ENTERTAINMENT

Jessi Zazu, of Nashville indie rock pioneers Those Darlins, dead at 28

Nate Rau
The Tennessean

Jessi Zazu, whose band Those Darlins was at the forefront of the city's indie rock revival a decade ago, died on Tuesday following an extended battle with cancer. Zazu, whose legal name was Jessi Zazu Wariner, was 28.

Zazu died surrounded by family, friends and fellow musicians who lined the waiting room inside Centennial Hospital's intensive care unit.

► More:Jessi Zazu was a fearless force in Nashville's rock scene

"She maintained a sense of humor and a commanding presence up until and through her final moments," said Linwood Regensburg, who performed in Those Darlins with Zazu. "She was in the company of those who cared deeply about her and who she cared deeply about."

Zazu emerged on the local music scene as a teenager, joining Nikki Kvarnes and Kelley Anderson to form Those Darlins. The band's music spanned many genres, often sounding on early recordings like a punk rock version of the Carter Family.

Local music fans were captivated and the band began touring ferociously, multiplying its following across the nation. Those Darlins helped establish that the local music scene was more than just country.

JESSI ZAZU

Zazu, whose uncle is country musician Steve Wariner, was public about her battle with cancer. She documented her fight in cover story in the Nashvile Scene and turned her illness into inspiration for her visual art.

After Those Darlins broke up last year, Zazu focused on her art, including a show in June at the Julia Martin Gallery where work by Zazu and her mother Kathy Wariner was displayed.

Jessi "Zazu" Wariner, center, watches performers during the "The Songs of John Prine" tribute concert at The Basement East in Nashville, Tenn., Thursday, July 27, 2017.

Zazu designed t-shirts that said, "Ain't Afraid" in stark red letters. Sales from the shirts helped raise over $50,000 toward her medical bills.

Zazu's friends said she inspired people, especially young women, because of the courage she showed in confronting her illness.

"Jessi advocated for women," said Shelley DuBois, Zazu's friend and author of the Nashville Scene story that chronicled her art and battle with cancer. "She thought women deserve more respect than they get. That's why she was so open about her experience with cervical cancer. She wanted other women to know that they weren't alone, that they should listen to their bodies and speak up for themselves without shame if they knew something was wrong. 

"Jessi helped her loved ones through her music and art and story. But she also helped strangers. Teenage girls everywhere pick up guitars after listening to her songs. Cancer patients she'll never know will be comforted by the art she made for the radiation room at Vanderbilt. She was so much bigger than herself. She'll continue to help so many people."

Margo Price, a fellow leader of the Nashville independent music scene, expressed her grief after news of Zazu's passing broke.

"Jessi was a force of nature - the way she lived, the way she played... It was an honor to work with her and to know her," Price tweeted.

Zazu is survived by her mother Kathy Wariner, her father David Wariner and her brothers Emmett Wariner and Oakley Wariner.

Reach Nate Rau at 615-259-8094 and nrau@tennessean.com. Follow him on Twitter @tnnaterau.

Memorial fund created

A fundraising website to help pay for a memorial service honoring Zazu's life has been created at youcaring.com/jessizazumemorialfund