Shannon Hoon

Singer-songwriter

Birthday September 26, 1967

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Lafayette, Indiana, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1995-10-21, New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. (28 years old)

Nationality United States

#5926 Most Popular

1967

Richard Shannon Hoon (September 26, 1967 – October 21, 1995) was an American singer-songwriter and musician.

Hoon was born on September 26, 1967, in Lafayette, Indiana.

He was raised in the nearby town of Dayton, Indiana, with his older half-sister, Anna and older half-brother, Tim.

His father, Dick Hoon, was a bricklayer and his mother, Nel Hoon, was a manager of a bar in Dayton.

In high school, he played football, wrestled, and was a pole vaulter.

Shannon's musical influences included the Grateful Dead, The Beatles, John Lennon, and Bob Dylan.

1985

After graduating from McCutcheon High School in 1985, Hoon joined a local glam metal band named Styff Kytten, which also featured guitarist Michael Kelsey, bassist Brian Bundy and drummer Barry Koch.

He took on the role of frontman and lead singer of the band.

It was around this time that he wrote his first song and called it "Change".

In 1985, Hoon, 18, left Indiana for Los Angeles.

In Los Angeles, he met musicians Brad Smith and Rogers Stevens at a party.

Smith and Stevens saw Hoon perform his song "Change" acoustically and invited Hoon to play with them.

1990

He was the lead singer of the band Blind Melon from 1990 until his death in 1995.

Christopher Thorn and Glen Graham were then brought into the fold, and by 1990 the five musicians decided to form Blind Melon.

The band was possibly named for a term Smith's father used to describe the neighborhood stoners; or for Blind Melon Chitlin, a character from a Cheech & Chong album.

In 1990, the new bandmates produced a four-song demo tape and subsequently signed a $500,000 recording contract with Capitol Records.

In Los Angeles, Hoon befriended his sister Anna's high school friend Axl Rose.

1991

Rose invited Hoon to join him in the studio where his band Guns N' Roses were recording their albums Use Your Illusion I and Use Your Illusion II (both released in 1991).

Hoon sang backing vocals on several tracks, including "The Garden" and "Don't Cry".

Rose also invited Hoon to appear in the video for "Don't Cry".

1992

In 1992, Blind Melon released their self-titled debut album produced by Pearl Jam producer Rick Parashar.

Blind Melon began touring to promote the album, supporting and opening for acts like BAD II, PIL, Ozzy Osbourne, Guns N' Roses, and Soundgarden over the course of 1992–1993.

1993

In the summer of 1993, the video for the album track "No Rain" was released as a single and featured a young girl, played by Heather DeLoach, in a bee costume, tap dancing to unappreciative audiences.

Blind Melon went multi-platinum.

Hoon and Blind Melon spent the next two years touring.

In 1993, Hoon was arrested for indecent exposure after he undressed onstage and urinated on a fan at a show in Vancouver.

1994

In 1994, Blind Melon appeared at Woodstock '94 where Hoon, allegedly high on LSD, went onstage wearing his girlfriend's white dress.

After taking a hiatus from touring, Blind Melon returned to the studio to record the album Soup in New Orleans.

1995

Soup was released in 1995.

In June 1995, Hoon entered rehab for a month (repeating his May 1994 treatment).

On July 11, 1995, Hoon and his girlfriend, Lisa Crouse, had a daughter named Nico Blue.

In August, Blind Melon planned a tour to support their album Soup.

A counselor was hired to accompany Hoon on the tour but was let go after the first week.

After a disappointing performance at Numbers club in Houston on October 20, Hoon undertook an all-night drug binge.

The next day, Blind Melon was scheduled to play a show in New Orleans at Tipitina's.

The band's sound engineer, Lyle Eaves, went to the tour bus to awaken Hoon for a sound check, but Hoon was unresponsive.

An ambulance arrived, and Hoon was pronounced dead at the scene, at the age of 28.

His death was attributed to a cocaine overdose.

Hoon was buried at Dayton Cemetery in Dayton, Indiana.

His grave is inscribed with a line from Blind Melon's song "Change", the first song he wrote: