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Country singer-songwriter Charlie Robison dies in Texas at age 59

FILE - Country music artist Charlie Robison poses for a photo in Nashville, Tenn., June 30, 2009. Robison, the Texas singer-songwriter whose rootsy anthems made the country charts until he was forced to retire after a medical procedure left him unable to sing, has died. A family representative says Robison died at a hospital in San Antonio after suffering cardiac arrest. He was 59. (AP Photo/Ed Rode, File) (Ed Rode, AP2009)

SAN ANTONIO ā€“ Charlie Robison, the Texas singer-songwriter whose rootsy anthems made the country charts until he was forced to retire after complications from a medical procedure left him unable to sing, died Sunday. He was 59.

Robison died at a hospital in San Antonio after suffering cardiac arrest and other complications, according to a family representative.

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Robison launched his music career in the late 1980s, playing in local Austin bands like Two Hoots and a Holler before forming his own Millionaire Playboys. In 1996, he released his solo debut, ā€œBandera,ā€ named for the Texas Hill Country town where his family has had a ranch for generations.

When he was approached by Sony in 1998, Robison signed with its Lucky Dog imprint, which was devoted to rawer country. His 2001 album ā€œStep Right Upā€ produced his only Top 40 country song, ā€œI Want You Bad."

In 2018, Robison announced that he had permanently lost the ability to sing following a surgical procedure on his throat. "Therefore, with a very heavy heart I am officially retiring from the stage and studio,ā€ he wrote on Facebook.

Robison served as a judge for one year on USA Network's ā€œNashville Star,ā€ a reality TV show in which contestants lived together while competing for a country music recording contract.

He is survived by his wife, Kristen Robison, and four children and stepchildren. Three of his children were with his first wife, Emily Strayer, a founding member of the superstar country band The Chicks. They divorced in 2008.

Robison's breakup with Strayer inspired songs on the 2009 album ā€œBeautiful Day.ā€ He recorded it while living across from the Greyhound bus station in San Antonio, in a loft apartment with mismatched furniture and strewn beer bottles, ā€œthe quintessential bachelor pad,ā€ he recalled.

ā€œPeople come up to me and say theyā€™re going through something right now, and itā€™s like this is completely written about them,ā€ Robison told The Associated Press in 2009. ā€œI wasnā€™t meaning to do that, but itā€™s been a residual effect of the record.ā€

Robison's final album, the rock-tinged ā€œHigh Lifeā€ from 2013, included a cover version of Bob Dylan's ā€œWhen I Paint My Masterpiece.ā€

Memorial services are pending.