Songs of the folk tradition can have long umbilical cords stretching back hundreds of years. (This one is over 800 years old.) More recently, a song like Streets of Laredo has a musical and lyrical DNA that can
This is also the history of Hey Joe, though
And while the family tree may not be nearly as leafy as Streets of Laredo, thanks to attorneys and publisher privateers, Joe’s paternity was also forced into the possession of a stepfather with one name: Billy Roberts, a California-based folkie who’d register the song’s copyright in 1962.
Then comes Dino Valenti: Best known as the composer of The Youngblood’s Let’s Get Together (still a much-used song for period soundtracks) and Quicksilver Messenger Service’s Fresh Air, Valenti would be sent to Folsom Prison from a police shakedown and a marijuana possession charge. To pay for his defense, Valenti sold the rights to Let’s Get Together for $100. While at Folsom, Valenti would meet Billy Roberts who at the time was playing with Johnny Cash’s band when he famously played there. Valenti would talk Roberts into transferring the rights to Hey Joe to help him woo the parole board with his status as a working musician. The ruse worked and Valenti was released and soon would be peddling the song to Los Angeles record companies. Mira Records would be the first to buy.
At Mira Records, and the reason we know the song at
After Hendrix, the tale of the gun-wielding rake of the song would receive many injustices from
And then in 2002, Robert Plant and his rootsy outfit Strange Sensation offered a revitalized and reductive slow-burn take of the erstwhile overworked jewel. In Plant’s retelling, the circle of fifths refrain was diluted, droning and other non-bluesy elements were offered, and a nod of tribute to the Stratocaster of Hendrix. All coming together to
After 55 years – and 36 after Hendrix – dusky Joe once again is fired from a gun worthy of his caliber.
And Billy Roberts; the father no one remembers:
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