Soul singer Sharon Jones, lead singer of the group The Dap-Kings, has died, her publicist announced late Friday. She was 60.

She'd been fighting pancreatic cancer since 2013, when she took a break from touring to undergo extensive surgery and chemotherapy, Fresh Air wrote earlier this year. The cancer went into remission, but returned this year.

She told Terry Gross about the difficulty of her treatment:

"I couldn't sing. I couldn't get air because, people didn't realize, I was cut across the diaphragm, all the way up from right under the center under my breasts, all the way down to the top of my navel, almost."

Even after she returned to the stage, she told Terry, she didn't feel like the band's dynamic performances were the same.

"That energy, I mean, everyone said my energy was great, but I didn't feel it at all. Even now, the days on the stage I'm just not myself, I don't have that energy. The legs doesn't lift up like I want to with the pain, the neuropathy from certain chemo. It's a hinder, but I do the shows, but it's not the same."

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Jones went through treatment again this year while continuing to perform, but the band had to cancel a European tour this past summer because of a medical procedure Jones needed.

Variety.com reports that Jones released her first album at the age of 40 after many years of occasional gigs as a session singer in Brooklyn. The diminutive Jones supported herself by working as an armored car guard for Wells Fargo and a corrections officer at Rikers Island.

The singer, who recalled first being inspired to become a singer while performing as a child in a South Carolina church's Christmas play, performed a set of holiday songs for NPR's Tiny Desk last year. You can watch it below.

Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

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