Terry Hall died from pancreatic cancer which spread to his liver

The Specials star Terry Hall died after secret battle with pancreatic cancer which spread to his liver as bandmate Horace Panter reveals the Ska legend, 63, ‘said goodbye to his sisters and friends’ shortly before he passed away

  • Terry Hall had pancreatic cancer which spread to his liver before he got diabetes
  • His bandmate Horace Panter revealed he had wanted to keep diagnosis secret
  • He said in a Facebook post that Hall received chemotherapy but it did not work 

The Specials frontman Terry Hall said goodbye to his sisters and bandmates over the phone just hours before losing his battle with pancreatic cancer at the weekend, it has emerged. 

The father-of-two was receiving chemotherapy after the disease spread to his liver and he developed diabetes, however the treatment failed and he died on Sunday at the age of 63. 

His bandmate Horace Panter revealed in a Facebook post how Hall had wanted to keep his diagnosis private while the group were preparing to record a new reggae album in Los Angeles. 

But the singer, who pioneered the British ska scene, became seriously ill just weeks before they were due to fly to the US.

The Specials frontman Terry Hall (pictured) said goodbye to his sisters and bandmates over the phone just moments before losing his battle with pancreatic cancer at the weekend, it has emerged

The Specials bandmate Horace Panter revealed in a Facebook post how he had wanted to keep his diagnosis private while the group were preparing to record a new reggae album in Los Angeles (Pictured left to right: Bandmates Terry Hall, Lynval Golding and Horace Panter) 

Horace revealed: ‘Terry had the framework for 8 tunes. Confidence was high. We were set to meet up with Nikolaj [Larsen, Specials keyboardist] and make magic. 

‘This was in September. Terry e-mails everyone and says he’s in bed with a stomach bug and can’t do the first week of pre-production sessions. No big deal, we can knock everything back a week. We’re not due to fly out until November 4th.’

He continued: ‘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. 

How The Specials frontman Terry Hall’s childhood was scarred by trauma after he was abducted by ‘paedophile ring’ in France aged 12 before he retold abuse in song lyrics

Hall never revealed if he alerted his family, police or any other authorities about his ordeal and he did not reveal the teacher’s identity. Above: Hall performing with The Specials in 1979

‘Terry is emphatic that no-one be told about this. If anyone asks, he’s managing his diabetes.’

Horace had hoped that if the chemotherapy did its job, the band would be able to get into the studio by March next year.

He said: ‘The chemo treatment starts favourably but it seems that it would be March 2023 at the earliest before we’d be in any position to work. He is in and out of hospital to stabilise the diabetes issue and also to manage pain. It then goes quiet.’

The band’s manager Steve Blackwell contacted Horace and said he feared Terry was ‘slipping away’ on December 15, and he died a few days later on December 18.

Horace added: ‘He calls me on his return journey and says things are not looking promising. Terry is dying.

‘The next day he is put on morphine and is more-or-less unconscious for most of the time. I thought it would be best for me to go and visit but Lindy, his wife, advises against it.

‘She has held her phone to Terry’s ear so that his sisters and Lynval can say their goodbyes. She suggests I do the same. So, I did. It was tough. Terry died around half past 5 the next evening, Sunday 18th December. The world has lost a unique voice and I have lost a good friend.’

It comes after tributes have flooded in for the music legend, who rose to fame with mega hits like Ghost Town, Gangsters and Too Much Too Young. 

Announcing the father of two’s death on Twitter, the band said: ‘It is with great sadness that we announce the passing, following a brief illness, of Terry, our beautiful friend, brother and one of the most brilliant singers, songwriters and lyricists this country has ever produced.

‘Terry was a wonderful husband and father and one of the kindest, funniest, and most genuine of souls. His music and his performances encapsulated the very essence of life… the joy, the pain, the humour, the fight for justice, but mostly the love.’ 

Meanwhile, one fan tweeted: ‘Definitely Too Much Too Young. Night Terry Hall. What a legend.’

Terry Hall, lead singer of The Specials, has died at the age of 63, the band has announced

Hall seen performing for the last time on June 28, 2022 at Paradiso in Amsterdam

The Specials pictured in 1980 during a trip to New York 

‘Too Much Too Young’: Tributes to The Specials singer Terry Hall who died, aged 63, from a ‘brief illness’ after pioneering British ska scene and rising to fame with mega-hits like Ghost Town and Gangsters

 

 

The post went on to say: ‘He will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him and leaves behind the gift of his remarkable music and profound humanity. Terry often left the stage at the end of The Specials’ life-affirming shows with three words… ”Love Love Love”. We would ask that everyone respect the family’s privacy at this very sad time.’

Bandmate Neville Staple led the tributes to the singer, tweeting: ‘This has hit me hard. We knew Terry had been unwell but didn’t realise how serious until recently. We had only just confirmed some 2023 joint music agreements together.

‘In the music world, people have many ups and downs, but I will hang onto the great memories of Terry and I, making history fronting The Specials and Fun Boy Three together. Rest easy Terry Hall.’

Culture Club frontman Boy George called it a ‘sad day’, tweeting: ‘Very sad to hear about Terry Hall! Absolutely loved him as an artist.’

Singer-songwriter Elvis Costello offered his condolences, tweeting: ‘Sad to receive the news of Terry Hall’s passing last night from Lynval Golding.

‘Terry’s voice was the perfect instrument for the true and necessary songs on ‘The Specials’. That honesty is heard in so many of his songs in joy and sorrow. My condolences to his family and friends.’   

Born in Coventry in 1959, Hall was shaped by a horrific experience of childhood sexual abuse when he was abducted by a paedophile ring on a trip to France aged 12. 

Hall sang about the harrowing ordeal with the song Well Fancy That – performed as part of his second band Fun Boy Three – and told interviewers how it left him suffering from bouts of depression and addiction problems. 

The band in 2010, pictured left to right: Terry Hall, Neville Staple, Roddy Byers, John Bradbury, Lynval Golding and Nik Torp

The Specials performing at the Hope and Anchor, London 1980 (pictured are Staple and Hall)

The singer-songwriter rose to fame as part of the band, who were pioneers of the ska scene in the UK

Hall is survived by his wife, the director Lindy Heymann. They had one son, while Hall has two older sons with his ex-wife, Jeanette Hall

A HISTORY OF SKA: FROM 1950s JAMAICA TO 1980s BRITAIN

Ska is a combined musical element of Caribbean mento and calypso with a bit of American jazz and also rhythm and blues. 

It separates itself from other musical genres due to its walking bass line accented with rhythms on the upbeat. In the early 1960s, ska was the dominant music genre of Jamaica and was popular with the other communities as well, including in Britain.

Ska music was made for dancing. It stands out because the music is upbeat, quick and exciting. 

Musically, it can be characterized with a drumbeat on the 2nd and 4th beats (in 4/4 time) and with the guitar hitting the 2nd, 3rd and 4th beats. 

Traditional ska bands generally featured bass, drums, guitars, keyboards, horns with sax, trombone and trumpet being most common.

Music historians typically divide the history of Ska into three periods: The original Jamaican scene of the 1960s (First Wave); the English 2-tone ska revival of the late 1970s (Second Wave); and the third wave ska movement, which started in the 1980s and rose to popularity in the US in the 1990s. 

Without a doubt Ska has set a musical standard for genres that follow it such as reggae and rocksteady.

Source: Jamaicansmusic.com

The Specials were formed in Hall’s home city of Coventry in 1977, by Jerry Dammers, Lynval Golding and Horace Panter – with Hall, Neville Staple, Roddy Byers and John Bradbury joining in the following months.

The band were originally called The Automatics, before changing their name to The Coventry Automatics, The Specials AKA The Automatics and finally, in 1978, settling on The Specials.

They made a name for themselves their ska and rocksteady style, and for providing a musical backdrop to economic recession, urban decay and societal fracture in the early 1980s.

The reggae punk band’s hits included Ghost Town, which spent three weeks at number one and ten weeks in the UK Top 40. Hall also released two studio albums and has collaborated with the likes Bananarama, Gorillaz and Lily Allen.

The band split in 1981, after which Hall, Golding and Staple went on to form Fun Boy Three, while Dammers and Bradbury released an album under the moniker The Special AKA, which spawned the hit single Free Nelson Mandela in 1984.

Fun Boy Three achieved four UK top ten singles during their time together, until Hall left the band in 1983 to form The Colourfield with ex-Swinging Cats members Toby Lyons and Karl Shale.

After undertaking a variety of solo and collaborative projects – Hall worked with the likes of Lily Allen – it was announced in 2008 that The Specials would be reforming for a number of tour dates and potential new music.

In September that year, Hall and five members of the band performed at Bestival music festival under the name Very ‘Special’ Guests.

In 2009 he reflected on the performance, saying: ‘Bestival was a trial run. We did an unannounced slot so we could just could turn up, nameless. It was perfect.’

The Specials embarked on a 2009 tour to celebrate their 30th anniversary and in 2018 supported The Rolling Stones during a concert at Coventry’s Ricoh Arena.           

People from across the music world paid tribute to Hall as news of his passing was revealed

‘At 12 I got abducted by a paedophile ring’ 

Terry Hall described being abducted by a paedophile ring when he was 12 in France as a ‘real eye-opener’ while speaking to Richard Herring on his podcast in 2019.

The singer said he lived with depression as a result and dropped out of school at 14.

‘I was sort of drugged up then on Valium for about a year and I didn’t go to school,’ he added.

He then spent time working odd jobs like bricklaying before joining a punk band called Squad.

He said the traumatic event in his childhood had affected him his whole life.

The abduction was mentioned in Fun Boy Three’s song Well Fancy That –  which detailed how the abuse was at the hands of a teacher.

The lyrics included, ‘You took me to France on the promise of teaching me French’.

He said in 2019: ‘It’s unfortunate it happened to me, but you can’t just let it destroy your life, it’s not good.’

In February 2019, The Specials released Encore, their first album of new material in 37 years.

Upon release, the album went straight to number one on the Official UK Album Chart, marking their first number one album, and the first time they had topped the charts since their classic track Ghost Town in 1981 and since their single Too Much Too Young became a number one in 1980.

The album’s lead single, the politically-themed Vote For Me, was considered by some fans as a follow-on from Ghost Town, which was hailed as a piece of popular social commentary having been released during the riots across England in 1981.

Hall told The Big Issue magazine in 2019: ‘I find myself in awe of the mess, nightly listening to politicians giving their opinion and thinking, I don’t necessarily trust any of you, really.

‘It is pretty sad. I grew up aligned to a party, the Labour Party, quite strongly. Until Tony Blair made Noel Gallagher prime minister I knew exactly where I stood.’

Figures from across the music world have paid tribute to Hall. 

Jane Wiedlin, guitarist and co-founder of The Go-Go’s, who co-wrote the band’s breakout hit Our Lips Are Sealed with Hall, joined Staple in mourning his death.

She wrote on Twitter: ‘Gutted to hear of the passing of #terryhall. He was a lovely, sensitive, talented and unique person.

‘Our extremely brief romance resulted in the song Our Lips Are Sealed, which will forever tie us together in music history. Terrible news to hear this.’

Wiedlin’s bandmate and Heaven Is A Place On Earth singer Belinda Carlisle said The Go-Go’s and Hall were ‘forever bound in music history’. 

The band made a name with their ska and rocksteady style, and for providing a musical backdrop to economic recession, urban decay and societal fracture in the early 1980s

The band were originally called The Automatics, before changing their name to The Coventry Automatics, The Specials AKA The Automatics and finally, in 1978, settling on The Specials

Hall (middle) performing with Staple (left) and Golding (right) as part of The Fun Boy Three 

Punk and folk singer Frank Turner wrote on Twitter that The Specials were one of the ‘most important’ figures of his childhood.

‘God damnit. Just heard the news about Terry Hall. What an absolute sadness,’ he said.

‘The Specials were one of the most important bands for me as a kid. Taught me many things I needed to know. Gutted. RIP.’

Folk singer Billy Bragg paid tribute to Hall’s cultural impact on Britain in the 1970s.

He tweeted: ‘The Specials were a celebration of how British culture was envigorated [sic] by Caribbean immigration but the onstage demenour [sic] of their lead singer was a reminder that they were in the serious business of challenging our perception of who we were in the late 1970s. RIP Terry Hall.’  

Lightning Seeds frontman Ian Broudie kept his tribute short, posting an emoji of a broken heart alongside a picture of himself with Hall. 

Hall was was originally spotted by The Specials’ Jerry Dammers, who recruited him as a frontman

Comedian David Baddiel followed a similar vein, writing on Twitter: ‘Terry Hall was great. That’s the tweet.’

Radio DJ Jo Whiley tweeted: ‘Horrid news. Have always been a fan. So many songs of Terry Hall that I’ve loved throughout my life. Specials. Fun Boy Three. Colourfield’.

Fellow West Midland’s band UB40 tweeted: ‘We are very sad to hear of the passing of Terry Hall the lead singer of The Specials. Another one gone too soon! RIP Terry’.

Matt Goss added: ‘I’m in shock that one of my favourite singer songwriters, Terry Hall has passed away. The Specials represent my youth, they represent everything about my teenage years, they were THE BAND that got us out of our homes and into the school discos & clubs!’

Dexys Midnight Runners added: ‘Very sorry and shocked, to hear the sad news about the lovely, and brilliant Terry Hall. Rest in peace

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