I know Parkinson’s will stop me
Del Amitri singer Justin Currie has revealed that he has Parkinson’s disease, which he accepts will eventually stop him from performing.
The 59-year-old confirmed the news in an interview with the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, when he said that he is now in a position where he can no longer “play the way I would expect toâ€.
He said that the diagnosis has demonstrated that “you think you’re invulnerable until something proves you’re not.â€
“I know it will get worse. At what rate, nobody knows. So I know I’m going to have to stop. The idea is quite grim.â€
He added that Parkinson’s has changed his personality, “in not necessarily negative ways.â€
“With any form of disability, you become aware of disability in general, and you become acutely aware of that line that disabled people have been saying for years – that there aren’t able-bodied people, there are just a lot of people who are not yet disabled.
“So I quite like that. I quite like the idea that we’re all going to go through some of these difficulties at some point in life.â€
“That ridiculous cliche, ‘What doesn’t kill you makes you stronger’, that’s not true.
“If you lose a leg you are not strong. And I am not stronger for having Parkinson’s, believe you me.â€
The Glasgow pop-rock band formed in 1980 and are best known for their ‘80s hits including ‘Nothing Ever Happens’ and ‘Roll to Me’.
They released a total of six studio albums before splitting in 2002. A 2013 reunion eventually resulted in their latest full-length effort, 2021’s ‘Fatal Mistakes’.
The band are currently on tour around the UK, supporting fellow ‘80s Scottish act Simple Minds on a run of shows that began on March 15 in Leeds, and has three remaining dates: at Bournemouth’s International Centre on March 26, Cardiff’s International Arena on March 27 and finally Glasgow’s OVO Hydro on March 29. Any remaining tickets for the shows can be found here.
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