Levon Helm's Life After Cancer
After Undergoing 28 Radiation Treatments, Singer And Drummer From The Band Has A New CD
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Play CBS Video Video Levon Helm Levon Helm the former drummer and lead vocalist for the '70s rock group The Band talks to Anthony Mason about his bout with throat cancer.
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Video Eye To Eye: Levon Helm "Only on the Web": Drummer and singer for The Band, Levon Helm, talks to Anthony Mason about losing his voice to cancer of the vocal chord, and how it returned years later.
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Levon Helm, the former drummer and lead singer of The Band, was told he'd never sing again after being diagnosed with throat cancer. He now has a new album. (AP Photo / Kevin Ferguson)
The record itself is a miracle, because not long ago cancer almost silenced him.
As drummer and guiding spirit for the legendary rock group The Band, Helm's earthy voice sang lead on many of the group's most popular songs.
Since the '60s, he has lived in Woodstock, N.Y., at the behest of Bob Dylan.
"We followed Bob up," he told CBS News correspondent Anthony Mason.
Then ten years ago, he began to feel his voice grow hoarse, and none of the usual singer's therapies would fix it. Helm, who used to smoke three packs a day, got the doctor's diagnosis: Cancer of the vocal chord.
"I think it's probably really devastating to hear something like that," Helm's daughter Amy said. "But he was really courageous about it. I wasn't so courageous about it. I was devastated by it."
But her father says Amy gave him the courage to fight.
"She insisted on going to all my radiation treatments with me after surgery and stuff," Helm said. "And I think tryin' not to let her see how scared I really was probably helped me as much as anything."
The Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center was two hours from Helm's Woodstock farm. But every day for two months Helm and Amy drove there. And in 28 treatment sessions, as Helm lay on a table, doctors fired radiation at the cancerous tumor in his larynx.
He lost his voice entirely.
"He couldn't talk. It was incredible. He could barely whisper," Amy said.
So Helm could no longer sing, but he could still play the drums. And he attacked them with renewed passion.
"And then after I got sick I needed, I couldn't take a job," he said. "So we started puttin' on little mini concerts here inside the studio."Photos: In Concert
With Amy, who also sings with the gospel group Olabelle, Helm put together a new band and invited folks into the family barn for late night shows he calls "Midnight Rambles."
"I was just tryin' to get my voice back so I could sing a two-hour show without croakin'," he said.
A few years ago, Helm's voice returned to about 70 percent of its old strength, he says, but as soulful as ever. Amy said it was amazing to hear her dad sing again.
For the new album, "Dirt Farmer," dedicated to his parents, Levon went back to songs he learned growing up on an Arkansas farm.
"It's not a guarantee. Nothin's a guarantee. It's the old 'one day at a time.' And that's all it's supposed to be, I guess.
Levon HelmAmy sings with him on the album, which she also co-produced.
"Well, you know, that's the big payoff for me," Helm said.
The payoff for his fans is that with cancer in remission, Helm has found his voice again.
"It's not a guarantee," he said. "Nothin's a guarantee. It's the old 'one day at a time.' And that's all it's supposed to be, I guess."
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- I disagree with jicry''s post on CBS Sunday.....this a.m. was a refreshing and informative varience on the usual format. I must say I look forward to a traditional Sunday program next week--it''s my all-time favorite of the week''s TV; --but short-quick information on all forms of medical info and where we are today because of research in those fields was an excellent way to start MY today. (Maybe I''m older than jicry? longer attention span? More in my memory bank?) - I was happy to see Levon Helm and daughter today, and all the others in the hour. AND! I don''t recall even one time a commercial during that hour about Viagra or Cialis (or whatever)!!
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- I disagree with jicry''s post on CBS Sunday.....this a.m. was a refreshing and informative varience on the usual format. I must say I look forward to a traditional Sunday program next week--it''s my all-time favorite of the week''s TV; --but short-quick information on all forms of medical info and where we are today because of research in those fields was an excellent way to start MY today. (Maybe I''m older than jicry? longer attention span? More in my memory bank?) - I was happy to see Levon Helm and daughter today, and all the others in the hour. AND! I don''t recall even one time a commercial during that hour about Viagra or Cialis (or whatever)!!
- Reply to this comment
- What a disappointment that Sunday Morning is going the way of network health fascism, supported by the pharmaceutical companies. What used to be a lovely spiritual oasis in television wasteland now joins in the commercial effort to terrorize Americans about their health or lack of it. The only saving grace in today''s line-up of stories was the piece about former President Carter.
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- as a three pack a day smoker for over 40 years,
my voice is cracking. i''m glad this guy got
his career and life saved. i knew people long
ago, who had their voice boxes removed and had
to use those things you put to your throat to talk.
they sounded, so mickey mouse like. should i
get cancer, i wonder what i will do. maybe i''ll
be lucky, have a final stroke instead, just fade
away like an old soldier of peace. or will it
be not fade away, by the rolling stones, love is
love and not fade away. billions must have lived
on this planet who have all died. over the whole
history of the planet. i really don''t believe
in life after death. rigor mortis only. but i
could be totally wrong on that. through science
there may be such places as a heaven and a hell?
a science such as we can not comprehend at our
present level of understanding. who can say
whether the future exists? and exactly what it
will be like? unless someone has gone from the
alpha to the omega with only a few knowing about it. - Reply to this comment




