Country music has lost another beloved performer.

Don Adams (4) Discography: Vinyl, CDs, & More | Discogs

Don Adams, a singer, songwriter and longtime band member for Johnny Paycheck and George Jones, died on Sunday, Feb. 1, according to Saving Country Music.

He was 85.

The site said that Adams had been battling cancer “off and on” for a couple of years.

Parade Magazine wrote that while Adams was never a “marquee headliner, his voice, musicianship and presence placed him squarely inside the outlaw country ecosystem of the 1960s and 1970s.”

Adams was born in Greenfield, Ohio, and he came from a family full of musicians.

His father, Frank Adams, was a radio and recording star all the way back in the 1930s, and Don and his brothers, Gary and Arnie, made up The Adams Brothers. As a group, they backed up artists such as Merle Haggard, Marty Robbins and Tamy Wynette as well as Paycheck.

However, it was their gig as The Jones Boys, backing up the legendary George Jones, that they were most well known for. They were so popular that Jones’ label even released an album entitled “The Jones Boys” which featured them without Jones.

The brothers also gained a reputation as hard partying lifestyle, and that helped them gain access to a more modern crowd when Mike Judge of “Beavis and Butthead” fame used them in multiple episodes of his Cinemax series “Tales From The Tour Bus.”

Don Adams and his brothers were inducted into the Ohio Country Music Hall of Fame, and received a Founder of the Sound Award at The Ameripolitan Awards in Memphis, Tennessee at the Graceland Hotel, according to Saving Country Music.