Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Levon Helm, singer of "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" for The Band, in final stages of cancer

Via SHNV

This really hurts. "
He refused the laryngectomy and underwent radiation treatment instead." Man why did you do that? I could have made the same decision 17 years ago, but fortunately didn't, and am still alive and kicking. My 15 year old daughter Dixie, would not have come into this life if I had made the wrong decision. To anyone who reads this, having a hole in your neck is no big thing, take it from me.

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The Band singer and drummer Levon Helm is in the final stages of cancer, according to a note posted on his website Tuesday by his wife, Sandy, and daughter, Amy.

“Please send your prayers and love to him as he makes his way through this part of his journey,” the note said. “Thank you fans and music lovers who have made his life so filled with joy and celebration . . . he has loved nothing more than to play, to fill the room up with music, lay down the back beat, and make the people dance! He did it every time he took the stage.”

At Saturday’s Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony in Cleveland, former Band guitarist and songwriter Robbie Robertson prefaced his induction speech for recording engineers Cosimo Matassa, Tom Dowd and Glyn Johns saying “Before I start, I need to send my love and blessings to my old band mate Levon Helm,” but he did not elaborate.

Arkansas-born Helm was the only non-Canadian member of the Hawks, a group that first backed early rocker Ronnie Hawkins, and then gained fame in the mid-1960s accompanying Bob Dylan when the singer and songwriter "went electric" to the consternation of many hardcore folk music fans who'd previously supported him.

The Band worked closely with Dylan after he went into seclusion following a near-fatal 1966 motorcycle accident, recording a batch of influential songs that were widely bootlegged and only surfaced in official form in 1975 as "The Basement Tapes." The Band released its first album on its own in 1968, "Music from Big Pink," to broad critical acclaim. It included one of the group's signature songs "The Weight." It followed with the even more highly lauded sophomore album "The Band," which included "Up On Cripple Creek," "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" and "Rag Mama Rag."

As one of three lead singers for the band, along with Richard Manuel and Rick Danko, Helm was the dominant voice on such signature songs as “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” “Rag Mama Rag,” “Ophelia,” “Don’t Do It” and “Daniel and the Sacred Harp.” Manuel committed suicide in 1986 and Danko died of drug-related heart failure in 1999.

Members of the Band decided in 1976 to quit touring, and threw a gala final concert they called “The Last Waltz,” which was captured on film by director Martin Scorsese. Here's a clip of Helm singing "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" at that concert:


More @ The LA Times

6 comments:

  1. OTOH, for a man whose voice was WHO he was, well... I can kind of understand that too...

    Though I never had the sort of success he did, the thought of never singing again might make me take risks I might not otherwise take...

    He didn't refuse treatment - he took the one that had a chance of leaving him the ability to do what he loved. It just didn't work out.

    That sucks...

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  2. This is sad news indeed. Levon, is one of a few last real human beings. I have seen Levon the humble star at a time he rightly could have had an ego as large as Tx. I have seen Levon the country gentleman, as much at home on a tractor as behind his drum kit in front of thousands.
    This will really tear Amy up, all you have to do is watch how she looks at him and you know immediately how important her daddy is to her.
    Brock I am glad you made the decision you did all those years ago. I am sure Miss Dixie is as well.

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  3. He wouldn't have been offered the laryngectomy if the doctors didn't think it should be done, though there are people who refuse all treatment and go home to die. In CA the VA asked me a couple of times to talk to people who opted out. I do see your point about his voice though.
    =======
    Amy

    I missed her.....?

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  4. Levon Helm played the part of Loretta Lynn's father in the movie, "COAL MINER'S DAUGHTER".

    I think I've seen him in some other movies or TV shows, too.

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  5. Levon Helm played the part of Loretta Lynn's father in the movie, "COAL MINER'S DAUGHTER".

    Thanks for the info.

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