the 1963 festive compilation , including their rendition of , which was a US No.8 hit.
The Rolling Stones were their support act on a 1964 British tour â Talley briefly dated Brian Jones. âThey could sing all their way right through a wall of sound,â Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards later said.
 âThey didnât need anything. They touched my heart right there and then and they touch it still.âÂ
The Ronettes also supported the Beatles on the bandâs final US tour in 1966. Talley took lead vocals alongside Bennett for the latter, after the increasingly controlling Phil Spector forbade Ronnie, by then his partner, to go on the tour.
The Ronettes split in 1967. âI hated the âdog-eat-dogâ side of show-business,â Talley Ross later reflected. âI hated pushing for the next record and the feeling of failure if we didnât get it. There was a continual demand on us to produce that I thought was unfair. My personality didnât like that.â
 She also later partly attributed her decision to her spiritual awakening and embrace of Christianity, and her desire to be a wife and mother. âI said, âOK girls, we can keep going, but this has happened to me,ââ she recalled.Â
âThey couldnât really see and understand where my stand was. So we agreed to finish out our contracts and dissolve the group.âÂ
Talley then married Scott Ross, a DJ at a New York radio station. She released a solo album in 1978, , of Christian contemporary music, and later began a career in real estate. Talley and Bennett turned down being part of a short-lived 1973 Ronettes reunion.
Spector and Ronnie had married in 1968 but Ronnie filed for divorce in 1974 after years of abuse. Beginning in 1988, the Ronettes launched a long legal battle to sue Spector over unpaid royalties, revealing in New Yorkâs State court of appeals in 2002 that they had earned less than $15,000 in royalties from their hits; Talley claimed Spector had âtotally cheated us for 35 yearsâ.Â
In 2002 a New York court found mostly in favour of Phil Spector, stating that the trio were only entitled to royalties as set out in their original contract. Spector murdered the actor Lana Clarkson in 2003 and died in prison in 2021 while serving 19 years to life.
In 2007, the Ronettes were inducted in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Ronnie Spector died from cancer aged 78 in 2022, while Bennett died aged 67 in 2009.

