Joni Mitchell to make full recovery, representative says
Joni Mitchell is known for her distinctively rich contralto voice and open-tuned guitar
New
York (AFP) - Folk legend Joni Mitchell is expected to make a full
recovery from a brain aneurysm and -- contrary to an account -- is
speaking, a representative said Sunday.
David
Crosby, another major figure in folk rock who was long close to
Mitchell, said in an interview released Friday that she was no longer
speaking and it was unclear when she would get better.
Mitchell's
conservator Leslie Morris confirmed that the 71-year-old Canadian
singer suffered an aneurysm but said that other details were "mostly
speculative."
"The truth is that Joni is speaking, and she's speaking well," Morris said in a statement on Mitchell's website.
"She is not walking yet, but she will be in the near future as she is undergoing daily therapies.
"She is resting comfortably in her own home and she's getting better each day. A full recovery is expected," she wrote.
Crosby,
who briefly dated Mitchell in the 1960s, told a webcast forum of The
Huffington Post that Mitchell "took a terrible hit" and that "to my
knowledge, she is not speaking yet."
Mitchell,
one of the defining singer-songwriters of the Baby Boomer generation,
was rushed to a Los Angeles hospital on March 31 and rumors have since
crept up repeatedly about the state of her health.
Mitchell
-- known for her distinctively rich contralto voice and open-tuned
guitar -- sang hits that included "Big Yellow Taxi," "Both Sides, Now"
and "Woodstock."
She has also been active in political causes including the environment and the Native American rights movement.
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