Hey Joe DP

Greatly Appreciated

HEY JOE (Deep Purple)
 
 
“Hey Joe”  is an American popular song from the 1960s that has become a rock standard and 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.  Deep Purple included the song as the eighth and final track on their 1968 debut album, Shades of Deep Purple and initially listed their own bandmembers as the songwriters.  Deep Purple’s seven and a half minute arrangement of the song includes elements of classical music, including parts from “The Miller’s Dance” (suite no. 2, part 2) of El Sombrero de Tres Picos ballet by Manuel de Falla, on a rhythm reminiscent of The Boléro by Maurice Ravel.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 
Now, on their website, Sundazed Records insists of the Stillroven that “their pedal-to-the-metal, frenetic version of ‘Hey Joe [is] still THE definitive version as far as we’re concerned”.  That’s a pretty strong statement considering that Hey Joe was one of the most recorded songs of the 1960’s.  Better-known covers include those by the Jimi Hendrix ExperienceDeep Purple (on their debut album, Shades of Deep Purple, they even claimed to be the songwriter!), Johnny Riversthe Byrdsthe Music Machine, and the Leaves.
 
So, if you want to test that claim, here is the Stillroven on YouTube (audio only) performing “Hey Joe”:  www.youtube.com/watch?v=z-0zMnkCYOE . 
 
(September 2012)
 
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Songwriting credits were not handled so scrupulously back then anyway, and those practices continued at least through the end of the 1960’s.  I have already mentioned in previous posts that Buffy Sainte-Marie showed her own name as the songwriter of You’re Going to Need Somebody on Your Bond on her debut album It’s My Way!; and that Deep Purple claimed to be the writer of “Hey Joe” on their 1968 debut album, Shades of Deep Purple (the musical bridge before the song was their work, but “Hey Joe” had already been a hit song several times by then). 

 

(February 2015)

 

Last edited: April 3, 2021