Whitesnake's David Coverdale reveals he suffered injury in recent fall

He rules out returning to the road until he's well enough

David Coverdale on stage with Whitesnake in 2022
Author: Scott ColothanPublished 12th Oct 2023

Whitesnake leader David Coverdale has revealed he suffered a shoulder injury in a recent fall.

The 72-year-old Saltburn-by-the-Sea rocker appeared on yesterday’s (11th October) episode of SiriusXM's Trunk Nation With Eddie Trunk and he was asked how he was doing following his series of recent health woes that forced Whitesnake to axe a series of tour dates.

After playing dates across the UK, Ireland and mainland Europe in May and June 2022, Whitesnake abandoned the rest of the European trek early due to David Coverdale’s “continuing health challenges” following an “infection of the sinus and trachea.”

A month after the European tour was axed, Whitesnake cancelled their planned North American tour as special guests to Scorpions because of Coverdale’s “persistent upper respiratory infection.”

David Coverdale told Eddie Trunk yesterday that Whitesnake still exists, he's still in touch with his band mates and they are getting “offers” to perform live, however he won’t “entertain anything until I get my physical aspect together.”

Whitesnake's David Coverdale in 2023

"I had a fall recently, which I don't think helped my… I've got two torn rotator cuffs, which would certainly compromise my performance," he explained. "But arthritis, all this kind of stuff's kicking in.”

A rotator cuff tear is when one or more of the muscles and tendons that make up your rotator cuff in your shoulder tears.

Coverdale continued: "My heart goes out to Steven (Tyler) after the cancellation (Aerosmith recently postponed the final 37 dates of their farewell tour due to Steven Tyler’s vocal cord damage). It's so awful, getting older and having this burden of responsibility to try to be as good as you can so you don't disappoint anybody. And I know how he feels and I sent my love to him through our friends, mutual friends.

"But I can't commit to anything until I know how my health is," Coverdale continued. "The last thing I want to do is go on tour and have to do what happened last year, which was come home, tail between my legs. It was heart-breaking. And being sick for a year didn't really help matters."

Whitesnake re-released their 2008 album ‘Good to Be Bad’ as a deluxe box set in April to celebrate its 15th anniversary.

The greatest rock song intros of all time, including Mark III Deep Purple:

50) The Rolling Stones – ‘Gimme Shelter’ (1969)

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49) Budgie – ‘Breadfan’ (1973)

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48) The Cult – ‘She Sells Sanctuary’ (1985)

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47) Metallica – ‘Master of Puppets’ (1986)

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46) Deep Purple – ‘Highway Star’ (1972)

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45) Deep Purple – ‘Burn’ (1974)

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44) Rush – ‘2112’ (1976)

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43) Eagles – ‘Hotel California’ (1976)

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42) Pink Floyd – ‘Shine On You Crazy Diamond Parts I–V’ (1975)

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41) Sex Pistols – ‘Pretty Vacant’ (1977)

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40) Judas Priest – ‘Painkiller’ (1990)

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39) Status Quo – ‘Caroline’ (1973)

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38) Status Quo – ‘Whatever You Want’ (1979)

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37) Pink Floyd – ‘Time’ (1973)

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36) Motörhead – ‘Ace of Spades’ (1980)


35) Black Sabbath – ‘War Pigs’ (1970)

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34) Guns N’ Roses – ‘Paradise City’ (1987)

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33) Dire Straits – ‘Money for Nothing’ (1985)

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32) Led Zeppelin – ‘Kashmir’ (1975)

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31) Lynyrd Skynyrd – ‘Free Bird’ (1974)

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30) T. Rex – ‘20th Century Boy’ (1973)

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29) Nirvana – ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit’ (1991)

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28) The Who – ‘Baba O'Riley’ (1971)

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27) Motörhead – ‘Overkill’ (1979)

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26) Derek and the Dominos – ‘Layla’ (1970)

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25) Led Zeppelin – ‘When the Levee Breaks’ (1971)

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24) AC/DC – ‘Highway to Hell’ (1979)

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23) Rainbow – ‘Tarot Woman’ (1976)

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22) UFO – ‘Doctor Doctor’ (1974)

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21) Iron Maiden – ‘Phantom of the Opera’ (1980)

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20) Meat Loaf - ‘Bat Out of Hell’ (1977)

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19) Iron Maiden – ‘The Trooper’ (1983)

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18) Metallica - ‘For Whom the Bell Tolls’ (1984)

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17) Deep Purple – ‘Speed King’ (1970)

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16) Black Sabbath – ‘Paranoid’ (1970)

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15) Guns N’ Roses - ‘Welcome To The Jungle’ (1987)

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14) Van Halen – ‘Hot for Teacher’ (1984)

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13) AC/DC – ‘Whole Lotta Rosie’ (1977)

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12) Iron Maiden – ‘The Number of the Beast’ (1982)

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11) Led Zeppelin ‘Whole Lotta Love’ (1969)

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10) Led Zeppelin – ‘Rock and Roll’ (1971)

Technically, this intro should be part credited to Little Richard; John Bonham was playing the drum beat from the intro to 'Keep A-Knockin' during Zep's sessions in Headley Grange for their fourth album when Jimmy Page joined in. The tapes happened to be rolling and 15 minutes later the basis of the song was finished!

9) Metallica – ‘Enter Sandman’ (1991)

One of the most famous riffs of all time, its genesis came from Kirk Hammett who was inspired by the menacing sound of Soundgarden's second LP. "It was about two or three o'clock in the morning," explained Hammett "I had just been listening to Louder Than Love… And I heard that album, I was inspired, I picked up my guitar, and out came that riff." Add the ominous "war drum" toms of Lars Ulrich, and the recipe was complete for a classic intro.

8) Rush – ‘The Spirit of Radio’ (1980)

The iconic opening riff on Rush's commercial smash 'The Spirit of Radio' showcases Alex Lifeson's guitar playing prowess. Commenting on the introductory guitar riff, Lifeson told Classic Rock in 2006: "I just wanted to give it something that gave it a sense of static – radio waves bouncing around, very electric. We had that sequence going underneath, and it was just really to try and get something that was sitting on top of it, that gave it that movement."

7) AC/DC – ‘Back in Black’ (1980)

Easily one of the most memorable intros in the history of popular music, 'Back in Black' opens with a gloriously simple yet brain-gnawingly infectious riff from Angus Young. A musical tribute to the late-great Bon Scott, new vocalist Brian Johnson was tasked with concocting the lyrics that would sit on the bedrock of the explosive riff. "I just wrote what came into my head, which at the time seemed like mumbo, jumbo," Johnson later remarked. "'Nine lives. Cats eyes. Abusing every one of them and running wild.' The boys got it though. They saw Bon's life in that lyric."

6) Black Sabbath – ‘Black Sabbath’ (1970)

The opening title track on Black Sabbath's self-titled debut studio album, 'Black Sabbath' is very music the sound of the birth of the heavy metal genre. The song opens with the sound of heavy rain and ominous thunder claps with the clanging of a church bell, before Tony Iommi's delightfully evil riffs confront the listener and Ozzy Osbourne cries, "what is this that stands before me? / Figure in black which points at me" – seemingly referencing the mysterious witch-like woman on the famous album sleeve. A truly seminal moment.

5) Rainbow – ‘Stargazer’ (1976)

Flaunting the late-great Cozy Powell's heroic musical prowess behind the drum kit, the eight-minute musical opus that is 'Stargazer' kicks off with a pummelling drum solo before Ritchie Blackmore's trademark riffs enter the fore. Powell's monumental and muscular rhythms perfectly tee up the epic track that captures all five members of Rainbow at the peak of their musical powers.

4) AC/DC – ‘Hells Bells’ (1980)

Echoing the ominous start of Black Sabbath's 'Black Sabbath' a year earlier, AC/DC's 'Back in Black' opener 'Hells Bells' begins with the slow, funereal tolling of a 900 kg bronze bell. Made by John Taylor & Co Bellfounders in Loughborough, the sound of the bell was recorded by assistant engineer Tony Platt using Ronnie Lane's mobile studio inside Taylor's Bell Foundry. It was recorded after AC/DC had finishing laying down 'Back in Black' in the Bahamas.

3) AC/DC – ‘Thunderstruck’ (1990)

The fifth and highest ranking AC/DC song intro on our list is their rip-roaring 1990 track 'Thunderstruck'. Angus Young reportedly created the searing opening guitar parts by playing with all the strings taped up, except the B. It was a studio trick he learned from his older brother and former AC/DC producer George Young.

2) Guns N’ Roses - ‘Sweet Child O' Mine’ (1987)

Guns N' Roses' monumental song 'Sweet Child O' Mine' opens with one of Slash's standout riffs. Dispelling the widespread belief that the riff was born from a practise exercise, Slash told Eddie Trunk in 2022: "I was sitting around the house where Guns used to live at one point, in '86 I guess it was, and I just came up with this riff. It was just me messing around and putting notes together like any riff you do. You're like, 'This is cool,' and then you put the third note and find a melody like that. So it was a real riff; it wasn't a warm-up exercise." He added: "Initially it was just a cool, neat little riff that I'd come up with. It was an interesting pattern and it was really melodic, but I don't think I would have presented it to the band and said, 'Hey, I've got this idea!' because I just happened to come up with it while we were all hanging around together. Izzy (Stradlin)was the first one to start playing behind it, and once that happened Axl started making up words, and it took off that way."

1) Deep Purple – ‘Smoke on the Water’ (1972)

Firmly entrenched in rock and roll folklore, the legendary and instantly recognisable opening riff on Deep Purple's 'Smoke on the Water' was played by Ritchie Blackmore on a Fender Stratocaster electric guitar. Years later, Blackmore noted that he took direct inspiration from Beethoven's Symphony No. 5, joking "I owe him a lot of money." 'Smoke on the Water' was also voted the Greatest Rock Riff of All Time by Planet Rock listeners in 2017.

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