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Chew Hung
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Hungster's Tribute to 

 

This page is dedicated to the Carpenters...

 

Note : This is NOT the OFFICIAL CARPENTERS HOMEPAGE.
It is Just A personal tribute page.

 

About Carpenters

 

Richard Carpenter 1946~


Richard Carpenter, a talented pianist and producer, is the older of the Carpenters. Although we usually identify Karen's amazing voice as the dominate "sound" of the group, it is Richard's contributions (in terms of the arrangement) that allowed them to achieve the unique sound we have come to know. Many songs exhibit this beautiful blend of sounds and my personal favorite is "Close to You".


 


Karen Carpenter 1950~1983


Karen started as a drummer and it wasn't until later that her unique vocal talent surfaced. A record company producer was the first to realize that Karen possessed a unique and beautiful voice. The most fascinating thing about Karen's voice is that it is completely pure and natural even without formal training. Although Richard's talent was the foundation for the Carpenters, Karen's wonderful voice quickly became the reason for the group's success. Karen passed away at the age of 32 on February 4th, 1983. She died of a heart failure which arose from complications from 8 year battle with anorexia nervosa. Although she's gone, her rich and fascinating voice still haunts millions. An excellent example of her rich vocal quality can be heard in the song "You're the One" 
 


Carpenters 1969~


After being rejected by other record producers for being too "Soft" for the market at that time, Jack Daugherty, the A&M record producer was attracted to Richard and Karen's demo-tape. "The Carpenters" signed their first recording contract with A&M in April of 1969, and began a long and relationship with Herb Alpert's (The A in A&M) record company. They made their debut in November of 1969 and their second release, "Close to You", reached the top of the American charts. In a career which saw them win 3 Grammy's, the Carpenters never broke up, though Karen did work for a time with Phil Ramone on a solo album.

 

Discography

 

   

 

External Links

Some Carpenters Homepages around the world (in alphabetical order as of  9 October 2001)

 

  1. The Carpenters by Tony Tay
  2. A Tribute To Karen Carpenter by Mogens Veng, Denmark.
  3. A&M's Home Page by Shigeru "Akichi" Nagao, Japan.
  4. Carpenters Forever Homepage by Ronald Garcia, USA.
  5. Carpenters' Japan Release Singles by Kaoru Yamada, Japan.
  6. Carpenters Page by Patricia T. , USA.
  7. Carpenters Photo by Barry Bilicki , USA.
  8. Close To You Home page by Masaru "Rocky" Kurita, Japan.
  9. Karen and Richard Carpenter & Other Loves by Gregory Harold Brown, USA.
  10. Karen Carpenter Home Page by Randy L. Schmidt, USA.
  11. Love, Inc.
  12. Misheard Lyrics From Carpenters Songs by Jerry Garrison, USA.
  13. Richard Carpenter Home Page by Randy L. Schmidt, USA.
  14. Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story by Todd Haynes, USA.
  15. Superstar's Homepage by Bernie Elder, USA.
  16. The Carpenters by Catherine Allen, UK.
  17. The Carpenters by PopTopix
  18. The Carpenters Site in Argentina by Victoria Sarinelli, Argentina.
  19. The Eventide Page by Asael Costa da Silva, Brazil.
  20. Yesterday Once More Homepage by Huey Pang, Hong Kong.


Carpenters FAQ Site :

 

  • FAQ site by Paul Maclauchlan, Canada.


The Carpenters Performing Arts Center :


The Carpenter Performing Arts Center (CPAC) was named to honor CSULB alumni Richard and Karen Carpenter in recognition of the Carpenter family's generosity to the Center. The center is committed to artistic excellence, quality entertainment, and provision of service to its patrons and clients. It is a non-profit organization administered under the auspices of the CSULB College of the Arts.

Reports on the death of Karen Carpenter

 

KAREN CARPENTER WAS KILLED BY AN OVER-THE-COUNTER DRUG SOME DOCTORS SAY MAY BE KILLING MANY OTHERS by Gioia Diliberto May 13, 1985

When Karen Carpenter collapsed at 32 from heart failure in a wardrobe closet of her parents' Downey, California home two years ago, the acting Los Angeles coroner, Dr. Ronald N. Kornbum, said she died of complications from anorexia nervosa, specifically "cardiotoxicity" brought on by the chemical emetine. What he did not specify was how the emetine got there. Experts now agree there was only one way possible: She had misused a common, over-the-counter drug called ipecac.

A foul-smelling, amber-colored drug, syrup of ipecac has been sold in drugstores for years to induce vomiting in poison victims. General practitioners have long recommended having a bottle in the medicine chest as a cheap antidote; a one-ounce bottle costs only about $2. But the fact is that ipecac, in large dose, may cause irreversible damage to the heart, and if taken repeatedly, is a lethal poison. One month after Carpenter's death, Deborah Mae Mellon, 32, a mother of two, died of emetine poisoning. Two Philadelphia lawyers, Thomas E. Mellon Jr., Mrs. Mellon's brother-in-law, and Michael B.L. Hepps, have filed a lawsuit charging the numerous manufactures of ipecac with failure to warn the public about the drug's toxic dangers. The suit, initiated on behalf of Mrs. Mellon's estate, seeks $5 million in ompensatory damages and $10 million in punitive damages. "No one can know from looking at this poison antidote that it is a poison itself," says Mellon. "Like Karen Carpenter, Debbie thought ipecac was harmless. She was a happy, healthy woman who simply was desperate to lose weight." Mellon says if the cause of Karen's death had been revealed immediately, it might have saved Debbie's life. "And it would have stopped other women from taking ipecac, too. They would have said to themselves, 'This is what killed Karen Carpenter. I'm not going to take it.'"

Now some doctors fear an epidemic of ipecac misuse among an estimated 150,000 anorectics and two million patients who suffer from bulimia, binge eating and purging. A group of psychotherapists who specialize in treating the two illnesses has decided to publicize the true cause of Karen's death. Chief among them is Steven Levenkron, a psychotherapist and author. It was Levenkron who treated Carpenter for anorexia-- successfully, he thought--for almost a year before her death. "Just as Karen slipped through our fingers, so are many other women," he says now. At a hearing later this spring in Washington, D.C., Levenkron and his colleagues will ask the FDA to declare ipecac a prescription drug. "Ipecac should not be readily available," he says. "It should be controlled immediately."

When she died, Karen had been suffering from anorexia for eight years--apparently since reading a passing reference to her chubbiness in a review. After seeing several therapists in California, she moved to Manhattan to begin working with Levenkron. He eventually put her in the hospital, where she raised her weight from a skeletal 83 to 108 and overcame her addiction to laxatives. In November 1982 Karen decided that she was able to go home. Soon after, according to Levenkron's reconstruction of her final months, she must have begun swallowing several teaspoons of ipecac every night after dinner and eventually increased her intake to a bottle or two. The drug, which causes sharp cramps followed by violent vomiting, gradually weakened her and led, on February 4, to her sudden death.

Levenkron says he was shocked to learn that his patient had died from ipecac poisoning. "I thought I knew everything about her." During phone conversations, he recalls, he had asked her, "Are you losing weight? Are you taking laxatives?" and she had always answered, "No." "Ipecac was something that never occurred to me to ask her about," he says. "I assume Karen thought this was a harmless thing to do," to eat regularly yet maintain her weight at 108.

In a press release for his autopsy report on Karen, the L.A. coroner failed to mention ipecac. The release in fact stated that "laboratory tests had rued out drug or medication overdose as a cause of death." Says Dr. Kornblum now, "It never occurred to me to mention ipecac. In my mind, emetine and ipecac are the same thing."

Since Karen died, Deborah Mellon's has been the only reported death from ipecac poisoning. But some observers suspect tat many diet-obsessed girls may have died from overusing the drug. "We think that many anorectics and bulimics who've died of mysterious heart failures may have actually died of ipecac abuse," says Levenkron. Dr. Alan Adlier, a Philadelphia physician who in 1980 treated the first reported victim of ipecac, most physicians aren't aware that it's cardiotoxic, and to my knowledge only one lab in the country tests for emetine poisoning."

Ipecac comes from the root of the ipecacuanha plant, a shrub that grows in South America. It is the only non-prescription drug known to contain emetine. Until the late '70s, when studies of ipecac poisoning started showing up in medical journals, many doctors never considered that ipecac might be misused. "None of us had taken the trouble to investigate this drug," says Levenkron, "because who would abuse a drug that produces horrible pains, nausea and vomiting?" Dr. John Adams Atchley, a Manhattan psychiatrist who is president of American Anorexia/Bulimia Association Inc., answers the question: "If you heard [bulimics] talk about the great joy they get in cleaning themselves out, you'd understand why they're willing to take ipecac. They'll put up with all kinds of things to get the almost spiritual high.

Anorexia is self-starvation resulting from a disturbed sense of one's own eating, followed by self-induced vomiting or purging by laxatives and diuretics. Bulimics are perfectionists and obsessive-compulsives, with high standards and low self-esteem; they are fleshier than anorectics, whose wasted look marks them as victims of a bizarre disease, and their numbers is growing. "In eight years I saw meetings in Jew Jersey change from groups of emaciated young women to groups of field hockey types who were bingeing their heads off, taking laxatives and throwing it up," says Dr. Atchley. But on closer look there are telltale signs: puffiness around the eyes and a swelling of the glands on the sides of the jaws. Chronic vomiters sometimes have facial rashes, damaged teeth and premature cheek wrinkles--like rows of parentheses on the sides of their faces.

Although bulimics seem sturdier that anorectics, they are often actually less robust. Bingeing itself can be fatal. Recently a 23-year-old model, who had starved herself down to 84 pounds, died in London after gaining 19 pounds during one binge. According to a letter in the British medical journal, Lancet, the woman's fatal intake consisted of liver, kidneys, steaks, eggs, cheese, bread, mushrooms, carrots, a whole cauliflower, 10 peaches, four pears, two apples, four bananas, two pounds of grapes and two glasses of milk.

Some vomiters end their binges with several bottles of diet soda. This makes the food float to the top of their stomachs and sparks the gag reflex. Some simply will themselves to throw up. Others--300,000 by some estimates--take ipecac.

Despite the tragedy of Karen Carpenter, not everyone agrees that ipecac should be made a prescription drug. Dr. John Schiegel, president of the American Pharmaceutical Association, suggests that instead, "We endorse labeling changes on the product that will more adequately warn consumers about the potential dangers of using ipecac incorrectly." Says Ron Williams, APha's director of professional affairs, "Every year ipecac saves 150,000 lives. Everyone should have a bottle in the medicine chest in case of accidental poisonings." to counteract certain poisons, ipecac must be taken within a half hour.

Dr. Atchley argues that requiring a prescription won't jeopardize poison victims. "A mother could ask her pediatrician for a prescription and keep a bottle in the medicine chest," he says. His position is seconded by former users of the drug. One of Levenkron's patients, a 14-year-old girl, said she bought ipecac at a drugstore after reading about it in a book about bulimia. She took it several times even though it made her vomit blood and bile. "Would you have used it even if it had a skull and crossbones on the label?" Levenkron asked the girl. "Yes," she said, she would have.

"Karen wouldn't knowingly have done something that would kill her," says her therapist. Her grave is in Forest Lawn.

Information found on this report has been furnished by a Newville member who graciously declines to be acknowledged. Please e-mail me for any feedback. 

 

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