
“I’LL FLY AWAY”: Rory Feek and His Daughters Prepare a Heavenly Reunion — A Song of Faith, Family, and Love That Never Ends
For years, the sound of Rory and Joey Feek’s voices has brought comfort, hope, and tears to countless hearts. Now, nearly a decade after Joey’s passing, that harmony is about to take flight once more — this time with the voices of Rory and his two daughters, Heidi and Indiana Feek, joining together for a moment that feels nothing short of sacred.
In what fans are calling “a reunion between heaven and earth,” the Feek family is preparing to record one of Joey’s most beloved hymns — “I’ll Fly Away.” The song, a timeless gospel classic about faith, freedom, and the promise of eternal life, has long held a special place in their hearts. For Rory, it’s more than just a melody; it’s a message, a promise whispered through music that love truly never dies.
Those close to the Feeks say the recording is being planned at their Hardison Mill Farm in Tennessee, the same peaceful place where Rory and Joey built their life, raised their family, and sang their final songs together. The simple wooden studio, once filled with Joey’s voice, will once again come alive — this time with her family carrying her memory forward in song.
“It’s not about making a record,” a family friend shared. “It’s about keeping a vow. Joey always said that music was their way of talking to God — and Rory’s just continuing that conversation.”
The hymn “I’ll Fly Away” has long symbolized the hope of reunion beyond this life. When Joey battled cancer in 2016, she often sang it with quiet strength, smiling even through pain. Rory later wrote that hearing her sing those words — “When I die, hallelujah, by and by, I’ll fly away” — gave him peace he couldn’t find anywhere else.
Now, with Heidi’s gentle harmonies and little Indiana’s innocent voice joining his own, Rory hopes to capture not just a performance, but a prayer. As the three sing together, many believe that Joey’s spirit will be there, filling the space with the same grace and warmth that made her songs unforgettable.
Fans who have followed Rory’s journey through his books, films, and his blog This Life I Live know that music has always been his way of healing — turning sorrow into story, and story into song. He often says that his farm is both a home and a church, a place where faith is lived out in the everyday: in the sound of laughter, the rhythm of chores, and the music that rises at sunset.
This new recording of “I’ll Fly Away” will mark the first time Rory has sung alongside both his daughters on a song once shared with Joey. Heidi, his eldest, inherited her parents’ musical gift, while Indiana, now a bright young girl full of joy, brings a light that reminds everyone of her mother’s spirit.
The family has not confirmed when the song will be released, but the anticipation is already spreading across social media. Fans have described the idea as “a song from heaven sent back to earth,” and “the most beautiful tribute the Feek family could ever create.”
For Rory, though, it’s not about public reaction — it’s about faith, gratitude, and keeping Joey close. In his own words, “When we sing together, I feel her with us. Not gone, just home.”
And that’s the heart of this story. “I’ll Fly Away” is more than a hymn — it’s a bridge between the seen and the unseen, between the ache of goodbye and the hope of someday. As the Feeks raise their voices once more, they remind the world that love — real, faithful, enduring love — always finds its way back home.
When the final note fades, it won’t be an ending, but a beginning — the sound of a promise kept, echoing softly from Tennessee to heaven, where Joey Feek surely sings along.
