Skip to main content

Musician Jake Flint dies just hours after his wedding

Musician Jake Flint died just hours after his wedding. Jake married Brenda over the weekend. (Jake Flint/Instagram) Musician Jake Flint died just hours after his wedding. Jake married Brenda over the weekend. (Jake Flint/Instagram)
Share

Oklahoma musician Jake Flint died unexpectedly over the weekend, hours after getting married, his publicist Clif Doyal told CNN.

He was 37.

"Jake Flint was a true Ambassador of the Oklahoma and Texas Red Dirt music scene," Doyal said. "He was not only a prolific songwriter, recording artist, and in-demand live performer, but he was also a tireless supporter of other talents throughout the region, always willing to lend a hand to help anyone who needed it. With his infectious smile and disarming sense of humor, he was loved by many, and I believe that, along with his music, will be his lasting legacy."

Doyal said Flint died in his sleep. His cause of death is unknown.

CNN has reached out to the medical examiner's office for more information.

Flint's bride, Brenda Flint, posted a video clip from their wedding day to Facebook, showing the two dancing and laughing as they posed for portraits, captioning it simply, "I don't understand."

"We should be going through wedding photos but instead I have to pick out clothes to bury my husband in," she said in another post. "People aren't meant to feel this much pain. My heart is gone and I just really need him to come back. I can't take much more. I need him here."

Flint's former manager Brenda Cline wrote on Facebook that she "loved him much like a son," and described him as "the funniest, most hilarious, hardest working, dedicated artist I have ever worked with in my career."

Red dirt music is "a mix of country, bluegrass, rock, and honky tonk" that originated near Stillwater, Oklahoma, according to a state tourism site.

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

BUDGET 2024

BUDGET 2024 Feds cutting 5,000 public service jobs, looking to turn underused buildings into housing

Five thousand public service jobs will be cut over the next four years, while underused federal office buildings, Canada Post properties and the National Defence Medical Centre in Ottawa could be turned into new housing units, as the federal government looks to find billions of dollars in savings and boost the country's housing portfolio.

'I Google': Why phonebooks are becoming obsolete

Phonebooks have been in circulation since the 19th century. These days, in this high-tech digital world, if someone needs a phone number, 'I Google,' said Bridgewater, N.S. resident Wayne Desouza.

Local Spotlight