Sheryl Crow has reacted admirably to the news she received last year - that she had a brain tumour. She even went so far as to say that she'd long suspected something was wrong , citing memory loss issues going as far back as the early 1990s.
The singer, who found most of her fame in the mid to late 90s with songs like 'A Change Would Do You Good' and went on to write the theme song to 1997 James Bond film 'Tomorrow Never Dies,' told the Las Vegas Review, "I haven't really talked about it, in November, I found out I have a brain tumour. But it's benign, so I don't have to worry about it. But it gives me a fit."
Indeed Crow cited a performance of 'A Change Will Do You Good', when she managed to forget the lyrics, despite it being her biggest song. "I worried about my memory so much that I went and got an Mri (magnetic resonance imaging). And I found out I have a brain tumour," she said. "And I was like, 'See? I knew there was something wrong," she commented. As chipper as she's been, the news undoubtedly must have come as a blow to Crow, who has previously already had to see off a bout of breast cancer, diagnosed back in 2006.