Rock musician Jesse Malin reportedly paralysed from the waist down after spinal stroke


By AGENCY

Jesse Malin suffered a rare spinal stroke earlier this year. Photo: TNS

Rock musician Jesse Malin, whose hardcore band was famously banned from Saturday Night Live in 1981, suffered a rare spinal stroke earlier this year, causing him to be paralysed from the waist down, according to a report.

While out to dinner with friends on May 4 at an Italian restaurant in Manhattan's East Village, Malin suddenly collapsed to the floor, according to Rolling Stone.

The group was commemorating the one-year anniversary of the death of Malin's best friend and former D Generation bandmate Howie Pyro.

Malin was hospitalised at Mount Sinai Hospital where he learned that he suffered a spinal cord infarction – a rare disorder when the main arteries supplying the spine with blood close off – affecting the use of his legs.

After two weeks of undergoing spinal tests at Mount Sinai, he was transferred to a neurological care centre at NYU Langone Hospital where he continues to recover, according to a fundraiser set up in his name, adding that the condition is inoperable.

"This is the hardest six weeks that I've ever had," he told Rolling Stone in a phone call from the rehab center.

Malin announced his diagnosis with a screenshot of the Rolling Stone story onto his Instagram account Wednesday morning.

"I'm told that they don't really understand it, and they're not sure of the chances," he continued.

"The reports from the doctors have been tough, and there's moments in the day where you want to cry, and where you're scared. But I keep saying to myself that I can make this happen. I can recover my body."

Malin is known for his energetic performances, during which he often jumps down from the stage to perform among the audience. Among the first of such raucous performances came when he was a teenager.

As a member of the hardcore rock band Heart Attack in 1981, he performed on SNL after an invite from the late comedian John Belushi.

The performance prompted a mosh pit among the audience, which led to the crowd breaking production equipment and someone throwing a pumpkin at a show producer. The band was later banned from performing at the sketch comedy show.

Malin became the lead vocalist for punk rock band D Generation throughout the 1990s.

After going solo in 1999, Malin started recording and performing folk-rock, which the LA Times once described as "somewhere between Paul Westerberg and early Bruce Springsteen."

His most recent success has come as a songwriter, co-writing with Lucinda Williams a sorrowful ballad to a New York of the past, New York Comeback, which charted at No. 1 on the Americana Music Association singles chart.

In his interview with Rolling Stone, Malin called his rehabilitation "very humbling," though he remained hopeful that he would eventually regain use of his legs.

"Even though I really believe it's a temporary state, I'm not going to walk out of here tomorrow with a leather jacket and a cane and go hang out at the bar," he said. "It's going to take a lot of work and a lot of being in a wheelchair." – Los Angeles Times/Tribune News Service

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Entertainment

Paul McCartney becomes Britain's first billionaire musician
Amber Chia breaks record for highest altitude fashion runway in Malaysia
HK actor Donnie Yen to star in 'John Wick' movie spin-off based on his assassin character Caine
Meryl Streep on hippos, sex scenes and almost losing her Oscar
Kevin Costner's ex-wife flaunts PDA with his former friend and neighbour
Sophie Turner breaks silence on claims she was a bad mum amid Jonas split
Anya Taylor-Joy pulls off insane driving stunts in 'Furiosa' – all without a driver's licence
David Copperfield denies 16 women's 'entirely implausible' sexual misconduct allegations
Singer Zayn Malik reveals using Tinder but got accused of catfishing
Malaysian actress Sandra Lim talks about on-screen kiss with HK star Raymond Lam

Others Also Read