Terry Hall diagnosed with pancreatic cancer prior to death – Specials bassist
Horace Panter said the band had been due to record a new reggae album in Los Angeles in November this year.
Terry Hall was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer shortly before his death, The Specials singer’s bandmate has said.
Bassist Horace Panter said Hall had been “emphatic” that his condition should be kept a secret after being diagnosed.
In a lengthy and emotional Facebook post, Panter said the band had been due to record a new album in Los Angeles in November this year, which had previously been put on hold due to the pandemic, when Hall fell ill.
The pair were part of The Specials’ first consistent line-up, and rose to fame together as part of the pioneering ska group, with number one hits including Too Much Too Young and Ghost Town.
Hall died aged 63 on Sunday.
He said that in September, Hall had emailed to say he was “in bed with a stomach bug”, but then did not improve in the following weeks.
“Sunday October 2nd and I get a phone call from Manager Steve. And everything turns to shit,” he wrote on Facebook.
“Terry’s illness is a lot worse than we thought. He has been diagnosed with cancer of the pancreas which has spread to his liver. This is serious. Like life-threatening serious.
“He has developed diabetes due to his pancreas being attacked. This has to be treated first, then it’s a regime of chemotherapy.
“There is nothing anyone can do. Everything is put on hold.”
The bassist went on to describe a decline in Hall’s condition in recent weeks, and that on December 17 he and Hall’s sisters rang him to say their goodbyes.
“It was tough,” he wrote.
“Terry died around half past 5 the next evening, Sunday 18th December.”
Following news of Hall’s death his musical contemporaries mourned the “terrible loss” of The Specials’ lead singer, describing him as “an inspiration and a lovely fella”.
The Specials were formed in Hall’s home city of Coventry in 1977, becoming the multiracial flagship of the 2 Tone movement, with songs on racism, unemployment and injustice demonstrating a very clear political stance.
They went on provide a musical backdrop to economic recession, urban decay and societal fracture in the early 1980s.
The band originally consisted of Jerry Dammers, Lynval Golding and Horace Panter – with Hall, Neville Staple, Roddy Byers and John Bradbury joining a year later.