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September 11, 2007
MOTLEY CRUE’S NIKKI SIXX
ROCKS CAPITOL HILL; APPEARS AT NATIONAL ALCOHOL & DRUG RECOVERY MONTH
EVENT
Sixx Also Set to Appear on CNN Headline News, Fox News Channel & More
To Share His Story of Addiction & Recovery and will be live on
(September 11, 2007)
– On Thursday, September 6, 2007 Mötley
Crüe founder Nikki Sixx
became the first member of the rock world to speak on Capitol Hill for
NAADAC’s, the Association for Addiction Professionals, 18th Annual
National Alcohol and Drug Addiction Recovery Month luncheon. Impressed
with Sixx’s compelling speech, Senators and Congressmen waited in line
directly after the luncheon to receive personally signed copies of his
upcoming book – currently #4 on
The New York Times
advance order book chart – The
Heroin Diaries: A Year in the Life of a Shattered Rock Star
(due in the U.S. and Canada September 18th from MTV Pocket Books/Simon &
Schuster), which chronicles Sixx’s battles with drug addiction and his
road to recovery.
Once viewed as one of the most wild and excessive men in rock ‘n roll,
Sixx was invited by NAADAC to share his compelling story at this
national forum alongside Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration (SAMHSA) Administrator Terry Cline Ph.D., and Center for
Substance Abuse Treatment Director H. Westley Clark M.D., J.D. Following
the luncheon Sixx appeared on CNN Headline News’ “Glenn Beck” on Friday,
September 7th and will appear on Fox News Channel’s “On the
Record With Greta Van Susteren (Monday, September 10th at
10pm EST) and again on “Glenn Beck” (Tuesday, September 25th
at 7pm, 9pm, 12am EST) for the entire hour of the show.
Sixx spread awareness on the importance of recovery and giving back with
the speech he delivered before members of the Congress and Senate in
Washington, D.C.
last week. In addition to his speech, upcoming guest appearances on
national television will detail his tale of addiction and recovery.
Below are excerpts from his speech:
“To be the first rock artist on Capitol Hill to share his story and
help raise awareness about one of America’s biggest problems, which, in
reality, is also a global epidemic, is a highlight of my career and
life….It’s hard sometimes to look at this as a disease and not as a
problem with willpower. But addiction is not different than any other
disease; it needs treatment….I started this little band called Mötley
Crüe and sold 45 million albums, toured the world, and had a great time,
destroying everything in our path, and then one day I woke up a heroin
addict. I was lucky… I had money and the ability to get into rehab. I
got in recovery but it didn’t take. Then, after many tries it finally
stuck.”
Sixx’s mission for The Heroin
Diaries book, and accompanying CD,
The Heroin Diaries Soundtrack,
(released August 21st via Eleven Seven Music) is to offer insight into,
and hopefully steer people clear of, the perils and dangers of substance
abuse. The Heroin Diaries Soundtrack
was written and produced by Sixx: A.M. (Sixx, James Michael and DJ Ashba),
and was inspired by the dark and crippling diary entries that later
became The Heroin Diaries
book. Though the album was not created with the intention of being a
radio record, the lead single, "Life Is Beautiful" is already in the top
20 on the rock radio charts.
Twenty-five percent of the book’s profits will be donated to Running
Wild in the Night – Sixx’s fundraising initiative for Covenant House
California, which helps keep runaway, abused and abandoned youth off the
streets.
About
Nikki Sixx
Nikki Sixx was born Frank Feranna in San Jose,
California, in 1958 and grew up in
Seattle
with his grandmother. He founded Mötley Crüe in 1981 with friend Tommy
Lee. As the cofounder, songwriter and bassist of one of rock’s most
notorious bands, Mötley Crüe, Sixx has achieved international success,
with album sales exceeding more than 40 million units worldwide. The
band’s decadent lifestyle was documented in the best-selling 2001
autobiography and soon-to-be feature film,
The Dirt. Mötley Crüe had
one of the top-grossing tours of 2005, with all four original members
reuniting to play before an estimated one million people in the
United States.
Complete Text of Nikki Sixx’s Speech
First I’d like to say that I’m honoured to be celebrating National
Recovery Month with everybody here today. For me personally, to be the
first rock artist on Capitol Hill to share his story and help raise
awareness about one of
America’s biggest problems, which, in
reality, is also a global epidemic, is a highlight of my career and
life. I don’t know if any of you saw that USA Today reported in
September last year that drugs and alcohol now affect 1 in 5 Americans.
My experience as a recovering addict is that dependency doesn’t just
affect the addict, but also the family, the workplace, and even our
economy. If you think about it, it affects and infects the lack of
productivity in the business world too – whether you’re in the
entertainment business, or government, we’re all being affected. One of
the first steps in recovery is to admit we’re powerless… but I don’t
think that can be applied in this forum. We have the ability through
awareness and diligent work to make a shift. It’s hard sometimes to look
at this as a disease and not as a problem with willpower. But addiction
is not different than any other disease; it needs treatment. I’d like to
share a short overview of my story. I’d rather live in the recovery, but
the gruesome details of addiction are important, too. My father left
when I was 3, my mother abandoned me at 6. I lived with my grandparents
and they travelled from job to job. I flipped back and forth to my mom
and never grew roots. I started experimenting with drugs very early. I
first smoked pot at 9, and by 13 I was homeless and arrested for selling
drugs and fled to Idaho to work on a
farm and save money to go to
Hollywood to become a rock star. I was young,
full of raging hormones and teen angst, and felt I had no family to
speak of. My role models were the rock stars, poets, and outlaws who
abused and used drugs and I became them. I started this little band
called Mötley Crüe and sold 45 million albums, toured the world, and had
a great time, destroying everything in our path, and then one day I woke
up a heroin addict. I was lucky… I had money and the ability to get into
rehab. I got in recovery but it didn’t take… Then, after many tries it
finally stuck. I don’t want to go too far into the blood and guts, but
more into the success. Today I’ve forgiven my family, I’m a single
father of 4, I’m a photographer, songwriter and producer, author, and I
have two bands: Mötley Crüe and a new band called Sixx:AM. We just
recorded a soundtrack to the book I wrote called “The Heroin Diaries”. A
percentage of the proceeds go to Covenant House. Covenant House gets
at-risk youth off the street and back into society. The reason I tell
you this is because recovery actually rocks – you get what you put in
and I believe that through treatment, these addicts and alcoholics -
much like myself - can make a difference in the world, so that’s why I’m
here. I want to say that we’re all here to celebrate recovery, but it’s
not just about our recovery. It’s also about the family in recovery. If
we don’t get individuals and their families in recovery, the legacy of
our families and future will be in addiction and everything that comes
with it: financial, spiritual, and emotional bankruptcy. This journey
the addict is on will end in insanity, jail, and death. Trust me, I have
had them all, and I’m here because I believe my higher power has more in
store for me than just being an artist, but I still get to be an artist
because of recovery. You get back what you give. So let’s turn
America
around. Let’s offer treatment, support, and awareness. Close the door on
destruction and celebrate recovery. Thank you. |