The news arrived on social media yesterday morning from Nedra K. Ross, daughter of the last surviving Ronette — the words simple, heartfelt, and absolutely devastating in their quietness: “At approximately 8:30 this morning our mother Nedra Talley Ross went home to be with the Lord. She was safe in her own bed at home with her family close, knowing she was loved. Thank you Lord.” That is the detail that has stopped everyone who has read it — not a hospital announcement, not a publicist’s statement, not the carefully managed language of celebrity death in the modern age, but a daughter sitting down and finding the most honest and most tender words available to her for the loss of her mother, and the picture those words paint — a woman of 80 years, safe, at home, surrounded by family, loved —
is the kind of ending that a life as fully and as faithfully lived as Nedra Talley Ross’s genuinely deserved. The Ronettes’ official page added its own farewell, writing that Nedra was “a light to those who knew and loved her” and that her “voice, style and spirit helped define a sound that would change music.”With Estelle Bennett gone since 2009 and Ronnie Spector since 2022, Nedra had carried the Ronettes’ legacy alone for years — the last living keeper of what three cousins from Manhattan built together in the early 1960s when they walked into Phil Spector’s office and changed the sound of popular music in a single audition. The family’s words this morning did not just announce a death — they described a homecoming, a woman at peace, a life completed in love. And somehow that makes it both easier and harder to bear.