
KIXĀ drummerĀ Jimmy “Chocolate” ChalfantĀ is “doing great” after collapsing onstage last month and will resume playing shows with the band in February.
The incident occurred on November 18 at the first show of what was scheduled to beĀ KIX‘s two-night stand at the Tally Ho Theater in Leesburg, Virginia with openersĀ AMERICAN JETSET.
On Thursday (December 1),KIXĀ bassistĀ Mark SchenkerĀ took to the band’sĀ FacebookĀ page to provide the following update onĀ Chalfant‘s condition: “We all have spoken toĀ JimmyĀ many times since that day and he left the hospital on Weds the day before Thanksgiving. He is doing well, and expects to be back on stage in February. He has a defibrillator/pacemaker installed under the skin in his chest and he’s still pretty sore from that surgery. Other than that he’s feeling great and in good spirits. We are all in regular contact with him.
“JimmyĀ also wanted to share the details of what happened with you and since I was there, we figured it best to tell it from my perspective.
We had just finishedĀ ‘Cold Blood’Ā and were about to go into the last song of the night which isĀ ‘Fuse’.Ā SteveĀ [Whiteman, vocals] was doing his ‘are you ready’ speil to the crowd and I turned around to start the intro andĀ JimmyĀ was slumped over his toms with his head down. I thought he was fixing his kick drum pedal. He was not moving andĀ Sam StilwellĀ (drum tech) was moving towards him to assist with what we all thought was a kick drum pedal issue. I motioned toĀ SamĀ and said ‘poke him, poke him’Ā SamĀ did so and looked back at me and said ‘not good, not good’. SomehowĀ Brandon DullĀ (guitar tech) appeared back behind the drum riser as well and I said ‘let’s get him off there now and over here’ where there was space behindĀ Brian‘s amp to figure out what was going on.Ā SamĀ andĀ BrandonĀ carriedĀ JimmyĀ off the riser and laid him down. I checked his neck for a pulse and put my ear to his mouth and nose to see if he was breathing. I looked up atĀ BrandonĀ who was holding his wrist checking for a pulse and with a serious look on his face he said ‘I got nothing’ I replied the same. One of us (don’t recall who) flipped open his eyelid and his pupil had no response to the bright stage lights. He was definitely completely unresponsive. NeitherĀ BrandonĀ nor I said a word, I just tilted his head back, checked his airway and started giving him rescue breaths andĀ BrandonĀ started chest compressions. At some point,Ā SteveĀ calledĀ Jimmy‘s wifeĀ CathyĀ from the stage andĀ BobĀ had shouted to his guitar techĀ Greg GellesĀ to call 911. The crew held up a drapery so the crowd couldn’t see us working onĀ Jimmy.Ā CathyĀ had run to her neighbors for a ride and was en route with Steve keeping her updated. WhileĀ BrandonĀ was compressing I kept lightly slappingĀ Jimmy‘s face saying his name desperately looking for some sign of life.Ā BrandonĀ and I continued to give him some pretty intense CPR until the medics arrived, at one point I heardĀ Jimmy‘s sternum (or maybe a rib or two) crack whileĀ BrandonĀ was doing compressions which is a good thing. I don’t know how many CPR cycles we gave him but it seemed like an eternity. I must admit that after a few minutes in, I thought ‘shit this isn’t working, he should be responding, we’re losing him’. I was scared shitless that our dear friend was going to stay dead right in our hands. Again, he had no pulse and no breathing when we got him to the side stage, white as a ghost with no color in his lips and no response in his eyes. I started another pair of rescue breaths and suddenly I could feel his lungs pushing back on my breaths which means he was starting to breathe on his own. Then he opened his eyes and started to groan but was still unconscious.Ā BrandonĀ got an inconsistent pulse on his wrist and that was what I got from his neck as well. So we kept administering CPR until the medics arrived. Maybe 6-7 minutes had elapsed since he collapsed on his drums. By the time the medics arrived we had revived him somewhat and they took over, hooked up a vitals monitor, put him on an oxygen squeeze bag to assist his breathing and started an IV. I could see on the monitor that his heartbeat was there and strong, though irregular, with good blood pressure and he was still groaning with his eyes open. They decided to hook up an AED and shock him. Same weird looking heartbeat on the monitor. They shocked him again and this time his heartbeat was strong and perfectly regular, still with good blood pressure and good O2 level in his blood. He was stabilized! They put him on a stretcher and took him to a hospital minutes away from the club, INOVA Lansdowne here in Virginia.
“That gig at Tally Ho Theater was supposed to be a two nighter so the crew started packing up the gear. I went up to the dressing room with tears rolling down my face trying to go over everything in my head, did we do everything right? Did we do everything in the right order? Did we forget something crucial? We were all speechless and it was quite traumatic. It was definitely the most terrifying five minutes of my life!
“One of the guys who works at the venue is a retired firefighter and one of the medics texted him and let him know that JimmyĀ was awake, talking, sitting up in bed and moving on his own in the hospital. What a collective sigh of tremendous relief we shared. We all went and saw him in the hospital after and as the medic said, he was fully aware, moving around and laughing a little with his wifeĀ CathyĀ by his side.
“JimmyĀ doesn’t remember anything from the end ofĀ ‘Cold Blood’Ā to when he awoke in the hospital. Luckily,Ā BrandonĀ is a Nationally and MD State Certified Paramedic and I’m a Master Scuba Diver Trainer, teaching Rescue Diver classes as well as a certified Emergency First Responder Instructor teaching first aid and CPR/AED. We made a good team and were able to save our friend.
“I don’t want to think about what would have happened if we weren’t there or ifĀ JimmyĀ was just driving around going about his daily life and cardiac arrest happened. If there is ever a right time and place for such a thing, this was it.
“Good news is it looks like JimmyĀ is doing great. The doctors found that the end of a stent that was put in last year had partially collapsed causing his cardiac event. They put a new one in and fixed him right up. He will be perfectly fine and we plan to resume playing shows in February afterĀ JimmyĀ goes through cardiac rehab. The only bad news is we have to reschedule the four remaining shows we had this year. Please, if you have tickets, reach out to the venues, check theirĀ FacebookĀ and web sites. Our Agent is already rescheduling those gigs and announcements from the venues are pending.
“JimmyĀ would like to thank all of our peers and especially the fans for your concern, and the massive outpouring of genuine love and support. It has been particularly moving for all of us to read your positive comments and messages.
“So, there you have it! That’s what happened! He’s ok! We’ll see you soon!”
A couple of KIXĀ fans who attended the November 18 gig shared videos onĀ Facebook, with one person writing: “Please keepĀ JimmyĀ fromĀ KIXĀ in your thoughts. He just collapsed at theĀ KIXĀ show encore at the Talley Ho. No pulse and lots of CPR etc. Amazing show tonight. I hope it wasn’t his last.” A second fan added: “I was just watchingĀ KIXĀ live at Tally-Ho in Leesburg, VA. The drummerĀ Jimmy ChalfantĀ collapsed on stage just before the start of the last song. Lights came on, 911 was called and the show was over. Prayers forĀ Jimmy.”
Back in September 2021,Ā ChalfantĀ suffered a heart attack at his home and was rushed to the hospital. He had immediate surgery to insert two stents in his heart then another surgery the next day for another stent.
KIXĀ was founded in 1977 and released its first, self-titled album onĀ Atlantic RecordsĀ more than 40 years ago. Their breakthrough came with 1988’sĀ “Blow My Fuse”, which sold nearly a million copies, thanks toĀ “Don’t Close Your Eyes”. The band continued to ride the hard-rock wave until 1995, whenĀ KIXĀ took a hiatus. Nearly 10 years later,Ā KIXĀ reunited and started touring regionally. A 2008 performance at theĀ RocklahomaĀ festival led to more gigs and the release of a live DVD/CD calledĀ “Live In Baltimore”Ā in 2012. In 2014,Ā KIXĀ released its seventh full-length album,Ā “Rock Your Face Off”, the band’s first studio effort since 1995’sĀ “Show Business”.
Source:Ā www.blabbermouth.net
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