[WorldUrbanLegend] 27 Club

Jimi Hendrix

 

The "27 Club" is an unofficial list mainly consisting of popular musicians, as well as artists and other celebrities who died at the age of 27. Although claims of a "statistical spike" in 27-year-old deaths among musicians have been refuted by scientific studies, the general cultural perception of this phenomenon remains, with many celebrities known for their high-risk lifestyles dying at this age.

Membership in this metaphorical "club" is typically mentioned posthumously and is primarily publicized by the media. The only qualification for membership is the age of death.

Between 1969 and 1971, several popular musicians, including Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Jim Morrison, died at the age of 27. This series of incidents garnered some attention at the time, but according to Charles R. Cross, biographer of Hendrix and Kurt Cobain, the concept of the "27 Club" didn't gain traction in the public consciousness until after Cobain's suicide in 1994. Cross argues that the "launch of the club concept" coincided with Cobain's death and the growing influence of emotional celebrity media in popular culture, linking it to a statement by Cobain's mother, Wendy O'Connor, quoted in a local newspaper, The Daily World in Aberdeen, Washington. She stated, "Now he’s gone and joined that stupid club. I told him not to join that stupid club." Many modern journalists interpret her remark as relating to the tragic deaths of famous rock musicians like Hendrix, Joplin, and Morrison, aligning with the views of Cross and rock music urban legend chronicler R. Gary Patterson.

The intended meaning of O'Connor's mention of "that stupid club" is controversial. Eric Segalstad, author of The 27s: The Greatest Myth of Rock & Roll, analyzes how her quote contributed to the popularization of the 27 Club, suggesting that she was actually referring to tragic family issues involving Cobain's two uncles and his great-grandfather. Other modern journalists have connected her statement to recent heroin-related deaths of young rock musicians in Seattle, such as Stephanie Sargent (of 7 Year Bitch) and Andrew Wood (of Mother Love Bone). Cross dismisses the "absurd notion" that Cobain intentionally timed his death to join the 27 Club, noting that Cobain had nearly died from drug overdoses multiple times in the year leading up to his death and had made several suicide attempts.

In 2011, 17 years after Cobain's death, Amy Winehouse passed away at the age of 27, reigniting media interest in the 27 Club. Three years prior, Winehouse's personal assistant Alex Haines stated in the British press that Winehouse, then 25, was afraid of dying at 27 like rock stars such as Jim Morrison and Brian Jones. Haines recounted, "She thought she would join the 27 Club. She said, 'I feel like I’m going to die young.'"

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