Diagnosed with Ménière’s disease and hearing loss, Huey Lewis doubts he’ll be able to record and perform ever again.
Sharing an update on his journey with the condition Ménière’s Disease, the now 74-year old music legend told People magazine:
“I’m no spring chicken, so something’s going to happen at some point.” “And this is my cross to bear. I have a cochlear implant in my head that now enables me to hear speech much better. I lost bilaterally, my hearing. The intense vertigo – knock on wood – I have kind of outgrown. I’m mildly dizzy all the time, and my hearing just went to zero.” “And now I have a cochlear implant, so I’m much better that way, but I can’t hear music.” “The worst part is that means it’s bad enough not to be able to perform and sing and play, but it’s really bad not to even be able to enjoy music.”
The Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter said that performing and recording was “the best feeling in the world,” adding “but I’m never going to get there. I mean, I might get to where I can try to, and I’m not going to give up. I’m going to try. But jeez, that kind of fun, that kind of great ride. I doubt I’m ever going to see that, feel that, again.”
In a 2021 AARP interview, Lewis shared that he had been diagnosed with Ménière’s Disease 25 years earlier, but noted that his vertigo attacks had been happening for closer to 35 years.
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Author: Saul Goode
Photo: Tankboy from Chicago