So, it turns out I'm not that great at
turning in assignments, like, sometimes, so the Bros and Bro-ettes
here at buffaBLOG decided to let me write a regular “column", where I get to say jokes and swearwords (I hope?). And since my only
loves in this miserable, ephemeral existence are Music and Internet
Comedy Lists, I decided that I would rundown the Five Coolest Rock
Star Deaths in this week's post.
5) Robert Johnson – Faustian Soul Debt
You know the legend of Robert Johnson,
the guy who sold his soul to the devil so that he could bring some
nasty, crunk swagger to the blues. After macking it to a Mississippi
club owner's shorty in 1938, he was poisoned with strychnine-laced
whiskey. Johnson spent days in bed, suffering unimaginable pain,
before the devil finally came and took back what was owed. But if you
look at the evidence – and follow me here, 'cause I've been
watching a lot of Law and Order – it was probably the
unassuming fan in the front row who seemed innocent enough at first
but blah blah blah, clues, blah blah blah, 200-level psychoanalysis,
commercial break... Johnson reminded her of the father who abandoned
her! Executive Producer: Dick Wolf.
Don't hate the player; hate the game.
4) Nick Drake – This One Is Just Sad
Nick Drake was like the Elliott Smith
of the hippie era; his depressing music is all the more depressing
when you know how shit went down. In the early 70s, the jazz-folk
singer-songwriter released three poignant records to virtually no
audience and then resigned himself to isolation for the last four of
his 26 years. In 1974, he was found dead, sprawled naked across his
bed, having overdosed on his own anti-depression medications. He
opens the John Cale-produced song “Hazey Jane II” with the line,
“What will happen in the morning when the world gets so crowded
that you can't look out the window in the morning?” and suddenly
you want to chow down a ton of MAOIs and Xanax bars, too. There were
some bizarre circumstances, though: he committed suicide almost
exactly five years after the release of his debut album, Five Leaves
Left. What's more, his music lives on today partly because he was
championed by actor Heath Ledger, who played Drake in a short film
years later. And, cryptically enough, Ledger was found dead, sprawled
naked across his bed, having overdosed on his own medications in
2008. It's like a bad Shyamalan film.
The D Major cadences give the song a
sense of hope. A false, false, false sense of hope.
3) Randy Rhoads – Flying High Again
A lot of musicians die in bus
accidents. And a lot of musicians die in plane crashes. Only one Rock
Death Genius managed to f*cking pull off both. Rhoads was the
guitarist behind Ozzy Osbourne's brief, early 80's resurgence, and he
penned dozens of the most totally excellent guitar licks ever, and
then crammed them all into one most totally bodacious song (see
below). In 1982, only three years after taking over Tony Iommi's job
of “making Ozzy seem like the reason why people listen to Ozzy,”
he hopped into a plane for some mid-tour hijinks. The pilot decided
it would be most awesome and totally hilarious to swoop down and
scare the rest of the dudes in the tour bus below. He got too close,
and, well, the results were awesome, but not in the good way, and
when you think about it, not all that hilarious.
If you play guitar and you didn't orgasm the first time you heard this, then you don't play guitar.
2) Jay Reatard – Party Monster
On paper, Jay Reatard has one of the
most badass deaths in rock history; the official cause of his 2009
demise was “cocaine toxicity.” The gargantuan amount of coke it
must have taken to bring down this rampaging monster of hectic,
face-punch punk rock was presumably staggering: in the ten years he
was active, he performed on about 70 records with a handful of bands.
Guy was unstoppable, it seems. There was some controversy around the
29-year-old's passing, however, with rumors that Memphis police were
investigating the death as a possible homicide. Whatever. I like to
believe that Reatard died while trying to climb Mount Everest. (Don't
do drugs, kids.)
I get the feeling these guys didn't
indulge in downers.
1) Mark Sandman (Morphine) –
Non-Fat-Person Heart Attack
Legendary low-rock frontman Mark
Sandman died of a heart attack in 1999. Typical death, but when you
play in a band called Morphine, it sort of eliminates the
possibility that your myocardial infarction was the result of too
much cholesterol. The cool thing? He died on stage while performing,
sort of like Dimebag Darrell, but without all the Dimebag Darrell.
Morphine was about to launch into a song when Sandman reportedly told
the audience, “It's a beautiful evening and it's great to stay here
and I want to dedicate a super-sexy song to you,” before falling
over and specifically NOT doing anything super-sexy whatsoever
(unless... no, never mind).
I get the feeling these guys didn't
indulge in uppers.





what about gram parsons!?
or the aforementioned eliot smith? c'mon steve, see where trying to skip meetings gets you? hahaha
All five of these should be Spinal Tap drummers