Jordin Sparks Silenced—for Now

Reigning "American Idol" champ's bad pipes keep her off start of Alicia Keys' North American tour

By Joal Ryan Apr 21, 2008 7:54 PMTags
Jordin SparksAP Photo/David J. Phillip

Since winning last year's American Idol, Jordin Sparks has been performing non-stop. Which, as it turns out, wasn't such a great idea.

Sparks is being forced to sit out the opening dates of Alicia Keys' North American tour due to what was described as an acute vocal cord hemorrhage condition.

"Jordin Sparks is on vocal rest and is expected to make a full and complete recovery," a spokesman for the Zomba Label Group, Sparks' recording home, said in a statement Monday. "She looks forward to joining Alicia Keys on tour in May."

The label did not know when exactly Sparks would be back on the road. The tour, which kicked off last Saturday in Virginia, runs through July. Sparks was scheduled to be Keys' opening act.

Also unknown was whether Sparks, as befitting Idol tradition, would be up for singing on the show's May 21 season finale. Fox said Monday it didn't have a set lineup yet.

News of Sparks' vocal problems was apparently first made known by Penn State University, which announced last week that a Sparks solo concert set there for Sunday was canceled.

Sparks' doctors informed the university of the condition, it said, and noted that without rest the 18-year-old risked "permanent vocal cord damage." 

A vocal cord hemorrhage, or bleeding in the vocal cord, "can be a serious problem," according to the Penn Center for Voice at Pennsylvania Hospital's Website.

The condition is described by the hospital as "a complication of laryngitis caused when a person who has laryngitis uses their voice at the height of the infection."

The diagnosis jibes with Zomba's, which, in its statement, said "Sparks has been going non-stop over the past two years."

Per the hospital Website, treatment for vocal cord hemorrhage includes rest, fluids, antibiotics and/or steroids. In severe cases, it said, laser microsurgery could be warranted.

Sparks' label said she was going the rest—and reeducation—route.

"Now she's going through the normal course of learning how to manage and care for her voice," the statement said.

Since defeating Blake Lewis for the Idol crown last May, Sparks has toured with her fellow finalists from the show, belted at the Super Bowl and recorded her first album. Earlier this month, she appeared on Idol's charity fundraiser, Idol Gives Back, dueting with Chris Brown on their hit, "No Air."

Apparently, she should have stuck to "The Sounds of Silence."