Overdosing in the World of Sound
I. J. Samson
St. John's, Newfoundland
By Jenni M. (Grade 9)
Drugs and musicians walk hand in hand down the
super highway most of us call life. One pill induces sleep, another repels
it. Some drugs just keep them alive.
I don't mean to say all performers are dropping
and snorting but it seems like a whole lot of them are. Mixing drugs and
overdosing is a sure way to find trouble and, eventually, the Big ole
Elevator to the Sky. A huge number of legends have died because they overdosed.
Stupid way to die, though, some people, like kids, think it's the best way.
Could be, but I think I'll pass. I'll fill you in on some of the losses
music has encountered thanks to the underground market of illegal and prescription
drugs.
Janis
Joplin died when she overdosed on heroin, which
was then complicated by alcohol. Born 1943 in Port Arthur, Texas, Janis
had a difficult adolescence. She didn't make friends easily in her early
life. She always felt alone and, having been overweight and acne prone,
it didn't help. After dropping out of college, Janis had gotten hooked
on speed. She started to sing in low-scale blues joints, wailing out her
mournful but extraordinary voice. This was the small start that led to
her being labelled as the greatest white female blues singer who ever
lived. She also sang at Woodstock. Joplin was working on her album "Pearl"
when she was taken away from us. October 4, 1970, Janis was found dead
in her Los Angeles hotel.
 's
death was a complicated one. Jimi liked women, music and good times. His
greatest accomplishments include the hits "Hey Joe" and "Purple
Haze". He was in bed when his girlfriend, Monika Nanneman, tried to
wake him and found that Hendrix
was unconscious. An ambulance was called to their
London apartment and took Jimi to St. Mary Abott's hospital. He was D.O.A.
There was controversy that James Marshall ( Hendrix's real name) had died
from Seconol, a drug traced in his blood, or from choking on his vomit
while he slept. Possibly, it was the combination of the two but, in any
case, Jimi Hendrix remains dead.
Shannon
Hoon threw away his life on October 20, 1995,
in the back of his tour bus as he overdosed on coke and heroin. He had
an infant son, Nico Blue, a woman who loved him, and a great place in a
band called Blind Melon. Hoon had entered the Betty Ford clinic several
times before realizing he had a problem but with no improvement. He was
usually high during his performances, including his Woodstock '94 gig,
and was thrown out at the '94 American Music Awards for being intoxicated.
Hoon was a heavy drinker, like Janis Joplin, and enjoyed psilocybin, shrooms,
and weed. He was a fine vocalist anyway. Blind Melon's smash "No
Rain" went up on the Top Ten on America's Billboard chart. In front
of Tipitina's, a resting post for the band (somewhere in the States), Shannon
died. Maybe it would have been easier for him to rehabilitate if his manager
hadn't supplied Hoon with his drugs. How is one person supposed to cope
with an addiction when the substance is being given to him and he is asked
to take it without wanting it?
I left out one important figure in this essay,
Kurt Cobain, because he has been totally exploited. Everyone has heard
enough about Kurt. Put him to rest. I conclude by saying it's not my place
to tell people how to run their lives. I think, in the public eye, stars
should not flaunt their drug habits, for they are idols to many people.
Many others compare themselves to these famous persons and try to be just
like them. It does not matter if it's Sprite or speed they're advertising,
the media will soak it in and eat it up. It's sad when you see others thinking
it's all right to kill themselves because so-and-so committed suicide down
in L.A. last week. Overdosing is not as great as it looks.
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