Linda Ronstadt Discloses Her Battle With Parkinson’s Disease
(ONE OF THE SADDEST NEWS I'VE HEARD THIS YEAR)
Her classic/standards albums with Nelson Riddle remain as some of my favorites. She's from a bygone era where you really HAD to sing, not let a computer do it for you.
WE WISH HER WELL...
Posted on
08/23/2013 by
Allan Fallow of "AARP"
"Legendary singer Linda Ronstadt, 67, told AARP today that she “can’t sing a note” because she suffers from Parkinson’s disease.
Diagnosed eight months ago, Ronstadt began to show symptoms as long as
eight years ago. But she ascribed her inability to sing to a tick bite
(“my health has never recovered since then”), and believed the shaking
in her hands resulted from shoulder surgery.
“I couldn’t sing,” she told Nash, “and I couldn’t figure out why. I knew it was mechanical. I knew it had to do with the muscles, but I thought it might have also had something to do with the tick disease that I had. And it didn’t occur to me to go to a neurologist. I think I’ve had it for seven or eight years already, because of the symptoms that I’ve had. Then I had a shoulder operation, so I thought that’s why my hands were trembling.
“Parkinson’s is very hard to diagnose, so when I finally went to a neurologist and he said, ‘Oh, you have Parkinson’s disease,’ I was completely shocked. I wouldn’t have suspected that in a million, billion years.
“No one can sing with Parkinson’s disease,” Ronstadt said. “No matter how hard you try.”
Ronstadt walks with the aid of poles when on uneven ground, and uses a wheelchair when she travels.
Although Ronstadt’s new memoir, Simple Dreams, will appear on September 17, it does not discuss her diagnosis, or the loss of her voice.
Ronstadt, who dated high profile men such as California Gov. Jerry Brown and George Lucas, helped shape the folk-rock music scene of the late 1960s and early 1970s. She started as lead singer of the Stone Poneys, then went on to achieve fame as a solo performer. She has earned 11 Grammy Awards, two Academy of Country Music awards, and an Emmy..."
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