It was announced this morning that the effervescent, consistently contributing local jazz talent Suzanne Couch has succumbed to stage four breast cancer in Mexico. As a result of her persistent, palpable good nature, the singer’s death comes as a shock to many – except her intimate circle of family of friends.
“It’s a difficult situation. People close to her knew what was going on for a good while, but she never really showed it. It’s been almost two years since she was diagnosed with stage four breast cancer,” Couch’s son-in-law Eric Rademarkers told The Gleaner. “She’d put on a face and go strong, because that’s how she is, strong, and she showed that.” The Steely & Clevie produced “Why” was a Top Ten hit in New York City for Couch in 1991.
Couch had been diagnosed perhaps around when she began planning the successful recent Hope In The Hills concert, featuring her daughter Sarah and 2015 Billboard Reggae Artist of the Year, Joss Stone. Held at Strawberry Hill, Irish Town, the concert was reported to have been an all-round delight, complete with a surprise performance from Toots Hibbert of Toots and the Maytals. It was during this event that the ailing musician revealed her condition to the audience through tears, acknowledging that she was in pain but was still resolute because the next step was treatment.
Rademarkers believes that production was particularly successful because it gave Couch a happy vibe, surrounded by all her friends and family. “It was great that she got to do a nice show,” he said.
Reggae musician Denver ‘Feluke’ Smith recently experience a similar ordeal after being diagnosed with stage four colon cancer and travelled to Mexico for treatment and surgery. Though still in recovery, Smith is preparing for the moment he is well enough to organise a fund-raiser, to benefit someone else who may need to travel for treatment.
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