Hey Joe

Greatly Appreciated

HEY JOE
 
 
“Hey Joe”  is an American popular song from the 1960s that has become a rock standard and as such has been performed in many musical styles by hundreds of different artists.  “Hey Joe” tells the story of a man who is on the run and planning to head to Mexico after shooting his unfaithful wife.  Patti Smith released a cover of the song as the A-side of her first single, “Hey Joe” b/w “Piss Factory”, in 1974.  The arrangement of Smith’s version is based on a recording by blues guitarist Roy Buchanan that was released the previous year (and dedicated to Hendrix).  Smith’s version is unique in that she includes a brief and salacious monologue about fugitive heiress Patty Hearst and her kidnapping and participation with the Symbionese Liberation Army.  Smith’s version portrays Hearst as Joe with a “gun in her hand”.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

Patti Smith is renowned for reworking well-known rock standards to fit her vision and also of adding shock value to her music that surely made Alice Cooper smile; and that was true of the band’s first single from 1974, “Hey Joe” b/w “Piss Factory”.  Patti Smith included a monologue about Patty Hearst (who had been kidnapped by the Symbionese Liberation Army earlier that year) in the middle of her rendition of the 1960’s standard; while the latter song relates the salvation she received from the helplessness of her job on an assembly line after discovering a book by French poet Arthur Rimbaud (Jim Morrison of the Doors was similarly enthralled with Rimbaud). 

 

(February 2014)

 

Last edited: April 3, 2021