

When Sill moved back to California, she resorted to sex work, scams, and check forgery to support her habit. The couple lived in Las Vegas for a time, but both developed crippling heroin addictions within months. In April 1966, Sill married pianist Robert Maurice "Bob" Harris. She started doing LSD and other drugs, moved in with an LSD dealer and joined a jazz trio. In 1964, her mother died, and she left college and moved out of her stepfather's home. She also played piano in the school orchestra and worked in a piano bar. Īfter being released, Sill briefly attended San Fernando Valley Junior College as an art major. Sill and her robbery partner were soon arrested and she spent nine months in reform school, where she served as church organist and "learned a lot of good music" including gospel music. Either during high school or after her graduation (depending on the source), Sill and a man she had met committed a series of armed robberies of businesses such as liquor stores and gas stations. She transferred from a public high school ( Birmingham High School in Van Nuys) to a private school, where she met other rebellious teenagers, some of whom were allegedly involved in crime. In a 1972 Rolling Stone magazine interview, Sill described her home life after her mother's remarriage as unhappy and frequently violent due to physical fights between Sill and her parents.

When Milford Sill died of pneumonia in 1952, Sill's mother Oneta moved with Judee and her older brother Dennis to Los Angeles, where Oneta soon met and married Tom and Jerry animator Kenneth Muse. Her father, Milford "Bun" Sill, an importer of exotic animals for use in films, owned a bar in Oakland, in which Sill learned to play the piano. Judith Lynne Sill was born in Studio City, Los Angeles, California, on October 7, 1944, and spent her early childhood in the Oakland, California area. Sill was influenced by Bach, while lyrically her work drew substantially on Christian themes of rapture and redemption. The demos were released posthumously with other rarities on the 2005 two-disc collection Dreams Come True.

In 1974, she recorded demos for a third album, which never was completed. Her eponymous debut album was released in late 1971 and was followed about 18 months later by Heart Food. The first artist signed to David Geffen's Asylum label, she released two albums on Asylum and partially completed a third album before dying of a drug overdose in 1979. Judith Lynne Sill (Octo– November 23, 1979) was an American singer and songwriter.
