Singer Jill Sobule dies in Minnesota house fire
Jill Sobule, a singer-songwriter best known for her 1995 single “I Kissed a Girl,” has died in a house fire in Minnesota at the age of 66.
Her death was confirmed by her publicist on Thursday, though it was not immediately made clear how the fire in Woodbury, Minnesota, started, according to the Associated Press.
Sobule was the singer-songwriter of “I Kissed a Girl,” the first openly gay-themed song ever to crack the Billboard Top 20 and wrote over a dozen albums spanning three decades of recording, her publicist said.
“The Denver-born songwriter/guitarist/singer tackled such topics as the death penalty, anorexia nervosa, shoplifting, reproduction, the French Resistance, adolescent malaise, intolerance, and the MAGA movement with her signature wit and soul-bearing authenticity,” the statement announcing her death said. “Jill is considered a pioneer in crowdfunding, constantly explored new models to empower artists in an ever-changing music industry, and was the darling of the ‘digirati’ – Jill has performed at the TED conference more than any other artist.”
Her most recent project was her New York Times critic’s pick, Drama Desk-nominated, autobiographical coming-of-age musical “F*ck 7th Grade.”
Sobule is survived by her brother and sister-in-law, her nephews, and a number of cousins.
There will be a formal memorial celebrating her life and legacy later in the summer though no date has been announced.
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