Def Leppardin kitaristilta tuoretta päivitystä syöpäänsä liittyen

Kirjoittanut Arto Mäenpää - 9.11.2015

Def Leppard 2015Uutisoimme kesäkuussa englantilaisen rockin legendan Def Leppardin kitaristin Vivian Campbellin syövän uusiutumisesta. Mies on siitä asti käynyt aina keikkailun välissä hoidattamassa itseään. Vivian on antanut hiljattain haastattelun 100.7 WZXL -nimiselle radiokanavalle Yhdysvalloissa, jossa mies on itse päivittänyt hieman tilannettaan syövän hoitoihin liittyen. Voit lukea aiheesta lisää tästä:

”Immunotherapy. Yes, I’m taking this drug called pembrolizumab. I’m part of a Phase II clinical trial. I don’t actually know if it’s working yet, to be honest. I’ll find out in early December. ’Cause right after Thanksgiving, we do another set of scans, and that’s basically the determining time. My doctors and I are gonna sit down and have a look at that and see if it’s holding the cancer at bay or shrinking the tumors. And if it is, I’ll be able to continue this treatment for a couple of years, which will be the best possible outcome, ’cause then I’ll be able to continue to work for a couple of years. If not, then, you know, I’ve gotta reconsider my options. But I’m hopeful, you know — fingers are crossed. It’s been great to be able to do that. I started doing this treatment six months ago, and it’s been fantastic, because it meant that I was able to continue working, you know, as opposed to doing a more traditional treatment like radiation or something, which would have meant I would have had to miss the tour. And work, for me, is catharsis, you know. It’s very important to me to be up there on stage doing it, and that’s what keeps me alive.”

Kysyttäessä onko keikkojen ja musiikin soittaminen yleisesti miehelle itselleen terapeuttista raskaiden hoitojen keskellä:

Artikkeli jatkuu mainoksen jälkeenMainos päättyy

”Absolutely. And I one hundred percent agree with you on that. I couldn’t imagine anything worse than being at home. You know, when I first got my diagnosis, the guys in the band, you know, obviously, out of genuine concern for me, they said, ’Well, you know, you don’t have to go on tour if you want. Just stay at home and look after your health. And, to be honest, I couldn’t imagine anything worse, you know. [Laughs] I’ve gotta be out there and doing it. And particularly with the LAST IN LINE stuff [Campbell’s other band, which also features fellow founding DIO members Vinny Appice, Jimmy Bain and Claude Schnell, plus singer Andrew Freeman, who has previously fronted HURRICANE and LYNCH MOB]. I mean, like I say, it’s really cathartic to pick up my Les Paul and get angry with it again, like I did when I was in my twenties. That makes me feel really, really good.”