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Thread: Musicians and tinnitus

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    Default Musicians and tinnitus

    Sorry to raise this topic, since most musicians don't really like talking about this subject. But I wanted to find out if any of the rest of you are struggling with tinnitus (persistent rigning in your ears)

    It's very common amongst us musicians. I've researched it on the internet and I'm finding a long list of performers who have it (Pete Townsend , Sting, Phil Collins, Bonno, Steve Lukather, ...)

    I've never been bothered by it until the past several months since it seems to be almost constant and much louder than it used to be. It's weird because I don't listen to loud music, or play in loud bands anymore, I haven't for some time. And I only use my iPod every now and then. But I have used headphones quite a lot over the years for recording and practicing. Headphones are one of the worst things you can do for your hearing as I'm learning (I'm trying to avoid using them anymore unless I absolutely have to).

    I wanted to find out if any of the rest of you are strugging tinnitus, and if you have found any treatments for it? I've tried a few things, such as decreasing my caffine intake (that's a tough one), and changing what I eat. But it doesn't seem to help much. If I run across anything that works for me, I'll be happy to share that with the rest of you.

    Any good advice is welcome.

    For you younger guys, avoid those headphones and turn down your iPods! Invest in some noise-canceling headphones so that you can listen to your music at a lower volume in noisy places.

    If you don't you will regret it when you hit your 40's and you have this same problem that I'm having.

    -- Jim
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    Timely topic, Jim. I just had a hearing test yesterday, and I have hearing loss in the 6000 hertz range. Cause: loud music of course. The diagnosis is sensorineural hearing loss.

    The ear expert said I don't need a hearing aid, but I should be very careful and always wear ear plugs when playing with bands.

    There is not much you can do once you have it, unfortunately. Once hearing damage has occurred, there is no undoing. Key thing is to not make it worse, and I'm getting custom-made ear plugs - see bottom of this page - http://www.starkey.com/products/audio_music.jsp

    I also have some cheapo ear plugs by Hearos, and they are a lot better than nothing.
    The Law of Gravity is nonsense. No such law exists. If I think I float, and you think I float, then it happens.
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    Hi Robert,

    Yeah, my hearing test showed a notch at about 4kHz that I didn't know that I had. They told me that it was from noise damage. I'm guessing that it is just a hazard of being involved with amplified instruments.

    I don't mind the hearing loss so much, but the ringing in my ears is really hard to deal with. It's like having crickets chirping in me left ear 24 hours a day. And it gets worse if I play through an amp for any length of time.

    I found an article on the Internet, an interview with Al Dimeola about his tinnitus. He said that tinnitus is the reason that he stopped playing electric and started using doing acoustic stuff. I'd always wondered about his switching to acoustic.

    Thanks for the tip on the ear plugs.

    -- Jim
    Electrics: Hamer Newport, Fender Clapton Strat, Ibanez AF86, Line6 Variax 700
    Acoustic Guitars: Taylor 514CE, Martin J40-M
    Dobro: Regal "Black Lightning Dobro"
    Mandolin: Morgan Monroe Mandolin
    Amps: Egnater Rebel 30, Vox AD120VTX, Roland Cube 60
    http://www.soundclick.com/bands/page...?bandid=301718

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    Jim
    My left ear is toast too. I have a constant whine that never goes away. I hear the whine and some really high frequencies and lows but the midrange around the vocal spectrum is pretty weak. I miss a lot of conversation because I never know what's going on. I don't think anything can be done for it either and like Robert I'm using some Hearos as well. I can only take care of what I have left. Sorry to hear that you have it as well.

    "No Tele For you." - The Tele Nazi

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    Spudman,

    Sorry to hear that you're struggling with the same thing.

    I'm trying all sorts of things to help reduce the ringing. If I find any magic cures I will make sure to pass them along. I've heard that some herbs can help to reduce the ringing.

    I found this website that listed all of these famous people who are dealing with this. It helps to know that we're not the only ones :-)
    http://members.fortunecity.com/nrbq1/tinnitus.html

    I'm not surprised to see Eric Johnson on this list. I went to see him live several times and it was always loud as hell. I saw him once when I was in L.A. and it was so loud that we had to go to the bathroom and find some tissue to stuff into our ears so that we could enjoy the rest of the concert.

    I'm thinking that this kind of exposure takes it's toll over time. Then you hit 40-ish and all of a sudden you realize that you can't make out conversation as well as you could when you were 30-ish, etc.

    -- Jim
    Electrics: Hamer Newport, Fender Clapton Strat, Ibanez AF86, Line6 Variax 700
    Acoustic Guitars: Taylor 514CE, Martin J40-M
    Dobro: Regal "Black Lightning Dobro"
    Mandolin: Morgan Monroe Mandolin
    Amps: Egnater Rebel 30, Vox AD120VTX, Roland Cube 60
    http://www.soundclick.com/bands/page...?bandid=301718

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    It's usually not the artist's fault the concert is loud, it's those damn deaf sound men. Years of being out front has ruined their ears. The FOH guy have ruined so many gigs for me. If they would just back the fader down a notch or two the shows would have been so much more tolerable.

    "No Tele For you." - The Tele Nazi

    Ha! Tele-ish now inbound.

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    Hi Everyone,

    Just wanted to pass along and update. I've tried some things that have helped me a lot. Hopefully some of this might help others who are struggling with tinnitus.

    Over the past month I've been going to a chiropractor who also does accupuncture. After describing the symptoms to him he suggested a few different things:
    - Some jaw stretching exercises to help loosen the muscles close to the ear cannal (these muscles can have a big affect on tinnitus)
    - Accupucture in various areas around the ear and also in areas of the body that affect hearing
    - Massage on the areas at the very bottom of the rib cage on your sides, by the kidneys (where those love handles are :-) . The doctor said that this is a key area in accupuncturists beleive to be related to various functions of the body including hearing.
    - Cut down on caffine (I switched to Green Tea, that was a little hard to do)
    - Cut down on intake of hot spicey food (this can also enflame some areas in the mouth that play a role in tinnitus).

    The end result is that the ringing in my ears has dropped significantly. It no longer keeps me awake at night. It's to the point where I don't notice it much anymore unless I'm in a very quiet room.

    Overall I would say that the symptoms have decreased by about 60 to 70%.
    I hope this is helpful to anyone else who is dealing with this.

    -- Jim
    Electrics: Hamer Newport, Fender Clapton Strat, Ibanez AF86, Line6 Variax 700
    Acoustic Guitars: Taylor 514CE, Martin J40-M
    Dobro: Regal "Black Lightning Dobro"
    Mandolin: Morgan Monroe Mandolin
    Amps: Egnater Rebel 30, Vox AD120VTX, Roland Cube 60
    http://www.soundclick.com/bands/page...?bandid=301718

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    I have had some minor bouts with tinnitus in the past, but for the last two weeks I've had a persistent case of it in my right ear that seems to show no signs of going away. I've tried reducing caffeine, and have been somewhat successful, and I've been taking more niacin (which is supposed to help in some cases). It varies in intensity, and seems to sometimes get much worse after chewing for a while such as after a meal. It's extremely annoying, and playing guitar while this is going on is somewhat frustrating since everything sounds like crap right now. I haven't seen a doctor for it. I hate going to the doctor, and anything short of extreme pain (such as when I had kidney stones last year) I just try to wait out.

    Usually my tinnitus lasts only a day or two. This has been with me for about 12 days or so. I'm going to try Jim's massage suggestions, and try to continue to reduce caffeine, but in the meantime I'm going bonkers. Very, very irritating to have this last this long and be this severe. Any further suggestions, folks? I'm all ears...
    -Sean
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    FrankenFretter,

    Mine is still there although it seems to increase or decrease at different times for no apparent reason. It is a constant thing with me now.
    As I researched tinnitus online, I found an almost "who's who" list of musicians that have it really badly. Jeff Beck, Steve Lukather, Pete Townsend, Sting, Phil Collins, Bono, etc It seems to be an occupational hazard of playing live music, especially for guitar players and drummers.

    My only advice is to avoid headphones whenever possible, and try to keep your headphone volumes lower than you like, if you must use them. Also don't stand too closely to drummers. Cymbals are murder on your ears. Buy some ear plugs and bring them along to any concert or gig that you play.

    --Jim
    Electrics: Hamer Newport, Fender Clapton Strat, Ibanez AF86, Line6 Variax 700
    Acoustic Guitars: Taylor 514CE, Martin J40-M
    Dobro: Regal "Black Lightning Dobro"
    Mandolin: Morgan Monroe Mandolin
    Amps: Egnater Rebel 30, Vox AD120VTX, Roland Cube 60
    http://www.soundclick.com/bands/page...?bandid=301718

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    I thought acupuncture was deemed purely placebo effect hoax years ago...but to the point: I also have minor hearing damage. Mostly it means I have several but shallow dips in the midrange area. I have pretty much perfect hearing still when the volume is moderate, and there is no background noise.

    BUT whenever there is background noise or chatter, be it a video projector fan blowing in the classroom, or at worst people's chatter and background music in a bar, it becomes hard of impossible for me to decipher what I hear. For years now, in noisy bars, I've gone by with lip reading and mostly just smiling and nodding my head. Seems to work well in most conversations ;-)

    I know I should wear ear protection, and I have custom made/molded silicon ones as well, but I tend to only use one in one ear at a time. I just hate it how they still change the sound, no matter how little, it's still too much.

    I just figure, well, if it goes, it goes then, and I'll just have to stop making music. The world won't be missing much :-)
    Dee

    "When life's a biatch, be a horny dog"

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    Quote Originally Posted by deeaa View Post
    The world won't be missing much :-)
    Wrong! I've listened to a couple of albums you gave me, and it's very much good stuff. But that's another topic...

    I just read this thread for the first time, and it's been enlightening. I don't think I have tinnitus (yet), and I'm not sure about hearing loss, but my hearing was never that great. My vision used to be out-of-this-world good, and I've noticed that going downhill as I age, but so far there's nothing severe with hearing loss or tinnitus.

    However, the stuff about drummers/cymbals, headphones, and everything else has been surprising, to say the least. It has brought up a couple of questions:
    1. I've used the little squishy earplugs and some of the big earmuff-type hearing protection for awhile (both free from work), but I remember my dad having some custom-molded earplugs that looked like a chunk of rubber that was the shape of his ear canal. Where can you get hearing protection like that? Is that what you were talking about, Robert? The link you had in your post seems to be broken at this point.
    2. Since headphones are not the best for you, would something like in-ear monitors be more damaging than floor monitors? At first I would think that a silent stage would be a good thing, but if you're just blasting your ears with headphones/in-ears, I'm not so sure.
    3. With the whole drummer thing, would an electronic kit help? I'm assuming yes, since you can always turn it down, but I'm curious whether that gets mentioned in anything any of you have read.
    4. On the earplug topic, is there anything that linearly reduces noise levels, so that you don't compromise the sounds you're hearing? I'm guessing no, but you guys might know if there is something out there.
    5. Jim, you mentioned noise-canceling headphones -- does anyone have any recommendations for those?
    6. I'll read up on this, but is it just the over-the-ear headphones that are harmful, or is it any type of personal speaker (e.g. earbuds, headphones, in-ears, etc.)?
    Quote Originally Posted by Spudman
    Does anyone read the original post?
    Guitars: Gibson LP Studio, MIA Fender Precision, Carvin C350
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    I don't play at high volumes, since I only play at home and I do have neighbors (and a family). I don't play through headphones often, but when I do, I usually keep the volume reasonable. As for my iPod, I almost never listen to it through headphones; it's mostly for the car or occasionally through the home stereo. I think my damage is all from when I was younger. Many loud concerts, band practice, and standing in front of eight Celestions at higher volumes than I should have. When we're young, we think we're invincible and that nothing we're doing at the time will affect us when we're older. Turns out that's not quite true.
    -Sean
    Guitars: Lots.
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    Pedals: Many, although I go straight from guitar to amp more often lately.

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    1. no idea, got mine at a shooting range from a traveling salesman
    2. potentially yes, but the line between the two must be drawn using common sense
    3. Yes they help immensely in getting the levels sensible, particularly cymbals are what really kills the ears.
    4. All sound protection alters the sound you hear, but personally molded are probably the best in that respect.
    5. The only proper noise cancellation phones I know are AKG but no idea otherwise. They are great for like walkman type use but of little use in music making.
    6. I understand the worst ones are the tight in-ear buds but any speaker right at your ear is potentially hazardous.

    Remember, it's all about prolonged exposure. You can take incredible volume levels for a short time with no i effects but every minute you are exposed progressively increases damage possibility.

    You can put your ear to a blazing 100w cab to hear which speaker sounds the best but keep good protection on for the rest of the day.
    Dee

    "When life's a biatch, be a horny dog"

    Amps: Marshall JVM 410H w/ Plexi Cap mod, Choke Mod & Negative Feedback Removal mod, 4x12", Behringer GMX110, Amplitube 3/StealthPedal

    Half a dozen custom built/bastardized guitars all with EMG's, mostly 85's, Ibanez Artwood acoustic & Yamaha SGR bass, Epiphone Prophecy SG, Vox Wah, Pitchblack tuner plus assorted pedals, rack gear etc. for home studio use.

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    Quote Originally Posted by deeaa View Post
    1. no idea, got mine at a shooting range from a traveling salesman
    2. potentially yes, but the line between the two must be drawn using common sense
    3. Yes they help immensely in getting the levels sensible, particularly cymbals are what really kills the ears.
    4. All sound protection alters the sound you hear, but personally molded are probably the best in that respect.
    5. The only proper noise cancellation phones I know are AKG but no idea otherwise. They are great for like walkman type use but of little use in music making.
    6. I understand the worst ones are the tight in-ear buds but any speaker right at your ear is potentially hazardous.

    Remember, it's all about prolonged exposure. You can take incredible volume levels for a short time with no i effects but every minute you are exposed progressively increases damage possibility.

    You can put your ear to a blazing 100w cab to hear which speaker sounds the best but keep good protection on for the rest of the day.
    Thanks -- I wasn't sure anyone was going to respond to my questions.
    Quote Originally Posted by Spudman
    Does anyone read the original post?
    Guitars: Gibson LP Studio, MIA Fender Precision, Carvin C350
    Amps: Genz Benz Shuttle 6.0 + Avatar B212 / Genzler 12-3, Acoustic B20
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    Quote Originally Posted by Eric View Post
    Thanks -- I wasn't sure anyone was going to respond to my questions.
    Maybe they couldn't hear you.

    See what I did there?

    "I happen to have perfect situational awareness, Lana. Which cannot be taught, by the way. Like a poet's ... mind for ... to make the perfect words." - Sterling Archer

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    Quote Originally Posted by R_of_G View Post
    Maybe they couldn't hear you.

    See what I did there?

    Huh?? <-- Yes, that's a joke!
    Quote Originally Posted by Spudman
    Does anyone read the original post?
    Guitars: Gibson LP Studio, MIA Fender Precision, Carvin C350
    Amps: Genz Benz Shuttle 6.0 + Avatar B212 / Genzler 12-3, Acoustic B20
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    Hi Eric,

    For noise cancelling headphones, I use the Bose ones, I think they're called "Quiet Comfort".

    In terms of the in-ear monitors, I've heard from other people that they work well. My only caution is that you have to rely on the sound guy to give you the right mix in your ears and then what if they get too loud in the middle of a song or something. You can't exactly back away from them.

    I have some earplugs that claim to be linear noise reduction type. They are made by a company called Etymotic Research: http://www.etymotic.com/

    Most of my ear damage probably came from my younger years when I went to a lot of loud concerts, and jams/band rehearsals. The weird thing about this stuff is that you won't begin to notice your hearing damage until you get older and your overall hearing quality goes down slightly as you age.
    Take care of those ears!

    --Jim
    Electrics: Hamer Newport, Fender Clapton Strat, Ibanez AF86, Line6 Variax 700
    Acoustic Guitars: Taylor 514CE, Martin J40-M
    Dobro: Regal "Black Lightning Dobro"
    Mandolin: Morgan Monroe Mandolin
    Amps: Egnater Rebel 30, Vox AD120VTX, Roland Cube 60
    http://www.soundclick.com/bands/page...?bandid=301718

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    Quote Originally Posted by Eric View Post
    Huh?? <-- Yes, that's a joke!
    Well played. [I "see" what you did there]
    "I happen to have perfect situational awareness, Lana. Which cannot be taught, by the way. Like a poet's ... mind for ... to make the perfect words." - Sterling Archer

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    Important but unsettling topic. I know I've done damage to my ears over my 39 years and would self-diagnose a low-grade case of tinnitus in myself. I've recently taken to using those Etymotic 'musician's' earplugs at jams. None of the guys I play with wear any ear protection. While these plugs are better than normal foam earplugs, unfortunately, I do find that they take a lot of top end off -- not a good thing when I want to hear my guitar amp. But it isn't too bad. I guess I never thought too much about how I abuse my ears through the use of earbuds and headphones. Thanks for pointing my attention to this... I will be more mindful.
    I wonder if it is worth investing in some custom earplugs.

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