Matthew Kadi.
Audio By Carbonatix
Boulder-born punk legend Jello Biafra is currently recovering in the hospital after suffering a stroke on Saturday, March 7.
“Jello Biafra is currently hospitalized but stable,” according to a statement shared via Alternative Tentacles, Biafra’s long-running label, on Monday, March 9. “Speaking for the Alternative Tentacles family, we are all just very thankful he is okay and getting the care that he needs. We will update you all as we are able.”
The post also included a firsthand account from the former Dead Kennedys frontman, who recounted his health scare in classic Biafra style.
“I hopped out of my bed because I needed to pee, and my left leg just collapsed under me and I fell to the floor. I couldn’t even break the fall with my left arm because it wasn’t working either,” the 67-year-old recalls. “I tried to hop back up again, and I couldn’t. I realized I had ‘fallen and I can’t get up!’

Ross Jones
“It was this point I thought, ‘Oh shit, I’m having a stroke!’” Biafra adds, reassuring his legion of fans that he’s committed to getting back at it as soon as he can. “I still have a lot of great stuff in me, but right now I gotta lotta rehabbing to do.”
Biafra, who lives in San Francisco full-time, is still involved in the Colorado music scene, whether he’s spinning vinyl at a spot on Broadway or bringing his free TentacleFest to the Rockies. Last year, he was part of the inaugural Field of Vision festival organized by King Gizzard & the Lizard Wizard in Buena Vista.
Most recently, he made news by condemning the current Dead Kennedys for affiliating itself with Punk in the Park, even after the event’s producer was exposed for financially supporting President Donald Trump’s re-election bid. The band planned to play the Pittsburgh and Vallejo, California, dates this year, before cutting ties.
“They’re taking the money $$$, and THEN pulling out? The real Dead Kennedys would never have let this happen in the first place,” Biafra, who served as vocalist and face of the band from 1979 to 1986, said in a statement to Stereogum on February 24. “One more sordid reason I don’t ever want to play with them again.”
Punk in the Park announced the cancellation of all 2026 events at the beginning of the month. But that’s Jello Biafra, never one to hold back his honest thoughts and opinions, which is one reason why so many love him. He’s sure to have more to say about the current speed bump, but in the meantime, here’s to a speedy recovery!