http://www.classicrockrevisited.com/Int ... ramm05.htmJeb: When you came back from surgery there were obviously some pretty severe vocal problems with you.
Lou: Sure there were.
Jeb: Fans whisper a lot and everyone seems afraid to talk to you about it. Hell, you have ears. You could hear what was going on. Let’s face it, Lou – along with Paul Rodgers, Steve Walsh and Brad Delp, you were the Voice of the 70’s. Basically, what has it taken to get your voice back to where you are comfortable with it?
Lou: I had to take my medication – I was on about 8-9 pills during the day and in the evening I had to give myself two shots of different medication. I had to do that seven days a week. A lot of the medication was to work against pain. I was taking a lot of painkillers and I was taking a lot of steroids. It was a pile of stuff that would leave me in a half stupor. Because of the steroids, everything I touched turned to ten pounds. It was like everything I ate just added poundage to me, left right and center. I would look in the mirror and not recognize myself. My diaphragm was actually not opening to its full extend due to all the weight. I would find myself in the middle of a tough sounding phrase and be out of breath. There were times that I couldn’t keep up with the beat because I was out of breath.
The first year after the operation – within four months – I was on the road. The operation took a whole day and the recovery time was about four weeks. This took place in March. By July, I was on the road. It was really insane. Apparently, the Foreigner management had shows booked and they meant to honor them so they threw me up there. I knew there was a lot of laughter and a lot of quizzical looks – I was awake enough to see that. People were going, “What’s wrong with Lou?” I knew that I didn’t belong up there but I really couldn’t do anything about it.
Jeb: If you don’t honor the contract then you get sued.
Lou: Right.
Jeb: You have lost some weight now. Have you been doing vocal training?
Lou: I definitely did some vocal training to form some good habits. I go to the gym five days a week and I have a personal trainer. I am on a strict diet, which is kind of hard to keep up with on the road, but I stick to it as well as I can. The weight is a real struggle to take off. Part of the medication that heals me is what puts on the weight. I am taking massive amounts of steroids to heal.
Jeb: You still take them to this day?
Lou: Yes, I thought it would be over but it isn’t. It has been eight years and I am still taking steroids. When I got out of the hospital my face looked like a big red beach ball. There was no definition. My skull was round. I didn’t even recognize myself.
Jeb: This has been a very hard fought battle for you.
Lou: It has been a hard fought battle just to be here. The operation was in March and I got married in August. Nobody sees those wedding pictures. They just really look weird. Two years later I was divorced. What happened to ‘in sickness and in heath’?