Cover art for Hey Joe by The Music Machine
Dec. 31, 19661 viewer

Hey Joe Lyrics

Hey Joe, where you goin’ with that gun in your hand?
Hey Joe, where you goin’ with that gun in your hand?
I'm gonna kill my woman
She's been seen with another man
I'm gonna kill my woman
She's been seen with another man

Hey Joe, do you think you'll ever die?
Hey Joe, now do you think you'll ever die?
I don't believe in money
Fortune, fame, or dirty lies
I don't believe in money
Fortune, fame, or dirty lies

Hey Joe, tell me where you're gonna go?
Hey Joe, tell me where, where you're gonna go?
I guess I'll take my life
Down in Mexico
I guess I'll take my life
Down in Mexico

Hey Joe, you can't die until your time
Hey Joe, oh, you can't die until your time
Death is the glove
That fits the hand of time
I say that death is the glove
That fits the hand of time
Hey Joe, hey
Hey Joe, hey, hey Joe
Too soon, I say it's too soon, too soon, too soon
Too soon, I say hey, hey Joe

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About

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Genius Annotation

‘'Hey Joe’‘ is the closing track on the Music Machine LP “(Turn on) The Music Machine. Much to the disapproval of Sean Bonniwell, his original material had to compete with dispensable cover versions of "Cherry, Cherry”, “Taxman”, “See See Rider”, and “96 Tears”, all chosen by their record label with an expectation that the well-known songs would increase record sales. One interpretation voluntarily selected by the band was this slow, moody, fuzz-laden arrangement of “Hey Joe” which bears a strong resemblance to Jimi Hendrix’s later version.

Bonniwell first heard the folk standard in 1962 at a club in Hermosa Beach, and was convinced the tune’s tempo was too fast, as he unsuccessfully attempted to persuade the Wayfarers to record a slower version. He revisited the concept with altered lyrics after hearing Tim Rose’s regionally successful rendition in early 1966. The throaty vocals, most evidently on “Hey Joe”, Bonniwell blames on recording “the Turn On album after a 30-day tour. Mark (Landon)’s fingers were literally bleeding. I could hardly even speak, much less sing”

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Credits
Producer
Recorded At
RCA Studios, Los Angeles, California
Release Date
December 31, 1966
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