Naomi Judd and Wynonna Judd Biography

Closeup image of Naomi Judd and Wynonna Judd
CREDIT: Buddy Squires, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

In the 1980s, The Judds were the most commercially successful duo in the history of country music. Mother and daughter Naomi and Wynonna released six studio albums on RCA between 1983 and 1991, producing a remarkable string of 14 No. 1 singles, starting with their breakout hit, “Mama, He’s Crazy.” Their fresh but traditional harmonies, blending Appalachian folk and bluegrass with pop, appealed to audiences of all ages, and Wynonna’s powerful, blues-inflected voice established her as one of country’s finest female vocalists.

The Judds’ “overnight success” came after several years of struggle and sacrifice. Born in Ashland, Kentucky, Naomi learned she was pregnant with Wynonna at age 17 and gave birth two weeks before her high school graduation ceremony. She moved to California and had a second daughter, actress Ashley Judd. After her marriage disintegrated, Naomi enrolled in nursing school in Berea, Kentucky, and moved herself and the girls to the tiny nearby community of Morrill. It was a difficult life – “If we didn’t make it or grow it, we didn’t have it,” Wynonna remembers – and it was on that mountaintop that Wynonna learned to play guitar, and the two began to harmonize, singing on the back porch or around the fire after chores were completed each evening, finding a way to ease mother-daughter tensions.

I could only afford the “used” record bin and there was a 33-1/3 album of Hazel and Alice – Hazel Dickens and Alice Gerrard. They were all coal-mining songs. And as these women harmonized together, it came to me: Wynonna and I couldn’t talk to each other, but, low and behold, we could sing together. Their songs were not just a balm between the two of us, but they were teaching Wynonna the history of country music. –Naomi

Convinced of her daughter’s gift, Naomi moved the family to Nashville where she found work as a nurse. Through the help of a patient, the duo landed a live audition at RCA, in front of studio head Joe Galante and producer Tony Brown. Wynonna was 18 years old.

It felt very much like going to principal’s office. I was used to singing; I wasn’t used to being in a boardroom full of men. Joe remembers me taking my guitar out of its case just like it was a gun in a holster. I could sing in front of 10,000 people, as long as I had my guitar. I was like “Xena” with a guitar. It was my protection; it was my weapon. It was my best friend. It was my purpose for anything and anybody. –Wynonna

Within two hours, they’d been offered a contract. Their first album, Wynonna & Naomi (1984), topped the charts. Seven years, eight CMA awards, five GRAMMYs, and 20 million+ record sales later, Naomi retired for health reasons and the duo split, ending with a 1991 farewell tour. The last show was televised, drawing the largest Pay-per-View audience of all time.

We had one of the greatest “good-byes” in the history of Country Music. We went out with a bang. And the next day, I woke up and, “Oh, my gosh. What do I do now?” It was devastating. I didn’t know how I was going to make it. But my mom and my manager were both in my ear constantly saying, “You’ve got this.” “You’ve got this.” –Wynonna

Wynonna launched her solo career in 1992 with the million-selling Wynonna. Through the rest of the ‘90s and the 2000s, she has scored nearly a dozen Top 10 hits, including six No. 1s. Her latest release Wynonna & the Big Noise (Curb, 2016) reached No. 14 on the Billboard U.S. country charts. Since Naomi’s recovery, The Judds have frequently reunited on stage and, in 2011, starred in their own reality series on the Oprah Winfrey Network.

Born: Naomi – January 11, 1946, Ashland, Kentucky
           Wynonna – May 30, 1964, Ashland, Kentucky

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