Drummer Allister to go without sleep for a week in bid to set world record in memory of his partner

​A Co Antrim man and double world record holder will go without sleep for a week as he attempts to set a new world record by drumming continuously for 150 hours.
Allister Brown from Lisburn is attempted a drumming world record in memory of his partnerAllister Brown from Lisburn is attempted a drumming world record in memory of his partner
Allister Brown from Lisburn is attempted a drumming world record in memory of his partner

If he succeeds, Allister Brown from Lisburn will enter the Guinness Book of World Records for the third time.

The event begins on Sunday at the Lisburn Music Centre where the 45-year-old will test his physical and mental endurance to the limit playing 2,500 songs in memory of his late partner Sharon Deegan, who died from pancreatic cancer in January 2021 aged 49.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Allister, who works as a senior detailer for a structural steel engineering firm, hopes to raise as much money and awareness as he can for local pancreatic cancer charity NIPANC.

Allister is also donating half the proceeds to the UK charity, Mind after struggling with mental ill health after nursing Sharon for over three years before she died.

He said: “People never think anything bad is going to happen to them until it does. Pancreatic cancer survival rates are very low because it is usually not picked up in time. Sharon did have a chance to get an operation known as the Whipple’s procedure which only around 15% of patients are eligible for but recovery was far too difficult for her. Watching someone you love die of this cruel disease is just horrific.

NIPANC is working to fund research which is something we all need to get behind and support.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

“After I lost Sharon to pancreatic cancer in 2021, I was devastated. I needed help with my mental health. Now I want to raise as much awareness and money for NIPANC and Mind as possible, while going for the world record. My aim is to let people understand you should never feel you’re on your own.”

Playing drums has been a much-loved hobby since getting his first kit, age two. Allister is already a double world record holder. He broke the individual drumming marathon in 2003 playing for 58 hours and 17 minutes and was invited to sign the 100 millionth copy of the Guinness Book of Records along with many other record breakers.

In 2004, he achieved 78 hours in a drum marathon and in 2008 broke the world record of 86 hours by playing for 102 hours and 49 minutes. The current world record stands at 134.5 hours and after 10 months training the local man is ready for the challenge.

He said: “I am training myself to cope with sleep deprivation by staying awake for 24 hours at the weekend so my body and mind can get used to it. Guinness rules allow a five-minute break every hour which you can save up and it all has to be recorded and verified, so I aim to accumulate the time by stopping every four hours for 20 minutes when I will eat and have a 10-15 minute power nap.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Allister met his partner Sharon at a drumming event in Lisburn in 2017. Just six months later she was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He says: “She started taking pains in her side and back. This went on for a few months with doctors diagnosing constipation. I took her to A&E numerous times until eventually a doctor asked for a CT scan to make sure nothing else was triggering the pain.

“They kept Sharon in for the scan and the following day I got a call. She was in tears and asked me to get down to the hospital urgently. She said she hadn’t got good news. It was a large tumour to the head of the pancreas which was likely to be cancer.

“Sharon was amongst 15% of people in the UK able to receive a Whipple’s operation to remove the head of the pancreas. However after a biopsy, it was discovered the cancer had already started to spread.

“Treatment was available and Sharon needed 24/7 care. Work allowed me to set up an office from home and I nursed her for the next three and a half years. She fought right to the last breath and taught us all how to change our mindset to life. A true cancer warrior.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

After Sharon’s loss, Allister suffered with mental ill health and says it was only the drumming community which helped him heal.

During the pandemic in 2020, he teamed up with drummers from around the world to take part in DrumathonLIVE; a 24-hour drumming marathon, which raised more than £45,000 for NHS charities.

It was held again in 2021 and live streamed on Facebook with the local man playing alongside famous drummers from some of the world’s top bands including Coldplay, Kaiser Chiefs, Simple Minds, The Kooks, The Feeling, Hans Zimmer, The Cure, Imagination and many more.

This year organisers have given their support to Allister to perform DrumathonLIVE on his own during his world record attempt on July 16.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

He says: “After I lost Sharon I needed help with my mental health, and for me it came in the form of DrumathonLIVE. It has brought many people together across the world, becoming a huge family of friends who are there for each other. I have benefited greatly through it giving me a purpose to play and enjoy drums again.”

The event starts on July 16 in Lisburn Music Centre, Railway Street which will remain open 24-7 while he drums through night and day.

You can catch Allister’s attempt live at www.drumathon.live and donate at https://www.justgiving.com/crowdfunding/drumathonlivegwr?utm_term=yGk9QB9eg

Related topics: