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Kurt Cobain, who died in 1994, was later included by some, probably due to his popularity and his death occurring at the pinnacle of his career. According to the book ''[[Heavier Than Heaven]]'', when Cobain died, his sister claimed that as a kid he would talk about how he wanted to join the 27 Club.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.hyperionbooks.com/titlepage.asp?ISBN=0786884029| title=Heavier than Heaven: A Biography of Kurt Cobain| publisher=HyperionBooks.com}}</ref> On the fifteenth anniversary of Kurt Cobain's death, National Public Radio's Robert Smith said, "The deaths of these rock stars at the age of 27 really changed the way we look at rock music."<ref>[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=102670912 "Before I Get Old: The 27s Made Early Exits"], NPR, April 5, 2009</ref> ''[[The 27s: The Greatest Myth of Rock & Roll]]'' details the history of the phenomenon.
Kurt Cobain, who died in 1994, was later included by some, probably due to his popularity and his death occurring at the pinnacle of his career. According to the book ''[[Heavier Than Heaven]]'', when Cobain died, his sister claimed that as a kid he would talk about how he wanted to join the 27 Club.<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.hyperionbooks.com/titlepage.asp?ISBN=0786884029| title=Heavier than Heaven: A Biography of Kurt Cobain| publisher=HyperionBooks.com}}</ref> On the fifteenth anniversary of Kurt Cobain's death, National Public Radio's Robert Smith said, "The deaths of these rock stars at the age of 27 really changed the way we look at rock music."<ref>[http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=102670912 "Before I Get Old: The 27s Made Early Exits"], NPR, April 5, 2009</ref> ''[[The 27s: The Greatest Myth of Rock & Roll]]'' details the history of the phenomenon.


There is a common superstition among the [[stoner culture]] that the use of a [[Lighter#White_lighter|white lighter]] is unlucky. The superstition originated from rumors that 4 of the 5 prominent members of the 27 Club (Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison, and Cobain) each had a white lighter in their possession at the time of their deaths.<ref>[http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=white%20lighter%20myth Urban dictionary: White lighter]</ref><ref>http://forum.grasscity.com/real-life-stories/81150-white-lighter-bad-luck.html</ref> However the more practical reason for unlucky white lighters is that when a pot smoker "packs down his bowl" with the edge of a white lighter it leave incriminating residue.
There is a common superstition among the [[stoner culture]] that the use of a [[Lighter#White_lighter|white lighter]] is unlucky. The superstition originated from rumors that 4 of the 5 prominent members of the 27 Club (Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison, and Cobain) each had a white lighter in their possession at the time of their deaths.<ref>[http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=white%20lighter%20myth Urban dictionary: White lighter]</ref><ref>http://forum.grasscity.com/real-life-stories/81150-white-lighter-bad-luck.html</ref>
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Revision as of 19:25, 16 May 2010

The 27 Club, also occasionally known as the Forever 27 Club or Club 27, is a name for a group of influential rock and blues musicians who all died at the age of 27, sometimes under mysterious circumstances.[1][2]

The 27 Club consists of two related phenomena, both in the realm of popular culture. The first is a list of five famous musicians who died at age 27 -- Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, and Kurt Cobain. The second is the idea that many other notable musicians have also died at the age of 27.[3]

Musicians usually included in the 27 Club

A white lighter is considered cursed by some in the stoner culture

There is some debate as to the criterion used to include musicians who died at the age of 27 in the "27 Club". The impetus for the club's creation were the deaths of a seemingly unusual number of prominent 27-year-old musicians within a two-year period of time, exactly: Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin and Jim Morrison.[4] Morrison and Jones died on the same date two years apart.

Kurt Cobain, who died in 1994, was later included by some, probably due to his popularity and his death occurring at the pinnacle of his career. According to the book Heavier Than Heaven, when Cobain died, his sister claimed that as a kid he would talk about how he wanted to join the 27 Club.[5] On the fifteenth anniversary of Kurt Cobain's death, National Public Radio's Robert Smith said, "The deaths of these rock stars at the age of 27 really changed the way we look at rock music."[6] The 27s: The Greatest Myth of Rock & Roll details the history of the phenomenon.

There is a common superstition among the stoner culture that the use of a white lighter is unlucky. The superstition originated from rumors that 4 of the 5 prominent members of the 27 Club (Hendrix, Joplin, Morrison, and Cobain) each had a white lighter in their possession at the time of their deaths.[7][8]

Picture Name Date of death Official cause of death Fame Aged
File:Brianguitar.jpg Brian Jones July 3, 1969 Drowned in swimming pool.[9] Rolling Stones founder and guitarist/multi-instrumentalist. 27 years and 125 days
Jimi Hendrix September 18, 1970 Asphyxiated on vomit after combining sleeping pills with wine.[10] Pioneering electric guitarist, singer and songwriter for The Jimi Hendrix Experience and Band of Gypsys. 27 years and 295 days
File:Janisjoplin.png Janis Joplin October 4, 1970 Probable heroin overdose.[11] Lead vocalist and songwriter for Big Brother and the Holding Company, The Kozmic Blues Band and Full Tilt Boogie Band. 27 years and 258 days
File:Jim Morrisonsinging.jpg Jim Morrison July 3, 1971 Official cause of death listed as "heart failure"; however, no autopsy was performed.[12] Lead singer, songwriter and video director for The Doors. 27 years and 207 days
Kurt Cobain c. April 5, 1994 Suicide by shotgun.[13] Lead singer, guitarist and songwriter for Nirvana. 27 years and c. 44 days

Other musicians who died at 27

Some lists include other musicians who died at age 27.[3][14] Cobain and Hendrix biographer Charles R. Cross writes, "The number of musicians who died at 27 is truly remarkable by any standard. [Although] humans die regularly at all ages, there is a statistical spike for musicians who die at 27."[3]

Name Date of death Cause of death Claim to notability
Alexandre Levy January 17, 1892 Unknown. Composer.
Louis Chauvin March 26, 1908 Neurosyphilitic sclerosis. Ragtime musician.
Robert Johnson August 16, 1938 Unknown, but typically credited to strychnine poisoning. Bluesman. Recorded very famous and influential set of 29 songs that influenced many famous musicians after him, considered the first of the unofficial 27 club.
Nat Jaffe August 5, 1945 Result of complications from high blood pressure. Blues musician.
Jesse Belvin February 6, 1960 Car crash. R&B singer and songwriter.
Rudy Lewis May 20, 1964 Drug overdose. Vocalist of The Drifters.
Malcolm Hale October 31, 1968 Carbon monoxide poisoning from a faulty space heater. Original member of Spanky and Our Gang.
Dickie Pride March 26, 1969 Overdose of sleeping pills. British rock and roll singer.
Alexandra July 31, 1969 Car crash. German singer.
Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson September 3, 1970 Barbiturate overdose, possible suicide. Leader, singer and primary composer of Canned Heat.
Arlester "Dyke" Christian March 13, 1971 Shot. Frontman and vocalist of Dyke & the Blazers.
Linda Jones March 14, 1972 Diabetic coma. R&B singer.
Ron "Pigpen" McKernan March 8, 1973 Gastrointestinal hemorrhage associated with alcoholism. Founding member, keyboardist and singer of the Grateful Dead.
Roger Lee Durham July 27, 1973 Fell off a horse and died from the injuries. Singer and percussionist of Bloodstone.
Wallace Yohn August 12, 1974 Died in a plane crash along with three other band members. Organ player of Chase.
Dave Alexander February 10, 1975 Pulmonary edema. Bassist for the Stooges.
Peter Ham April 24, 1975 Suicide by hanging. Keyboardist and guitarist, leader of Badfinger.
Gary Thain December 8, 1975 Drug overdose. Former bassist of Uriah Heep.
Helmut Köllen May 3, 1977 Carbon monoxide poisoning. Bassist with 1970s German prog rock band Triumvirat.
Chris Bell December 27, 1978 Car crash: ran into a telephone pole. Singer-songwriter and guitarist of power pop band Big Star and solo.
Jacob Miller March 23, 1980 Car crash. Jamaican reggae artist and lead singer for Inner Circle.
D. Boon December 22, 1985 Lying down in the back of a van when it veered off road, he was ejected from the vehicle and broke his neck. Guitarist, lead singer of punk band the Minutemen.
Alexander Bashlachev February 17, 1988 Suicide by jumping. Russian poet, rock musician and songwriter.
Jean-Michel Basquiat August 12, 1988 Speedball overdose. Painter and graffiti artist; formed the band Gray.
Pete de Freitas June 14, 1989 Motorcycle wreck on his way back from filming a music video. Drummer for Echo & the Bunnymen.
Mia Zapata July 7, 1993 Murdered. Lead singer of the Gits.
Kristen Pfaff June 16, 1994 Officially ruled as an accidental heroin overdose. Bass guitarist for Hole and Janitor Joe.
Richey James Edwards c. February 1, 1995 Disappeared; officially presumed dead November 23, 2008. Lyricist and guitarist for Manic Street Preachers.
Fat Pat February 3, 1998 Shot. Rapper and member of Screwed Up Click.
Freaky Tah March 28, 1999 Shot. Popular rapper and member of the rap group Lost Boyz.
Rodrigo Bueno June 24, 2000 Car crash. Argentine cuarteto singer.
Sean Patrick McCabe August 28, 2000 Asphyxiated on vomit after ingesting too much alcohol. Lead singer of Ink & Dagger.
Maria Serrano Serrano November 24, 2001 Plane crash. Background singer for Passion Fruit.
Jeremy Michael Ward May 25, 2003 Heroin overdose. The Mars Volta and De Facto sound manipulator.
Bryan Ottoson April 19, 2005 Prescription drug overdose. Guitarist for American Head Charge.
Valentín Elizalde November 25, 2006 Murdered. Mexican banda singer.
Orish Grinstead c. April 20, 2008 Kidney failure. Founding member of '90s R&B group 702.
Lily Tembo September 14, 2009 Severe gastritis. Zambian musician.

Notes

  1. ^ The 27 Club from BBC Radio 2. Access date June 19, 2007
  2. ^ Malu, Berges Y, "The 27 Club" in Split Magazine, May 20, 2007. Access date 19, June, 2007
  3. ^ a b c Cross, Charles R., "P-I's Writer in Residence Charles R. Cross explores the darker side of 'only the good die young'" in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, February 23, 2007. Access date 19, June, 2007
  4. ^ "The 27 Club: Musicians Who Died At The Age of 27", UpVenue, February 17, 2009
  5. ^ "Heavier than Heaven: A Biography of Kurt Cobain". HyperionBooks.com.
  6. ^ "Before I Get Old: The 27s Made Early Exits", NPR, April 5, 2009
  7. ^ Urban dictionary: White lighter
  8. ^ http://forum.grasscity.com/real-life-stories/81150-white-lighter-bad-luck.html
  9. ^ http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/notorious_murders/celebrity/brian_jones/
  10. ^ The Final Days, Tony Brown excerpt quoted in http://woodstockhendrix.gobot.com/about.html
  11. ^ http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/style/features/joplin.htm. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. ^ "Postcard: Paris". Time. July 19, 2007. Retrieved April 23, 2010.
  13. ^ http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/nirvana/articles/story/5937930/cover_story_the_downward_spiral
  14. ^ "The 27s — Roster"

References

Further reading