HE ACDC lead singer Brian Johnson has made a surprising return to music despite a series of health ordeals, including hearing loss and a cancer scare
Johnson, 74, joined the legendary rock and roll band ACDC as the new lead singer in 1980 after the death of the singer Bon Scott from alcohol poisoning. That same year, the band released the song Back In Black as a tribute to the late singer which catapulted the band to fame. But over the years the band has had several hiccups due to bad health. Johnson had a cancer scare in 2009 and suffered from hearing loss 7 years later, which caused him to walk from the band; and the founder Malcolm Young died in 2017 from dementia. After these events, as well as the departure of the band’s bassist and drummer, ACDC went inactive for several years but has recently come together for the release of the album Power Up.
Despite having lost the hearing in his left ear, Johnson had no doubts about coming back to create Power Up–an album consisting of songs Malcolm Young and his little brother Angus Young had written but not produced. “I missed the boys, and the way the boys make music. So it didn't take much to get me. I was on board straight away." His return is thanks to hearing aid technology which means he can come back safely. "We've pretty much got it licked with this new equipment,” he told USA Today.
In 2016, Johnson lost the hearing in his left ear, surprisingly not because of the loud music he was playing. “I’ve got hearing loss in my left ear. I didn’t get it from music. I got it from sitting in a race car too long without earplugs. “I heard my ear drum burst because I forgot to put my plugs in under my helmet. That’s how it happened,” he told America’s Got Talent’s Howard Stern. The cancer scare. Before his hearing loss, the star had a serious scare after being diagnosed with Barrett's Syndrome–which can lead to oesophagus cancer.
Johnson, who did not have oesophageal cancer, spoke about how lucky he was that the doctors found Barrett's Syndrome early. "I was very lucky we caught it in time. A lot of people think it's heartburn but I knew there was something really hurting me so I went straight to the top doctor,” he said."I was the most scared I've ever been in my life. I didn't sleep for a week." According to the NHS, you are only “slightly more likely to get oesophageal cancer” if you have Barrett's syndrome, and it is “not common”. The health body has a few recommendations for how to prevent oesophegael cancer. They recommend trying to lose weight, cutting down on alcohol, and quitting smoking as well as letting hot drinks cool down before drinking them.