
12-28-2009, 11:08 AM
|
 |
Administrator
|
|
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: the Eiffel Tower
Posts: 5,327
|
|
Metallica drummer struggles with ringing in ears
Quote:
The noise in the concert hall is loud, throbbing. The crowd chants, "Metallica ... Metallica!"
Lars Ulrich holds a drumstick high above his head. For a split second, the frenzy quiets to a dull roar. Ulrich brings his drumstick down with a crash and is swallowed by astonishing noise -- wailing guitars, thumping bass and his own furious banging on the drums.
"I've been playing loud rock music for the better part of 35 years," said Ulrich, 46, drummer for the heavy metal band Metallica. "I never used to play with any kind of protection."
Early in his career, without protection for his ears, the loud noise began to follow Ulrich off-stage.
"It's this constant ringing in the ears," Ulrich said. "It never sort of goes away. It never just stops."
Except the ringing is not spurred by actual sound. It is a condition called tinnitus, a perception of sound where there is none.
"It's a phantom auditory sensation like phantom limb pain when an arm is cut off, and you feel pain in that missing limb," said Richard Salvi, a leading tinnitus expert and director of the Center For Hearing and Wellness at the University at Buffalo in New York. "Much the same seems to happen when you have tinnitus."
Tinnitus can be persistent or intermittent. It often is perceived as a high-pitched ringing in the ears but also can sound like buzzing, whistling, whooshing or clicking.
More than 50 million people in the U.S. experience some degree of tinnitus, according to the American Tinnitus Association. For 12 million of those afflicted, the noise is disabling.
At first, Ulrich said the ringing in his ears was barely perceptible. He said the problem got worse during a 1988 concert tour, oddly while he slept.
I try to point out to younger kids ... once your hearing is gone, it's gone, and there's no real remedy.
"I would fall asleep often with the television on, and I would wake up in the middle of the night to go turn the TV off," Ulrich said. "Except it wasn't actually on. When I realized that I was doing that frequently, actually getting up to turn the TV off that was not on to begin with, I realized that maybe I had some issues."
|
Metallica drummer struggles with ringing in ears - CNN.com
__________________
Look, I've got to go and call the central station and let them know my mother has the memory span of a fruit fly
Instead of creating intelligent policy, Obama seeks to solve problems by giving speeches and then holding events in celebration of his words.
|