In a moment of clarity, Pavement wrote/threatened âYou gotta pay your dues before you pay the rentâ. The following artists did just that, soldiering on when most would forgive them for choosing a quiet life out of the public eye. I canât 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 Obamaâs inauguration. Charlie Daniels calls him âSirâ.
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 âFrankensteinâ from his great album, âThey Only Come Out at Nightâ.
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.
Poisonâs 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. Heâs 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 âBreathlessâ.
Charles is an American treasure/musician who mixed gospel, blues, and country in the 1950s and 1960âs. 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 âWe are the Worldâ 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), â(Beethovenâs) 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 lifeâ. I have selected the third movement of Beethoven’s Moonlight Sonata because most people familiar with the sonata only know the first movement.




















@Urbane_Gorilla (45):
asthma is a pretty big disability when you play the sax or flute or whatever the hell it is that Kenny G plays.
And yes Jason Becker should be on this list
I think it is clear. You need to make a second list of musicians with disabilities. You forgot Neil Young, who has epilepsy. And most importantly, you should have mentioned Gary Numan who has Asperger Syndrome, a sort of autism. Hopefully there will be a second list for musicians with disabilities. Maybe even a third!
Not sure if someone said this? Craig Nicholls, lead singer of The Vines, has autism.
http://www.pianofire.wordpress.com
@bucslim (61): Fitty’s taken more shots to the face than Jenna Jameson.
WHAT??? No Evelyn Glennie? She’s a masterful deaf percussionist from Scotland. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evelyn_Glennie
nice list!!!!!!!!
I dunno if this went through before, but anyway I got mentioned on someone else’s list! Thanks, JayK!
All y’all know that Beethoven carried two blue pearlhandled flintlock pistols with him whenever he left the house? Shame he never had to use them. Woulda made a great story.
Something wrong with my posting abilities. Thanks for the mention, JayK!
Ok i think this was a great idea for a list, and i was really excited to read it BUT….ASTHMA and DIABTES that’s the best you could come up with. really, really. ugh
For the list MASTER. See Umberto Eco- ‘The Vertigo of Lists’
Umberto Eco on lists
http://www.marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2009/11/umberto-eco-on-lists.html
Uh…just where is Stevie Wonder?
Are some of these even disabilities….
Why would you mention Edgar winter and not his brother? They both are albinos. Kinda poorly done list, almost seems thrown together.
Still interesting, nontheless.
I learned in high schoolfrom my teacher that Beethoven, after going completely deaf cut his pianos legs to feel the vibtrations of the sound and play his symphonies…pretty neat:)
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Wow, unbelievable!
Roy Sipel
good point bucslim,(49) tupac should be on this list; death would indeed be the most disabling illness of all. But seriously stevie wonder and django should be on the list. And I don’t understand all this controversy about the singer from kiss being on the list. The absence of ear flesh would be seriously disabling for a vain, self obsessed rock star.
What about Daniel Johnston?
Evelyn Glennie should totally be on this list – she’s an amazing percussionist!
I am disappointed to see Jose Feliciano missing from the list, especially when you have people like Bret Michaels on the list…
Half of them weren’t even disabilities! Check out Evelyn Glennie, deaf percussionist.
Was really cool to see someone on the list that suffered from MS…my mother has it, and watching the slow progression is AWFUL!!! I was a little surpised that Stevie Wonder wasn’t on the list, but otherwise it was kick ass!!!
Albinism? That’s not really a massive disability, it won’t get in the way of learning an instrument. I don’t know why Django Reinhardt isn’t in here. He didn’t have a similar accident to Tony Iommi, he badly burnt his hand when he caravan went up in flames. Also I have no idea by what you mean when you say Tony was a southpaw, he was from Birmingham. I’ve never heard anyone from brum called a southpaw
Rick Allen,that’s the man! His story is amazing and really inspiring. Gotta love this guy, even without one arm he can still play way better than a bunch of drummers out there.
Great list,
Yellowman and Salif Keita are great musicians with albinism.
Frankie Paul is legally blind.
Nice to see film footage of Wilhelm Kempff.
.
Also great to see the du Pré footage.
Of course, there are many famous blind musicians/composers: Rodrigo, Helmuth Walcha.
And pages could be written about tone-deaf musicians
What about Phil Keaggy? One of the best live performances of acoustic guitar I have ever seen and he is missing a finger.
This list is a bit of a failure. Half of these šdisabilitiesš donÂŽt really constitute an obstacle to musicianship, and Du Pre might be more at home in a list entitled “great musicians whose careers were tragically cut short by a wasting disease.”
Beethoven, Ray Charles, Perlman, sure. But the rest of them… There have been far greater musicians who overcame far greater physical obstacles than some of the people on this list. Watch me list ten of them in thirty seconds without trying:
-Paul Wittgenstein
-Django Reinhardt
-David Helfgott
-Stevie Wonder
-Clarence Fountain
-Blind Lemon Jefferson
-Blind Willie McTell
-About three dozen more blind blues artists
-Salif Keita (OK albinism doesnÂŽt really count as a disability that influences your musicality, but it has represented a great obstacle for him because in his native Mali it is considered a curse)
-Thomas Quasthoff (he has no limbs but he sings opera. Again, maybe you donÂŽt need arms and legs to sing opera, but he couldnÂŽt get into music school at one point because all voice students were required to take piano as well, which a man without arms canÂŽt really do.)
Thomas Quasthoff
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Quasthoff
Great list and so inspiring – I have nothing to complain about.
Hi.
Glad to see everyone loves/hates the list. A few responses.
From Merriam-Webster’s Online Dictionary, http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/disability
Main Entry: dis·abil·i·ty
Pronunciation: \Ëdis-É-Ëbi-lÉ-tÄ\
Function: noun
Date: 1557
1 a : the condition of being disabled b : inability to pursue an occupation because of a physical or mental impairment; also : a program providing financial support to one affected by disability
2 : lack of legal qualification to do something
3 : a disqualification, restriction, or disadvantage
For this list, I went with 1 and 3. Although Ray Charles might have had something to say about no. 2 in the days of Jim Crow laws…
97. Itzahk Perlman plays while seated, so he was further down the list than he would be if this were a list about talent. He would be second to Beethoven then.
26. Everything was done to include Django Reinhardt. I mentioned him by name, included a YouTube video that shows a photo of him and a snippet of his playing, and the link starts with a photo of Django, NOT Iommi. Django inspired thousands of guitar players, Iommi millions. Their stories are intertwined but one is much more (in)famous and influential (for good or bad, depending on your taste). Iommi would agree that Django is a better player, btw.
27. First candidate on the short list, but I was going with one line item per disability.
46. I’m glad that you’re beating MS. To your other point, no, you can’t “disguise” being in wheel chair. And you shouldn’t have to. But I’m not trying to equate these conditions. I’m just saying it takes some b**ls to go onstage every night with birth defect. Leave it at that.
ASTHMA NOT A DISABILITY-See the definition above. Not being able to breathe is a definite impairment for playing a wind instrument.
60. Didn’t know that Sullivan suffered kidney stones, but it wasn’t agony. I’ve had a kidney stone. It’s f****** agony.
80. Jerry Garcia was impaired on his strumming hand, not his fretting hand.
68. Jeff Healey made the short list. “Confidence Man” is my favorite, but I already was heavy on guitarists and was trying to limit to one entry per disability. RIP, Jeff. (For the record, I like Canadians, and even worked for a Canadian telecom company).
73. This isn’t about whether Kenny G. sucks, but how he overcame/copes with a disability. If you locked me in a room with Saddam Hussein, Hitler, and Kenny G., and then give me a gun with two bullets, I might just shoot Kenny twice…
77. Thanks for the understanding, Emily.
80. Wrong. Go higher than twice. See #73.
116 and 119. Try not breathing for 60 seconds and get back to me. Or give yourself a shot every day for a month. You’re missing the irony.
129. “Southpaw” is American slang for someone who is left handed. Baseball is popular worldwide, but yes, sorry for the vernacular. Now what does Brum mean?
135. Thanks. You made my day.
I’ll let you guys have the last word (this is your list now, not mine). Please remember that this list was NEVER intended to be all-inclusive. I was only trying to inspire just a little bit by playing on irony:
A one-armed drummer shouldn’t be playing in a multi-platinum band, but he is.
A deaf composer shouldn’t be able to write ANY music, but Beethoven composed the greatest symphony in history.
Someone who can’t breathe well shouldn’t sell millions of records playing saxophone, but Kenny G. does.
A guitar player with half his fingers missing shouldn’t be inspiring millions of able-bodied kids to play just like him, but Tony Iommi did. (All Heavy Metal goes back to Black Sabbath and even further, ever so slightly, to Django).
A frontman with a facial deformity shouldn’t be “*****y”, but Paul Stanley is.
A diabetic frontman should conserve his energy, but Brett Michaels definitely doesn’t.
Could a black man really compose the official song of an American state that once banned him because of a color he couldn’t even see? Ray Charles did.
…and so on.
@GratefullyDead (80):
Totally agree!
While I give him alot of credit for continuning to do what he loved despite his injuries, Rick Allen was not nearly as good after his accident.
Also, there’s a few good reasons why hair metal isn’t popular anymore, including the fact that it is really *****ty music.
@Master of the Obvious (137):
“Also, thereâs a few good reasons why hair metal isnât popular anymore, including the fact that it is really *****ty music.”
I agree! And yet my brother has tons of heavy metal on his iPod and continues to insist it’s “awesome.”
@Zaeriuraschi (pronounced zay-ree-ooh-ras-chee) (138):
Do your best to save your brother from his musical prison! If he likes metal, there is far better stuff that doesn’t involve transvestism, masturbatory guitar solos and the same three power chords rehashes in different ways. Let me be clear–I am a fan of good metal. I cannot think of one hair metal band worth my time, however. And just for the record, Metallica is NOT hair metal.
How does being an Albino make you disabled? Asthma, Diabetes, Microtia? Disabled? Really? Mighty loose definition of the word at play.
140- Actually, I started with the following definition from the Merriam-Webster Online dictionary (http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/disability) and went from there.
Definitions 1b (the first part) and 3 seemed to fit.
Main Entry: dis·abil·i·ty
Pronunciation: \Ëdis-É-Ëbi-lÉ-tÄ\
Function: noun
Date: 1557
1 a : the condition of being disabled b : inability to pursue an occupation because of a physical or mental impairment; also : a program providing financial support to one affected by disability
2 : lack of legal qualification to do something
3 : a disqualification, restriction, or disadvantage
What? No Wesley Willis!? He was obese, homeless, and schitzo among other problems. Granted..he wasent much of a musician, but that guy kept going.
And I’m still lol’ing at 121.
Just thought of someone else,has anyone mentioned Nathaniel Ayers(mental illness)?
Jamie Foxx played him in the film “The Soloist”
I agree with alot of the other posters,some of these “so called” disabled musicians,should be replaced by some more deserving and truly inspirational musicians.
im So glad you had rick allen on here!!! if he wasnt then A) you probably didnt know his name or who he was or B)you know who he is but forgot. Def Leppard is AMAZING!!!!
You could have added Johann Sebastian Bach. He went blind in later years. And having 20 children is surely a disability!
I know he isn’t well known in popular music, but Tony Melendez is an inspirational musician who has played the guitar for even the Pope at World Youth Day, with his feet as he is lacking both his arms. Now there is a true artist.
Don’t forget. Hasselhoff – he’s got a case of d-bagness. Nice list. Bret Michaels suffers from some disease other than diabetes, I’m sure! In all seriousness though, the list was pretty good. Thanks to the additional ones too.
@J (129): “Southpaw” just means left-handed, it has nothing to do with geographical location…
Hi. Jay K. here.
Glad to see that all of you love/hate the list. As always, I learned a lot from the comments.
Some readers are missing that the title was FAMOUS musicians with disabilities. If you’re a musician you probably know Django, but most average people don’t because they don’t follow jazz.
Since I hate music purists, I was trying to show that even the famous artists that most people sniff at had hurdles to overcome, and perhaps you should give them a break when you know what they were up against. Some people got it, some didn’t.
There’s definitely room for more. Have at it!
Thanks again,
Jay K.
There are plenty of blind musicians who could be mentioned, but Rahsaan Roland Kirk was not only blind, but he played multiple instruments (at the same time), invented a few of his own instruments, and continued playing after a stroke left him partially paralyzed — modifying his instruments to enable him to play them one-handed.
J-Dilla was one of hip-hop’s most prolific producers. He toured extensively and worked around the clock for most of his career, all the while suffering from lupus, which eventually killed him. I elect James Yancey, bka J-Dilla for an honorary mention…
Jeff Healey was a blind guitarist best known, probably, for his cover of My Guitar Gently Weeps. He died recently.
Good list but I feel Mick Mars deserves a mention:
Diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis at age 19, he still went on to become the lead guitarist for the widely renowned rock band Motley Crue. The disease has caused his spine to freeze up and fuse together causing him a great deal of pain and to lose three inches off his height.
beethoven had to be number 1, nobody can beat that honestly.
it is amazing that the beautiful music he created, he never knew what it sounded like, it is quite sad honestly.
What’s Kenny G doing on a list of musicians?
This list is silly. A great deal of Albinos are not sensitive to light, which means if they aren’t then it isn’t a disability is it. So how the hell is Edgar Winter in front of the greatest violinist ever who also beat polio? You know how many people didn’t beat polio? A *****load. No one ever died from being an albino (not usually atleast).
Also, how is Microtia a disability? A deformity is not a disability unless you actually can’t do normal stuff because of it. Having weird ears does nothing to hinder a persons musical talent and in saying that, where the ***** is Stevie Wonder!? Paul Stanley gets on the list because his ears are a bit strange and yet, the multi-instrumentalist, all time top 10 songwriter, who has some of the greatest albums ever and is blind is nowhere to be seen! *****ing stupid.
On top of that, no one should be on this list because they had Diabetes. That is just stupid. Posion weren’t even that good of a band to begin with and Diabetes is hardly anything to complain about.
…wow!!!i’ m so thankful someone made this list!!!!!!!!!!
great list it gives boost to my career.
Hey guys, if you’re not happy, make your own lists… it’s easy to criticize, so do better than that instead of ranting. These lists are limitated to 10 or 15 entries max, there’s no pretention to be exhaustive and complete. They are subjectives and just exists to entertain and inform. Sad to see so many bad reactions about diabete and albinism. you can see how much people doesn’t know what they’re talking about, just because they’re healthy, i guess, and cannot put themselves in the shoes of sick/disabled/diformed people. Rich healthy kids who like to complain about someone else’s work because they’re doing nothing with their lives? ….
oh i just read your answer, Jkay… perfect answer, total respect, enough said ^^
!
continue making great lists! and continue to ***** off ranting gnomes
Cheers, Ced
Nice! I didnt know Brett Michaels had diabetes…
Kenny G also has the amazing ability of resurrecting the dead with his boring music.
woah… one arm drummer!