Maggie Roche

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Is Maggie Roche Dead or Still Alive? Maggie Roche Birthday and Date of Death

Maggie Roche

Maggie Roche Death

Margaret passed away on January 21, 2017 at the age of 65 in New York, NY. Margaret's cause of death was breast cancer.

Maggie Roche death quick facts:
  • When did Maggie Roche die?

    January 21, 2017
  • How did Maggie Roche die? What was the cause of death?

    Breast cancer
  • How old was Maggie Roche when died?

    65
  • Where did Maggie Roche die? What was the location of death?

    New York, NY

Maggie Roche Birthday and Date of Death

Maggie Roche was born on October 26, 1951 and died on January 21, 2017. Margaret was 65 years old at the time of death.

Birthday: October 26, 1951
Date of Death: January 21, 2017
Age at Death: 65

Maggie Roche - Biography

Maggie Roche, the songwriter whose serene alto anchored the close harmonies of the Roches, her trio with her sisters Terre and Suzzy, died on Saturday, January 21, 2017. She was 65.Suzzy Roche said the cause was br**st cancer. Maggie Roche lived in New York City.“She was a private person, too sensitive and shy for this world, but brimming with life, love, and talent,” Suzzy Roche wrote on the Roches’ Facebook page. “She was smart, wickedly funny, and authentic — not a false bone in her body — a brilliant songwriter, with a distinct unique perspective, all heart and soul.”Ms. Roche developed a pop-folk songwriting style that could be droll or diaristic, full of unexpected melodic turns and often inseparable from the way the sisters’ voices harmonized and diverged.On albums from the early 1970s into the 2000s, Maggie Roche’s songs chronicled a woman’s life from early stirrings of independence (“The Hammond Song”) and amorous entanglements (“The Married Men”) to thoughts on longtime connection (“Can We Go Home Now”). They often mixed heartfelt revelations and flinty punch lines.With the Roches, and in duos with each of her sisters, she released more than a dozen albums. The Roches never had a major hit, but the group maintained a devoted following. They shrugged off disappointments in “Big Nuthin’,” a song the trio wrote together.“We’d like to make a million dollars and be set for life,” Maggie Roche told The Los Angeles Times in 1995. “We’ve been lucky, though. We have a career, and that is a gift. I guess I want things to be easy, but that’s not the way it is.”Margaret A. Roche was born October 26, 1951, and grew up in Park Ridge, N.J. The sisters sang in Roman Catholic church choirs, and Maggie started writing songs after getting a guitar for her birthday in 1964. She and Terre formed a duo, performing at first for Democratic Party fund-raisers in New Jersey.They attended a songwriting seminar given by Paul Simon at New York University in 1970, and he had them sing harmony on his 1972 album “There Goes Rhymin’ Simon.”

DEAD OR ALIVE?