In a moment of clarity, Pavement wrote/threatened “You gotta pay your dues before you pay the rent”. The following artists did just that, soldiering on when most would forgive them for choosing a quiet life out of the public eye. I can’t guarantee you will like all the artists on this list, but you may come to respect each a little more, knowing what they had to contend with.
Many consider Perlman the greatest violin player of the 20th century. He contracted polio at the age of four, but made a good recovery, and learned to walk aided by crutches. Today, he generally uses crutches or a scooter to get around. He plays violin while seated, which you may have caught at American president Barack Obama’s inauguration. Charlie Daniels calls him “Sir”.
Winter is an American blues musician. An adventuresome multi-instrumentalist at home on keyboards, saxophone, percussion, and vocals, Winter was most successful in the 1970s with The Edgar Winter Group. He is easily recognized by his albinism. Due to the lack of pigmentation in their irises, many albinos are very sensitive to light. Yet Winter has made a career on brightly lit stages playing “Frankenstein” from his great album, “They Only Come Out at Night”.
Stanley Eisen (stage name Paul Stanley) is the rhythm guitarist and lead singer of the marketing juggernaut/rock band KISS (estimated album sales, 100 million). Stanley was born with Microtia, a rare congenital deformity where the fleshy part of the outer ear (the Pinna) is extremely underdeveloped or absent entirely. His solution to avoid schoolyard teasing was to grow his hair long, and that kind of chose his later profession. Stanley is also the spokesman for About Face an organization that provides support and information to individuals with facial differences.
Poison’s lead singer Bret Michaels was only six when diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, a disease that renders the pancreas unable to make insulin, a hormone essential for converting food into energy. At ten, he went to the Kno-Koma diabetes camp, met other diabetic kids, and learned to legally shoot up and eat correctly. After that, he joined Poison and sold 25 million records by constantly touring a frenetic stage show. He’s in his forties now, still tours, and can be seen on his own reality TV show, courting loose women.
Asthmatic Kenneth Gorelick is a Grammy-award winning saxophonist once rejected from the University of Washington music program. Today he could buy the University of Washington. His smooth jazz expanded the jazz market exponentially and sold 48 million records–making him the 25th highest selling recording artist in America. One of his most successful albums is titled “Breathless”.
Charles is an American treasure/musician who mixed gospel, blues, and country in the 1950s and 1960’s. The son of a sharecropper, his version of “Georgia On My Mind” was proclaimed the state song of Georgia in 1979, only a decade and change from the days of Jim Crow. Rolling Stone ranked him number ten on their list of “The 100 Greatest Artists of All Time” and their readers voted him number two on the list of “The 100 Greatest Singers of All Time”. He was the last artist to arrive for the “We are the World” recording sessions, and when he entered the studio, the room finally had soul. You could hear a pin drop.
Jacqueline du PrĂ© OBE was a British cellist, acknowledged as one of the greatest players of the instrument. She is particularly associated with Elgar’s Cello Concerto in E Minor; her interpretation of that work has been described as “definitive” and “legendary”. Her career was cut short by multiple sclerosis, which forced her to cease performing at the age of 28, and led to her premature death. Watch the video clip above to see one of her astoundingly masterful performances. There has never been a cellist like her and her early death is a tragedy.
After an accident in a sheet metal factory, 17 year old southpaw Tony Iommi lost the tips of the middle and ring finger of his right hand. He considered quitting music, but a record by similarly-injured jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt encouraged him to keep playing. After failing at playing right-handed, Iommi strung his guitars with banjo strings and wore plastic covers over the two damaged fingers. He made the covers by melting plastic bottles and dipping his fingers in while the plastic was soft enough to be shaped. He then completed the easier tasks of forming Black Sabbath, selling 20+ million albums, and becoming a highly influential guitarist himself.
Driving to a 1984 New Year’s Eve party, Def Leppard drummer Rick Allen was thrown from his Corvette, severing his left arm. Doctors initially reattached the arm, but were forced to remove it due to infection. Soon after, Allen and some engineers designed an electronic drum kit allowing his left foot to play the snare. Drum manufacturer Simmons built a kit to the needed specs, and Allen returned to the stage in 1986, only two years after the accident. In August 1987, the band released their fourth album, Hysteria, which sold over 20 million copies.
As a child, he practiced to stop his father beating his mother. As a man, his name is synonymous with musical mastery, and he wrote the most famous notes of music in the history of man. According to FlameHorse (who knows his classical music), “(Beethoven’s) finest works are also the finest works of their kind in music history: the 9th Symphony, the 5th Piano Concerto, the Violin Concerto, the Late Quartets, and the Missa Solemnis. And he achieved all this despite being completely deaf for the last 25 years of his life”. I have selected the third movement of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata because most people familiar with the sonata only know the first movement.




















Great list!!!
WOWOWEEWA
What about Django? He was missing parts of sevral fingers.
Django wasn't missing parts of his fingers.
He had paralysis in his hands from a fire when he was a kid. It forced him to quit playing the violin and take up the guitar as therapy.
His string runs where his way of playing around his disability. His paralysis created a new way of playing.
Fantastic and very interesting list. So glad to see Mr. Perlman, Ms. Dupre, and Beethoven on the list!!
However, J.S.Bach could also be added for blindness in his old age…and Smetana also included for deafness, although his music is not nearly as far reaching and influential as Beethoven’s, but it doesn’t diminish his creativity and genius.
Opening an article with a quote from ‘range life’ just made this the best listverse list yet. And I haven’t actually read any of the entries yet.
And to think we whine when we get a little setback! These guys (and girl) kept on going!
A fine list JayK, although some of the entries didn’t expand upon the obstacle each artist had to contend with.
I’ve been a fan of KISS since the late 70′s and even though Paul Stanley was my fav, I had no clue about his ears. So cool piece of trivia.
Is diabetes a disability? That makes me disabled! You think I can apply for government pension?
Just kidding. Awesome list.
Not only Django Reinhardt, but Jerry Garcia. He is one of the most brilliant guitarists of all time, and he was missing 2/3rds of his right middle finger.
I went to Belgium last February to Django's hometown where they have a festival every year. They have bands competing who can play the music of Django best. It amazing.
good list, no mental disabilities though
I would hardly call Microtia a disability
And Type 1 diabetes is pretty borderline too. Certainly a Chronic (as in long term) illness but not disabling provided you follow your insulin regime properly.
Jaqueline du Prés while sad does not seem to fit your introductory criteria either as she does not appear from your write up to have soldiered on.
Cheers
Lee
There are enough classical musos with disabilities to make a separate list about them. du Pres really doesn’t fit her as her MS forced her to stop performing, compared to the rest, who kept performing (or in Beethoven’s case composing).
An interesting thought is: were these people great musicians in spite of their disabilities, or were they great musicians because of them?
Interesting list; I was a bit surprised not to see Ian Dury on there or Stevie Wonder.
Stevie Wonder – Blindness, like Ray Charles
Ayumi Hamasaki – Deafness, like Beethoven (don’t know if you can call her a “musician”)
I really like Edgar Winter!
I got his autograph a while back, I noticed when he was signing for people he had to lean to within inches of what he was signing to see what he was doing.
Really nice guy!
Great list
Cool list. Never knew that about Paul Stanley from Kiss. Thanks alot.
WOW @ rick allen
thats actually amazing
playing with one hand is incredible
What about Ian Curtis of Joy Division? He was epileptic, and his on-stage performances showed it…
no. 1 has Emperor Palpatine playing. hehe
Very cool. Couple I’d never even heard before. Thanks for broadening my horizons.
I still dont understand how beethavon could compose evn though he couldnt hear amazing
Beethoven wasn't deaf from birth. He began to lose a good deal of his hearing around the time that he composed his 6th symphony. So, the fundamentals of music that he used to compose were things that he was actually able to hear in his head, rather than actually having to play them back to hear them.
Fantastic list
Wonderful list. Yet, as a Canadian, I cannot help but mention Jeff Healey, one of Canada’s greatest jazz musicians, who was blind from the age of 8 months. Despite having artificial eyes, Healey managed to play guitar and trumpet in a 1920s and 30s style of jazz. He was featured in the Patrick Swayze movie “Roadhouse” as the leader of a travelling band, playing guitar with his signature on-the-lap technique. Throughout the 80s and 90s, Jeff Healey was synonymous with Canadian jazz talent.
For more info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Healey
ummm…what about the blues virtuoso Jeff Healey (RIP), who was discovered by the blues deities Albert Collins and Stevie Ray Vaughan? It’s because he is Canadian isnt it!??!? ISNT IT!?!?!!!
You forgot about Andrea Bocelli.
Kenny G’s other disability is the almost total absence of cool.
I think the lead singer of kiss shouldn’t deserve a spot on the list. Sure, having no ears is a disability. But people like Hawking or Jason Becker who suffer from ALS can’t even move. Becker composes neoclassical music using his eyes. If that doesn’t deserve a spot on the list I don’t know what does.
My 6 year old was born without an ear. I think the list could be split into two parts: disability at birth vs. acquired disability after birth. Breaks our heart when the little guy comes up and says he wants a real ear.
To put Toni Iommi on and not Django is a *****ing joke. Django was more disabled, more influential and a much greater player.
No Stevie Wonder?
Good list anyways.
hang in there Stevie Wonder
I would say this is a good list list but with the oversight of Django Reindhardt, A guy who reinvented a way of playing jazz guitar with only two fingers, I have to say you need to do more research. I mean Kenny G. Your reaching to call asthma a disablility these days. And where’s Stevie Wonder, You have Ray Charles yet no Stevie.
Poorly padded list in my opinion
Agreed. Becker deserves a spot in this list. Also Shawn Lane. You could almost make a top 10 of guitarists with disability.
Also Chick Webb is more deserving than most of these guys.
There was a nice movie about Jacqueline du PrĂ© named “Hilary and Jackie” where she was portrayed by Emily Watson.
You should have included Kanye West as he is clearly retarded.
Interesting list but I agree Paul Stanley and Bret Michaels aren’t really disabled in any way. I think the late Vic Chesnutt deserves mention he was a “partial quadrapalegic” from a car accident, he had virtually no use of his legs and minimal use of his arms yet he played guitar and released 17 albums
I read somewhere Beethoven might have gone deaf from syphilis? His journals were found and apparently he slept with prostitutes a lot. It also might have been what he died from.
Oh, the things you learn from the National Geographic!
Very interesting list!
if asthma & diabetes are disabilities, why can’t I get a disabled parking sticker for my fiancee? Excellent list idea, shame about the execution
Calling some of these people “musicians with disabilities” is disrespectful to people with, you know, actual disabilities… Asthma? Diabetes? Even microtia and albinism aren’t really going to hinder a musician in producing music (not that I’m unsympathetic!). Compare to Becker, as mentioned above, and they’re barely even worth mentioning…
I like the list. Glad you included Rick Allen. He is an amazing drummer to listen to, given the fact he only has one arm.
Cool info, JayK.
Hey, you left John Mayer off the list! He’s sold a few records and he’s a terminally insufferable *****. That’s certainly some kind of disability.
@Emmett Brown (32): You just made me choke on my tea.
Stevie Wonder definitely should’ve been on there.
Iommi’s good, but Django needs to go there… or Phil Keaggy, who had the same amputation (and is a far better guitarist).
@get a clue (37): +1,342,324
@Emmett Brown (32): Nice comment, so true.
@Plastik (31): I will have to get a copy of that – I love Emily Watson and du pre
He could have easily made it a list of 50. Marcus Roberts is an incredibly talented pianist, and blind. Donal Coghlan is another with MS. If i’m not mistaken, Beethoven had his hearing then went deaf as an adult, so the tones were in his head, and his fibroids could have been corrected today through surgery. He just got more and more muffled until…
Oh…Robert Wyatt ! Where is he ?
Um, how does this list NOT include Evelyn Glennie?
Oh, as a backup… Evelyn Glennie is a virtuoso percussionist. She is also profoundly deaf.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evelyn_Glennie#Deafness
Asthma and Diabetes don’t really seem particularly suited to this list, albeit the list isn’t ‘the most famous..’ However, if you were to include asthma, then why not choose Keith Relf (Lead singer of the Yardbirds) who not only suffered asthma, but was down to one lung. He could belt out a tune too…. I’d also go for Django over Iommi.. And probably delete Brett Michaels in favor of Stevie Wonder.
I have MS and it is NOT a disability. If you saw me you wouldn’t even know. Jacquie Du Pre had progressive MS, which is very rare. Her success as a musician came prior to developing MS and once diagnosed she sadly declined rapidly and died
Including a person who has small ears is an insult to those who truly struggle with disabilities and yet are able to succeed. Growing your hair long won’t disguise the fact that you are in a wheel chair.
The more I read the comment, the more I agree. The list author’s misuse of the term ‘disability’ is inexcusible. I like musicians such as Perlman who played though and in spite of a disability…as opposed to those who hand funny-shaped ears or a disability simply cut their established career short. In Paul Stanley’s case, I believe being deaf might be an improvement over having to listen to Kiss’s music.
I think I would put Stevie Wonder’s blindness over Kenny G’s asthma. I mean seriously asthma a disability?
Tupac suffers from death and still puts out albums. Amazing!
Asthma, diabetes are hardly disability and not nearly as serious as the other stuff mentioned on the list.
PS
Sorry i hadn’t read the comments… looks like I just echoed what other people have said.
LUDWIG VAN BEETHOWEN?!
You’ve ever heard of Anton Pagani?!
The guy who was blind, but was still able to play harmonica, a cello, and whistle at the same time? And did i mention, that he was blind?
I’ve also heard of Joan Whisnant, the woman who was able to play guitar with her feet, since she had no arms at all.
Now, those people weren’t actually famous, BUT there are several Savant-syndrome people, who had unbelievable musical talent, like Thomas Greene Bethune, who had the talent of playing two differend songs on a piano at the same time, and he also sang a third one. He was blind from birth.
You can find Musical Savants even in Youtube, try the keyword: “Human i-Pod”.
And, as a final word, i’d like to mention few talented musicians without disabilities:
Alfred Langeven was able to play flute using only the air from his eye-ducts.
Don Tranger was able to play three trumpets at the same time, and i’ve seen another person who was able to play three clarinett’s at the same time.
Henry Scott was able to play the piano with mittens on.
Ray Steele from Oklahoma, was able to whistle with his tounge out, and at the same time, chew chewing gum.
Arthur Schultz from Michigan, could play the piano with his hands wrong way, with the bakcs of his hands.
Jack Trimbleton led a three-men orchestra in 1930s and 40s, where he carried the two other members on his back while playing.
H.C. Harris from Mississippi was able to play mouth organ with his nose, and whistle at the same time.
There are actually THREE verses in the National anthem of the USA. Vey few people know the rest two.
I hope you’ve learned something here, and
YOU BETTER HAVE READ THIS; I WROTE IT HALF AN HOUR!!!
Well I would say, that in this case, asthma is a disability, it affects your breathing and Kenny G plays the flute…plus diabetes, no matter how common, is still a terribly inconvenient thing to have.
I’d say albinism is less of a disability than those two, cooler at least…
Good list I guess…
I feel like some of these weren’t “disabilities” just health problems. And numerous of these the world knows…I was expecting to see some more unique situations.
yes, Vic Chesnutt should have been included. and in the vein of Django et al, Phil Keaggy deserves a mention as well.
asthma is a disability? does he get a special parking place?