Episode Transcript
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The following podcast may not befor all listeners.
Listener discretion is advised. 27 may just be a number to most,
but to some, it's a deadly countdown, A curse, if you will,
that has claimed some of music'sbrightest stars.
They burned too bright, lived too fast, and all shared one
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haunting detail. They drew their final breaths at
age 27 M whisper of white lighters found clutched in their
cold hands. Others speak of dark packs,
talent and fame traded for a tragically short timeline.
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Jimi Hendrix, Jim Morrison, KurtCobain, Amy Winehouse, to name a
few. Their voices silenced, forever
frozen and eternal Youth at 27. Coincidence.
Perhaps the skeptics blame the excesses of fame, the pressures
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of stardom, and the demons that chase those who dare to shine
too brightly. But in this episode, we dive
deeper into the shadows of the 27 Club, where talent and
tragedy dance their final waltz.I'm your host, Anne, and you're
listening to Unexplained Realms.I hope you join me in the
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unraveling of the dark threads connecting these legendary
artists in death, and ask the question that haunts us all.
Is there something more sinisterbehind these coincidental
deaths? They say a flame burns brightest
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just before it's extinguished, and that flame went out at
exactly 27 for an eerily specific group of musicians.
Blues musician Robert Johnson was the first to join the club.
He died on August 16th, 1938, just shortly after his 27th
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birthday. Long before his fame, some will
say Robert Johnson made a deal with the devil on a moonless
Mississippi night. The story whispered like a
prayer in reverse. It tells of a mediocre guitarist
who disappeared into the darkness at a crossroads where
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crickets fall silent and shadowsmove like smoke.
Johnson waited there at midnight.
There, they say, a tall dark figure emerged from the gloom,
took Johnson's guitar, plated with fingers like black thorns,
and handed it back, gifting Johnson amazing talent.
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When Johnson returned to the Juke joints, his fingers danced
across the strings like possessed things, drawing sounds
that made old men cross themselves and women shiver.
For the next 5 years, he paintedthe Delta Blues with songs that
spoke of hell hounds and walkingwith the Devil.
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Then in 1938, at age 27, the bill to the Devil came due.
One flirtitious glance at the wrong woman at a bar, one poison
bottle of whiskey, and three days of death coming slowly.
The woman happened to be the wife of the bar owner.
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There is speculation that he wasoffered an open bottle of
whiskey that night and drank straight from it.
There's no official cause of death, as there was no autopsy.
They never marked his grave, hismusic, those dark, haunting
melodies that sound like they were pulled from somewhere
beneath the world. They live on, carrying whispers
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of the crossroads deal in every note.
As we move forward in time and lurk within the shadows of
rock'n'roll history, there lies a tale as dark as the London
Knights that birthed The RollingStones.
Brian Jones, the band's Golden Hair founder, blazed like a
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meteor across the 60s music scene before violently spinning
out of control as drugs and alcohol tightened their grip.
His brilliance began to fade. The band he created watched him
unravel until finally, they did the unthinkable.
They cut him loose, replacing him with Mick Taylor.
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But the real tragedy was yet to come.
On a warm July 9th in 1969 at his Sussex farmhouse, Jones
lifeless body was pulled from his swimming pool.
The official story? A rock star who partied too
hard, Another victim of excess. The whispers of something more
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sinister have echoed through thedecades.
Some say Jones met a violent endthat night at the hands of a
disgruntled former employee witha score to settle.
Like Jones himself, the truth remains submerged in mystery, a
dark footnote in rock history that still haunts those who
remember that fateful summer night.
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Official verdict shifted like a changing wind on the coroner's
report from drowning to the morecryptic death by a misadventure.
But whispers of murder have echoed through the decades since
that sultry July night in 1969. Hours before his body was found
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floating in the illuminated waters, Jones had been hosting
one of his typical alcohol and drug soaked gatherings.
But two men from that fateful evening would forever be haunted
by suspicion. Frank Thorogood, a construction
worker, had been renovating the East Sussex estate and Tom
Kellock, the Stones chauffeur who first discovered Jones's
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lifeless body. Earlier that day, Jones and
Thorogood had clashed over money, a seemingly mundane
dispute that would later take ondarker implications.
The same hands I had argued withJones would later pull his body
from the pool, as Thorogood claimed, to assist in the
recovery. But it was Kellogg's presence
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that night, the chauffeur who somehow became the 1st to find
his body, that has kept conspiracy theorists whispering
for over a half a century. Like many rock'n'roll tragedies,
the truth sank to the bottom of the pool that night, leaving a
swirl of unanswered questions and suspicious glances.
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In the fading days of summer 1970, the Blues lost one of its
most distinctive voices. Allen, Blind.
Owl Wilson, the heart and soul of the band Canned Heat, was
found dead in a sleeping bag behind a bandmate's home.
The official cause was an overdose, but like so many
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stories from the era, the whole truth remains shrouded in
uncertainty. Wilson wasn't your typical Blues
musician. His high, ethereal voice and
masterful guitar work had helpedcraft hits like On the Road
Again, songs that became anthemsof the Woodstock generation.
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But behind that musical brilliance lurked a darkness
that few understood. Depression haunted him like an
ever present shadow, and he'd already tried once to escape its
grip by ending his life. That September night left
questions that would never be answered.
Was it a deliberate final act orsimply a tragic accident?
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Those who knew him saw both possibilities.
A gifted musician who could findjoy in music but pain in living.
His death at just 27 added another name to what would
become an eerily significant agein rock history, joining others
who would follow him into the void.
Within months, the last night ofJimi Hendrix's life played out
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like a dark Blues song in the basement of a London flat.
In those early morning hours of September 18th, 1970, the man
who made guitars weep was spending time with his
girlfriend, Monica Danneman, drinking wine and fighting
insomnia in the way that would ultimately kill him.
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Vesperax was no ordinary sleeping pill, each tablet
packed enough sedative to knock anyone out.
Hendrix, either not knowing or not caring, took nine of them.
It was a deadly miscalculation for a man whose relationship
with substances had always been as reckless as his guitar solos
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were precise. The math was brutal. 1 Vesperax
was a normal dose. 9 was an avalanche waiting to happen.
When it hit his system, they didexactly what they were designed
to do. They shut everything down.
But they didn't just bring sleep, they brought the kind of
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silence that not even the loudest Marshall Stack could
wake him from. The details that followed read
like a Horror Story. Red wine in his lungs, vomit in
his Airways, and an ambulance that came too late.
The greatest guitarist of his generation, the man who rewrote
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the rules of what an electric guitar could do, died face up on
a basement bed in a foreign country, another brilliant light
snuffed out at 27. The music world hadn't even
finished The Morning, Alan Wilson, and now Hendrix was gone
too, leaving behind a legacy of sound that would echo through
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the decades and questions about those final hours that would
never fully be answered. October 4th, 1970 started like
any other day at the Landmark Motor Hotel in Hollywood.
Janis Joplin laid down one of her most haunting tracks, A
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Woman Left Lonely. The title itself now feels like
a cruel prophecy, a final whisper of what was to come.
That evening, Janis did what Janis always did.
She turned to heroin. The needle marked her arm for
the last time in that hotel room, a room that would become
more famous than its modest walls deserved.
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Something felt wrong when Janicedidn't show up at Sunset Sound
Studios, her Rd. manager, John Cook.
I've been around long enough to know her rhythms and understand
that there was a pattern even inher chaos.
The dreads started building whenhis calls to Room 105 of the
Landmark Motor Hotel went unanswered.
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What Cook found when he finally got to her room would haunt him
forever. Janice was lying between the bed
and the night stand. She was wearing a short
nightgown and there was change in her hand from the cigarette
machine from the night before. This was a mundane detail that
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made the scene far more surreal.The needle marks on her arm told
a story the authorities were alltoo familiar with.
Another musician, another heroinoverdose.
But pieces of the puzzle didn't fit.
Janice had a broken nose and blood all over her face, the
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coins in her hand, and there wasa pack of cigarettes in the
other. The official cause of death was
stamped and filed. Heroin overdose, another
casualty of the lifestyle. But for those who knew her, who
understood the peculiar timing and circumstances, questions
lingered. The official story always seemed
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too neat, too convenient, just another rock star overdose and a
year already drowning in them. But her best friend Peggy
Caserta, who knew Janice's demons and delights better than
most, painted a different picture in her memoir, one that
trades needles and hot shots fora simple, brutal accident.
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According to Caserta, that nightat the Landmark Motor Hotel
ended with a stumble in the dark, the sequence she describes
as painfully ordinary. Janice, returning from the
vending machine, cigarettes in hand, loses her balance.
The fall is quick and violent. Her nose breaks against the
bedside table. And in that moment, fate turns
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on the smallest of pivots. There's no dramatic overdose.
There's no dealer's revenge, just gravity and bad luck
conspiring in the worst possibleway.
She believed it was asphyxia brought on by a fall that left
the Texas tornado unable to breathe, alone in Room 105 while
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Los Angeles slept around her. The truth of that night died
with Janice. But Caserta's version haunts
differently than the official narrative.
There's something almost unbearable about its simplicity,
that a force of nature like Janis Joplin could be stopped by
something as mundane as a stumble in the dark.
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No grand exit, no poetic justice, just a broken nose and
silence. Where there used to be music,
there is 1971. Jim Morrison was no longer the
lizard king who could do anything.
The leather pants had been replaced by loose fitting
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clothes that hit a swollen frame, and the swagger that once
commanded stages had dissolved into something slower.
The City of Light was supposed to be his escape, a place to
shed the skin of rock stardom and rediscover the poet within.
Instead, it became his final act.
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In the bars of the Morais district, where he'd become a
regular fixture, patrons watchedthe former sex symbol transform
into something else entirely. Some say he was running from
fame, Others insisted he was running toward death.
On July 3rd, the mystery that would haunt rock history
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unfolded in an apartment. In his girlfriend Pamela
Gorson's version, Morrison had been coughing up blood,
complaining of chest pains. He took a bath and she found him
there, lifeless, in the tub. No autopsy, no American embassy
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notification, just a death certificate citing heart failure
and a burial so quick it sparkeddecades of conspiracy theories.
But what really happened in thatParis apartment?
Some say heroin. Others point to the CIA, or a
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massive cover up, or even that Morrison faked his death.
The truth disappeared into the Paris night along with his last
breath. Without an autopsy, proper
investigation, the final chapterof James Morrison became a blank
page for everyone to write theirown ending.
What we do know is this. Somewhere in a Paris cemetery
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lies a rock God who burned too bright and felt too fast.
His grave is marked with graffiti and empty wine bottles,
offerings from those still searching for answers.
The headstone is in Greek, true to your own spirit, it says.
Perhaps that's the only epitaph that matters for a man who lived
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and died on his own terms, leaving behind one of rock's
greatest mysteries. At the age of 27, in the hazy,
smoke filled clubs of 1960s San Francisco, a man they called
Pigpen helped birth what would become the Grateful Dead.
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Ronald Mckernan was his real name, but that didn't matter
much. He was Pigpen to everyone who
knew him, a Blues man swimming in the sea of psychedelia while
his bandmates chased cosmic revelations through LSD and
other mind bending substances. Pigpen's poison of choice was
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simpler, darker whiskey. Straight and merciless, the
bottle became his companion and his executioner.
By 1971, his liver was crying uncle and doctors delivered
their ultimatum, stop drinking or die.
But the demons that lived in those whiskey bottles had
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already carved too deep a home in his soul.
On March 8th, 1973, the Reaper finally caught up with Pigpen.
They found him alone. His life ended brutally by a
gastrointestinal hemorrhage. A final and bloody farewell from
years of hard living. Today, he rests beneath the
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California sun at Alta Mesa Memorial Park in Palo Alto,
another cautionary tale in rock's long history of beautiful
disasters. In 1967, the raw, primitive
heartbeat of punk rock began to pulse when Dave Alexander joined
forces with Iggy Pop and the Ashton Brothers to birth the
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group the Stooges. His bass line crawled through
their earliest songs like a darkundercurrent, helping forge the
blueprint for a musical revolution.
But beneath the surface, Alexander was already dealing
with demons. The bottle became his master,
his destroyer. On a warm night, August 1970, he
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stumbled on the stage, too wasted to remember how to play,
and marked his final bow with the Stooges.
The music died for him that night, but the drinking raged
on. Five years later, his body
finally surrendered to the poison that had become his
closest companion. February 1975, in a sterile
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hospital room. Pneumonia and pancreatitis tore
through his ravaged body, ultimately taking his life.
Another musician consumed by thedarkness.
I had once fueled his art. Another cautionary tale
whispered in dive bars and backstage rooms.
The bass lines fell silent, but the warning echoed on.
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Eatham's story reads like a Greek tragedy set against the
backdrop of 1970's Rock, his badfingers, golden voice and guitar
virtuoso. He should have been living the
dream. Instead, he found himself
trapped in a nightmare of betrayal and despair
orchestrated by the very people who were supposed to protect the
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band's interests. The music industry showed its
darkest face to him and Badfinger.
While their melodies soared on the airwaves, their bank
accounts lie empty, bled dry by vultures and business suits.
Stan Polly, their manager, proved to be the most venomous
of them all, a puppet master whodanced with their finances until
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Warner Brothers finally saw through his toxic charade.
But by then, the damage was done.
On a cold night in 1975, just three days shy of his 28th
birthday, Ham made his final walk to his garage.
There, beneath the weight of theshattered dreams and financial
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ruin, he penned his last lyrics,a note to his pregnant wife and
son, telling them of his love. His parting words seared truth
into the paper, blaming Stan Polly for his death.
Then, in the darkness of the garage, Eatham joined the ranks
of rock's fallen angels. Another artist destroyed don't
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buy drugs or excess but by the cruel machinery of the music
business itself. The 27 Curse retreated into its
darkness for a while, but grew hungry in 1989.
Pete Defreitas, the thundering heartbeat behind Echo and the
Bunnymen, became its next unwitting member.
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Like a dark prophecy fulfilled, the curse had climbed.
Morrison, Hendricks, Joplin and many others again reached out
its skeletal fingers. When fate struck, Defreitas rode
his motorcycle through misty morning air.
The collision was brutal, final.Another brilliant flames snuffed
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out on the altar of rock's cruelest tradition.
The dramas fell silent, and the Bunnymen would never be quite
the same. In the end, Pete joined that
haunting pantheon of artists, frozen forever in their prime.
April in Seattle always feels like drowning.
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The rain doesn't fall so much asit hangs in the air.
In 1994, the rain seemed heavierthan usual, as if the city
somehow knew what was coming. Kurt Cobain's body was found on
April 8th in the greenhouse above his garage on Lake
Washington Blvd. He was 27 years old.
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The shotgun lay across his chestlike a final embrace.
Next to him, a note written in red ink with the words borrowed
from Neil Young. It's better to burn out than to
fade away. But Cobain didn't burn out.
He exploded, leaving fragments of himself scattered across a
generation. In the days before, he had
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escaped from a rehab facility inLos Angeles, bought a plane
ticket back to Seattle and wandered the city like a ghost.
Security cameras caught glimpsesof him in various neighborhoods,
each sighting like a photograph of a man slowly disappearing.
The autopsy would later reveal high concentrations of heroin
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and traces of Valium in his bloodstream.
Some say it was too much heroin for someone to be able to pull a
trigger. Others point to inconsistencies
in the investigation. But in the end, the official
verdict remained suicide. The greenhouse where they found
him became a site frequented by fans until it was demolished in
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1996. Now all that remains is a bench
in a nearby park, covered in graffiti messages.
In 2011, Amy Winehouse joined this tragic fellowship.
Like those before her, she burned too bright, too fast.
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Her last performance, stumbling on a Belgrade stage, seems less
like a concert and more like a dark premonition.
They found her in Camden Square on a sticky July afternoon in
2011. The London heat had turned her
beloved Camden Town into a brickand asphalt pressure cooker.
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Amy Winehouse lie there, anotherfallen star in the constellation
of the Cursed. The empty vodka bottles told a
story she'd been writing for years. 3 scattered around her
bed like glass, soldiers standing guard over their fallen
queen. Her tiny frame, barely 95 lbs,
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had finally surrendered to the war she'd been fighting in
public for years. The tabloids had their cameras
ready. They'd been rehearsing for this
ending since her first stumble out of a Camden pub.
The girl with the beehive hair and the voice that could make
angels weep had joined an exclusive club nobody wanted to
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be in. They say the signs were there.
The cancelled shows in Belgrade where she swayed on stage, too
drunk to remember her lyrics. The night's her impossible voice
could scrape the sky and dig into the Earth.
Score in the same breath, cracked and faltered.
London watched its daughter destroy herself in slow motion
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through the lenses of 1000 paparazzi cameras.
Within hours, her Camden house became a shrine.
Fans left bottles of wine, cigarettes and flowers offerings
to a soul who sang about refusing rehab and meant it.
The autopsy would later reveal five times the legal driving
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limit of alcohol in her Officially, she died of alcohol
poisoning, but the coroner labeled it death by
misadventure. They called it that, as if there
was anything adventurous about drinking yourself to death.
She was alone except for the demons that had been her
faithful companions. I know you're wondering why I
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haven't discussed the white lighter conspiracy surrounding
the 27th club. That's because I couldn't find
any proof that is actually true.But I did find out that the BIC
style lighters didn't even existwhen Jimi Hendrix and Janis
Joplin died. BIC didn't introduce them until
the 1970s. Kurt Cobain was not carrying
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when when they found him in the greenhouse, and neither was Jim
Morrison in Paris. Perhaps the 27 Club is just pure
pattern seeking in chaos. Humans love finding order and
randomness and connections and coincidence.
Some whisper about darker forces.
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Ancient cultures believe 27 represented a dangerous
spiritual transition, the third cube of three, a number heavy
with mystical significance. Others say that it's the
rock'n'roll lifestyle catching up with troubled artists at
their peak. What's most unsettling is that
the statistical probability of so many influential musicians
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dying at exactly 27 defies normal odds.
We're not talking about average musicians here, either.
These individuals were generational talents and voices
that defined their eras. Though something to consider,
many 27 club members reported strange experiences sometime in
their lifetime. Jim Morrison claimed he had
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witnessed a car accident in the desert as a child and the spirit
of a dying Native American jumped into his soul.
Kurt Cobain had reoccurring dreams about dying at 27, and
Johnson's deal with the Devil atthe Crossroads remains one of
music's most enduring legends. But for now, I'll leave this to
the unexplained realms, and I'llleave you with the William Blake
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quote that inspired the name forJim Morrison's band, The Doors.
In the universe, there are things that are known and things
that are unknown in between our doors.