X Japan leader needs surgery
Shakur docu
LOS ANGELES, May 10, (Agencies): Yoshiki, the force behind Japanese rockers X Japan who is known for such intense drumming he sometimes collapses on stage, on Tuesday canceled upcoming shows to undergo urgent surgery.
Yoshiki, whose group was one of the biggest acts in Japanese music history with fanatical fan followings in the 1980s and 1990s, will have treatment to receive an artificial cervical disc, his management said.
“Yoshiki has been informed by a neurosurgeon in Japan that his neck has experienced severe damage that would force a professional rugby player to retire. It has been medically determined that he is approaching his limit, both physically and mentally,” a statement said.
“The operation is to be performed on May 16th at a Los Angeles hospital. Unfortunately, the cancellation of all scheduled activity in May could not be avoided.”
The statement said the reunited X Japan would be reviewing July arena concerts in Japan as well as a subsequent global tour that had not yet been announced, with a decision later on whether the shows can be rescheduled or need to be canceled.
The frail 51-year-old, whose full name is Yoshiki Hayashi, had suffered bone fractures since childhood but pursued such an aggressive brand of heavy metal drumming that he would often writhe in pain on the floor by the end of shows.
Yoshiki, who is also a classical pianist, in January played New York’s Carnegie Hall with the Tokyo Philharmonic Orchestra but, his doctor said Tuesday, he had already lost feeling in his left hand.
He kept performing since then, including at an X Japan concert in March at Wembley Arena in London.
“Even in his condition at that state, Yoshiki stated that he wanted to see things through to the end,” doctor Tommy Tomizawa said in a statement.
“However, due to the worsening of his symptoms, doctors determined that if the situation continued he would have gone beyond the point of surgery and recovery.”
Combining the power of arena metal with the glam androgyny of David Bowie, X Japan won legions of devoted fans ranging from screaming teenage girls to Japan’s former prime minister Junichiro Koizumi to US rockers Kiss.
In an interview last year with AFP, Yoshiki said he believed X Japan’s bid to win over a bigger audience in the West could have been possible had the band come of age in the internet era.
Social media in Japan reacted to the news of the surgery, with “Yoshiki” being one of the most tweeted words.
Yoshiki acknowledged in a Facebook posting after his management statement that he was “a little scared” but “planning on performing the upcoming #XJapan shows” in July, immediately attracting hundreds of reactions from fans.
Sentiment was nearly unanimous in wishing Yoshiki the best and urging him to take care.
“Yoshiki-san, the neck is the most important,” fan Yukari Misaki wrote on Facebook, referring to him with a Japanese honorific.
“Concentrate on your medical care, and please please, don’t overdo it. You will be fine.”
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LOS ANGELES: Academy Awardwinner Steve McQueen is set to direct a documentary about Tupac Shakur. Shakur Estate trustee Tom Whalley and Amaru Entertainment said Tuesday that the film is fully sanctioned by the late hiphop artist’s estate.
McQueen is best known for directing “12 Years a Slave,” which won the best picture Oscar in 2014 and earned him a best director nomination.
The director said in a statement that he looks forward to working with Shakur’s family to bring his unvarnished story to life. Shakur’s aunt and late mother’s sister Gloria Cox will serve as an executive producer.
“Few, if any shined brighter than Tupac Shakur,” said McQueen, who hinted there was some overlap between himself and Shakur during his time at NYU film school in 1993.
Whalley hopes that the documentary will help take Shakur’s legacy beyond “the refraction of the headlines, the controversy, and the tragic way his life ended.” Shakur died in a still-unsolved drive-by shooting in Las Vegas in 1996, at age 25.