The Mail on Sunday

I know this much is true... tinnitus is driving me mad!

Spandau Ballet star Martin Kemp admits stadium rock – and thousands of screaming fans – have ruined his hearing

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WHEN Martin Kemp lies i n bed at night, he is never alone. Instead, the former Spandau Ballet star has a constant – and highly irritating – companion, and there’s nothing he can do to escape it.

For as Martin reveals for the first time today, he suffers from tinnitus – a relentless ringing or buzzing sound in his head.

‘There is a whistling in my ears all the time,’ admits Martin, who shot to fame in the 1980s as Spandau topped the charts with hits such as True and Gold.

‘During the day I don’t notice it, but as soon as it goes quiet, or I’m in bed, I can hear it,’ he says. It drives me a bit crazy sometimes.’

Martin, a judge on the BBC talent show Let It Shine, recently learned that he also has high-frequency hearing loss. Both problems are the legacy of noise damage caused by standing in front of giant stacks of amplifiers during the years when Spandau played in stadiums across the world.

The screaming of hysterical young girls who met them everywhere they went – bass guitarist Martin was the band’s heart-throb – didn’t help either.

Martin, 55, reveals that his brother Gary, who was with him in Spandau, also suffers hearing problems. ‘I went to have a test because of the tinnitus and was taken aback when the audiologis­t said that I have hearing loss,’ he says.

‘But it’s not surprising considerin­g I’ve been in the music industry since I was 17. Standing in front of a tower block of amplifiers or using in-ear monitors – which I think are worse because the sound goes right into your ears – killed the high end of my hearing. The sound on stage was incredibly loud.’

MARTIN recalls that even in his early 20s he suffered ringing in his ears after gigs. ‘I was going to bed hearing whistling, but it would go away after a while. I knew the noise wasn’t good for me, but there wasn’t much I could do about it. It’s not really appropriat­e to ask everyone to turn down the volume on stage, or to ask the audience to stop shouting so much. Eventually it doesn’t go away.’

Although he admits it occasional­ly drives him to distractio­n, he has learned to cope. ‘It has its own life – it comes and goes when it wants to. I’m not sure if it’s there all the time, or if I just notice it sometimes and not at others. You deal with it by pushing it to the back of your mind. Your brain tries to forget about it for you.’

Nick Taylor, chief audiologis­t at high street chain Specsavers, says: ‘Martin’s hearing loss is typical of the type caused by exposure to very loud noise.

‘When it comes to specific highfreque­ncy sounds, his hearing drops dramatical­ly. During the hearing test, he had trouble decipherin­g whether the high-frequency sounds he heard were, in fact, real sounds or tinnitus.’

He adds: ‘The damage happens when loud noise overexcite­s the tiny hair cells in our inner ear, so they wear out quickly. The extent depends on how loud and for how long the exposure is. As a rule, if you use headphones at a level where other people can also hear the music, it’s too loud. Do this for more than 20 minutes a day and it will damage your hearing. Over a period of five years, you will have permanent hearing damage.’

Martin, who is married to fellow pop star Shirlie, of Pepsi and Shirlie fame, says he is still able to follow conversati­ons even when in a crowded, noisy room with lots of background noise – but Nick is not convinced. ‘It’s common for people with moderate hearing loss, like Martin, to say they don’t notice they’re finding it harder to follow conversati­ons when there’s lots of background noise,’ he says.

‘It’s likely that, subconscio­usly, he is watching people more closely and relying on other communicat­ion clues, such as body language and looking at their faces. When you factor in age-related hearing loss, which happens to everyone, it

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By Hilary Freeman

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