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NZ show may have been Keith Richards' last

 
Mr Ed
User ID: 91496
New Zealand
05/10/2006 07:20 PM
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NZ show may have been Keith Richards' last
[link to www.nzherald.co.nz]

NZ show may have been Richards' last

Thursday May 11, 2006
By David Eames

Keith Richards' wife Patti Hanson and his four children are at his bedside as concerns grow that the 62-year-old Rolling Stones guitarist may never perform live again.

Minders for Richards and his family appeared outside Auckland's Ascot Hospital yesterday to tell waiting media the ageing rocker was recovering well, but was likely to be in hospital for some time.

His son Marlon and wife Lucie, and daughters Angela, Theodora and Alexandra had joined Ms Hanson.

Richards was brought to Auckland after falling from a palm tree while holidaying in Fiji last month.

London's Sun newspaper yesterday quoted a source close to Richards who said the musician's condition was "much more serious than The Rolling Stones camp have been letting people believe".

The source claimed there were concerns among medical staff that Richards could be left brain damaged or partially paralysed by the fall, and the family had been warned Richards might never perform live again. The Rolling Stones' last show was in Wellington on April 18.

Publicists for the band had earlier rejected Herald reports Richards had undergone two brain operations, but the source told the Sun the star had suffered blackouts after a first operation - believed to have been performed on April 28 - to drain a blood clot from his skull.

New York-based publicist Fran Curtis claimed yesterday: "The first and only operation was done on Monday, May 8, and was 100 per cent successful. There was no brain damage. He continues to improve as expected."

But the Sun said doctors found Richards suffered a "complete mid-line shift" - a condition where one side of the brain collapses on to the other - after his first operation.

The second operation is understood to have been carried out by Auckland's Ascot Hospital-based neurosurgeon Edward Mee. Mr Mee could not be contacted by the Herald last night.

Fellow Stones Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood are believed to be watching Richards' progress from London, while Mick Jagger is "monitoring the situation" from the United States, the Sun said.

Richards' illness has forced Stones management to postpone Bigger Bang tour dates in Europe, a situation that would be an "absolute nightmare", said New Zealand concert promoter Brent Eccles.

The Herald attempted to speak last night with the band's UK publicist Bernard Doherty, but was not successful.

"We like your newspaper, not," he said, before hanging up.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 91847
United Kingdom
05/10/2006 07:40 PM
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Re: NZ show may have been Keith Richards' last
White men over 60 years of age really should not be climbing palm trees.

It's as silly as racing quad-bikes.
HeidiLore

User ID: 85208
United States
05/10/2006 07:43 PM
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Re: NZ show may have been Keith Richards' last
Keith Richards on death's door...we truly are doomed...
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Anonymous Coward (OP)
User ID: 91496
New Zealand
05/10/2006 11:51 PM
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Re: NZ show may have been Keith Richards' last
<Fellow Stones Charlie Watts and Ronnie Wood are believed to be watching Richards' progress from London, while Mick Jagger is "monitoring the situation" from the United States, the Sun said.>

These guys must be doing some form of remote viewing then. Must have come about through years of drug experimentation.

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hatch battener
User ID: 92001
United States
05/11/2006 01:13 AM
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Re: NZ show may have been Keith Richards' last
That is horrible news. That's what I feared when I heard of the accident.

The Stones have gotten a bit puffy like everybody their age. But if you look at pictures of the Rolling Stones in 1967. The attitude. The way they totally rocked. They were the greatest rock and roll band in the world. They were timeless. If Keith and Mick were teenagers in todays music scene, they'd be kicking butt now just like they did back then.

But I don't think it'd be the end of the Stones. I know someone who had a serious brain injury, and they can do amazing things with peoples recovery nowadays. This guy had a traumatic head injury and was at the 'run, spot, run' reading level, after emerging from a months long coma. 8 years later, he went from 'run, spot, run' to graduating from a respected University with a degree. It's takes time, but the brain can be retrained and bounce back. Look at Neil Young after his stroke, you really can't tell it even happened. It might take years of recovery, but the Stones will rock on!

band
Mr Ed (OP)
User ID: 91496
New Zealand
05/11/2006 02:26 AM
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Re: NZ show may have been Keith Richards' last
Yep, as Captain Obvious sez, KR was discharged this afternoon (NZ Time, Thursday). He is staying locally and privately in Auckland (Remuera) and will pop in to the local Hospital that performed his surgery (Ascot Hospital) as an outpatient.

Me thinks he is OK.. really..

Apparently he still has his sense of humor about him so that is good..

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