Tag: musicians & addiction

  • Chris Cornell’s Family Sues His Doctor Over Singer’s Suicide

    Chris Cornell’s Family Sues His Doctor Over Singer’s Suicide

    Vicky Cornell believes the doctor negligently prescribed her husband mood-altering drugs.

    Chris Cornell shocked the rock world when he suddenly took his own life in May last year. Now his wife, Vicky Cornell, and their children are suing the doctor who prescribed Chris a slew of prescription drugs that Vicky believes led him to his death.

    People obtained the lawsuit against Dr. Robert Koblin, which accuses him of “negligently and repeatedly [prescribing] mind-altering drugs and controlled substances,” including lorazepam and oxycodone.

    Koblin is accused of failing to consider Chris’ history of drug abuse and not properly following up on how the medications he prescribed were affecting Chris, the suit alleges. The drugs “clouded [Cornell’s] judgment and caused him to engage in dangerous, impulsive behaviors that he was unable to control, which cost him his life.”

    Chris was found dead at age 52, just hours after finishing a live performance with his band Audioslave. He had long struggled with substance abuse.

    “I went from being a daily drug user at 13 to having bad drug experiences and quitting drugs by the time I was 14,” he told Rolling Stone in a 1994 interview.

    At the time of his death, the late Soundgarden frontman had seven different drugs in his system, and although none of them were the actual cause of his death, Vicky believes an excess of anxiety drugs drove him to suicide.

    “Approximately a year before he died, he was prescribed a benzodiazepine to help him sleep,” she said. “He had torn his shoulder. The pain in the shoulder was waking him up at night and it was keeping him up.”

    There was no way he was suicidal, a family source believes. In the two weeks before his death, he delayed travel plans twice in order to avoid inclement weather. He even opted to drive a rental car for seven and a half hours instead of flying.

    “Clearly someone who was so hesitant and fearful to fly in these situations valued their life,” the source said. “These are not indications of someone with no regard to their well-being.”

    Following his death, Vicky said she found it hard not to blame herself. And, despite her husband being in a rock band, Chris was not another case of a hard rocker’s lifestyle catching up to him.

    “My husband was the furthest thing from a rock star junkie. He just wasn’t,” she said. “He was the best husband, the greatest father. I lost my soulmate and the love of my life.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Black Keys Collaborator Richard Swift's Cause Of Death Revealed

    Black Keys Collaborator Richard Swift's Cause Of Death Revealed

    The prolific musician battled alcohol addiction prior to his death. 

    The family of singer-songwriter and music producer Richard Swift confirmed that his death on July 3, 2018 was due to alcohol addiction. A post on Swift’s Facebook page confirmed that the 41-year-old died in a hospice facility in Tacoma, Washington one month after being hospitalized for hepatitis and liver and kidney distress.

    In addition to releasing several acclaimed solo albums, Swift performed and toured with the Black Keys, Wilco and the Shins, produced recordings by Damien Jurado and The Mynabirds, among others, and owned a recording studio, National Freedom, where artists like Sharon Van Etten and Guster recorded material.

    Swift was hospitalized in June for an undisclosed “life-threatening condition,” for which a GoFundMe page was established to offset hospital costs.

    After his death on July 3, Swift’s family, his label and Next Wave Management issued a joint statement on his official Facebook page to address questions about his passing. 

    The post’s authors confirmed that Swift suffered from alcohol addiction, which “ultimately took his life,” they wrote. With help from friends and family and the assistance of MusiCares, a foundation which provides medical and personal assistance to music industry figures, he had undergone “multiple stays” in rehabilitation facilities during the past two years, and was diagnosed with hepatitis and liver and kidney ailments in June 2018.

    According to the post, “multiple hospitals worked to help stabilize him over the course of that month, but his body was unable to heal, and per his wishes and with his family’s consent, he was moved to hospice care.”

    Swift died in the early morning of July 3, leaving behind his wife, Shealynn, and three children.

    A prolific and widely admired musician and producer, Swift began his recording career with two self-released albums that were reissued by the independent label Secretly Canadian as The Richard Swift Collection, Volume 1 in 2005.

    He issued a slew of solo work between 2007 and 2014, which featured contributions by Mark Ronson and Ryan Adams, among others, while also serving as a member of the Shins from 2011 to 2016 and as touring bassist for the Black Keys in 2014 and drummer for the Arcs. 

    Black Keys co-founder Dan Auerbach paid tribute to his friend with an Instagram post on July 3 that read, “Today the world lost one of the most talented musicians I know. I will miss you my friend.”

    View the original article at thefix.com