THE DAY WARREN ZEVON DIED
DAVE LIFTONSeptember 7, 2015
The rock world lost one of its most beloved cult heroes on Sept. 7, 2003, when Warren Zevon died after a year-long bout with lung cancer. He was 56.
Zevon had been feeling the symptoms -- including dizziness and shortness of breath -- leading up to his stint at the Edmonton Folk Music Festival in August 2002. Upon returning home, Zevon, who had long had a fear of doctors, had no choice but to go for a check-up. The diagnosis was inoperable mesothelioma, a form of cancer that develops as a result of exposure to asbestos.
With his longtime friend and collaborator Jorge Calderon, Zevon went to work on what he knew would be his final musical statement, The Wind. Old friends such as Bruce Springsteen, Jackson Browne and Tom Petty made guest appearances, and a VH1 documentary crew filmed the sessions. The album was released on Aug. 26, 2003, only 12 days before his death.
But something else from his past also came back. Zevon had been sober since the mid-'80s, when a long stint in rehab finally took hold after several previous attempts failed. But with death imminent, Zevon began drinking again the night of the engagement party for his daughter, Ariel.
"I got very angry with him during that period, and I never told him," writer Carl Hiaasen said in I'll Sleep When I'm Dead: The Dirty Life and Times of Warren Zevon, an oral history by Zevon's ex-wife's Crystal. "I didn't have the heart to because of what he was going through. I could understand the depression, but this was extraordinarily selfish behavior for someone when you have your kids, and their hearts are already breaking, and then to have to see your father like this. ... He knew that. He knew it very well. He wasn't proud of what he was doing."
David Letterman also found a way to honor Zevon, a frequent guest who occasionally filled in for bandleader Paul Shaffer. On Oct. 30, 2002, That night, Zevon was The Late Show's only guest and performed three songs, "Genius," "Mutineer" and "Roland the Headless Thompson Gunner."
Although he was expected to die within a few months of his diagnosis, Zevon lived long enough to see the birth of his twin grandsons, Gus and Max. He approached his death with the same gallows humor that infused his songs. "When Warren finished recording The Wind," Crystal said, "he called me and said, 'I better die quick so they'll give me a Grammy nomination. It's a damned hard way to make a living, having to die to get 'em to know you're alive.'"