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Scottish singer Lewis Capaldi performing at the 2023 Glastonbury festival. He annouced he would take a break from touring after struggling to finish his set.
Scottish singer Lewis Capaldi performing at the 2023 Glastonbury festival. He announced he would take a break from live shows after struggling to finish that set. On New Year’s Eve he said he wanted to ‘return to doing what I love’ soon. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images
Scottish singer Lewis Capaldi performing at the 2023 Glastonbury festival. He announced he would take a break from live shows after struggling to finish that set. On New Year’s Eve he said he wanted to ‘return to doing what I love’ soon. Photograph: Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

Lewis Capaldi extends touring break as his health improves: ‘I want to make absolutely sure I’m 100%’

This article is more than 4 months old

Scottish singer says six-month hiatus from live shows after struggling during his performance at Glastonbury helped him ‘cope better with my Tourette’s and anxiety issues’

Lewis Capaldi has said he is “going to continue taking some time to carry on looking after myself” after his six-month hiatus from touring yielded an improvement in his health.

The Scottish singer-songwriter announced in June he would be taking a break from touring “for the foreseeable future” after he struggled with his voice during a Glastonbury set, during which the crowd stepped in to sing the lyrics to his final songs.

On New Year’s Eve, he updated fans in a lengthy Instagram post to say he is “working with some incredible professionals to help me learn about and cope better with my Tourette’s and anxiety issues”, and said it has been going “great”.

Capaldi said: “I’m really happy to say I’ve noticed a marked improvement in both since I decided to take some time off back in June.”

The 27-year-old singer of Someone You Loved said he would also release an extended version of his second album Broken By Desire to Be Heavenly Sent featuring five new songs on Monday.

“For now I’m going to continue taking some time to carry on looking after myself, maybe writing some music and taking a moment to reflect on some of the most incredible years of my life,” Capaldi wrote.

“I want to make absolutely sure I’m 100% before getting back out there again properly for more shows and doing what I love more than anything! These songs mean the world to me and I’d be gutted if I’d not been able to share them. Hope this tides you all over until we can get in a room and sing them together some day very soon!”

He also thanked fans for their support, saying their reaction has been “nothing I’ve ever experienced and has made me more excited than ever to return to doing what I love at some point in the not too distant future”.

Capaldi explored how the pressures of fame have affected him mentally and physically earlier this year in the Netflix documentary Lewis Capaldi: How I’m Feeling Now.

It won an National Television award in the authored documentary category and has been nominated for a Grammy for best music film.

On Sunday, Capaldi wrote: “If you saw the film I made on Netflix, you probably know this already. But I was absolutely terrified of disappointing you all, afraid of not living up to expectations and in all honesty scared that the whole thing would be a complete flop.

“But thanks to all of you, it wasn’t. It’s mind-blowing to see the songs on this album still resonating with so many of you despite the fact I’ve not been out there promoting it or touring, it means the world to me.”

Broken By Desire to Be Heavenly Sent – which had accumulated 95,000 chart units during its first week on sale – had held the title for biggest opening of the year until Taylor Swift released her rerecording of her 2014 album 1989.

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