Cher recorded a version of "Hey Joe" on Imperial Records in late 1966, which peaked at number 94 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart. It was included on her 1967 album,
With Love, Chér. An
AllMusic review noted that her version "makes for some fun" but was "not so spectacular" and "clearly the wrong material for this great singer."
Cash Box praised the "outstanding vocal showing from Cher (as usual)" and said the track "combine[s] considerable impact for a pop market barnstorming", also noting the "most appealing delivery of a lyric in a long while" and a "smashing blues-rock side". French singer
Johnny Hallyday covered the song in French in 1967. His version reached No. 2 in Wallonia (French-speaking Belgium). for number of simultaneous guitarists.
Marmalade recorded a version of the song in 1968 because they needed a B-side to their single "Lovin' Things" in a hurry, and because they thought it was a traditional song and as such, the band would get the songwriting royalties from it. Marmalade guitarist
Junior Campbell stated in interview that "Jimi Hendrix's version had already sold about 200,000 copies and then we sold about 300,000 on the flip of 'Lovin' Thing'. But then the following year, the bloke who'd written the bloody song suddenly turned up out of the woodwork!". The song was one of several on the album that parodied the fashionable
hippie lifestyle. Lyrics in Zappa's version included "Hey punk, where you goin' with that flower in your hand?/Well, I'm goin' up to Frisco to join a psychedelic band." It was recorded at a slower tempo and included as track 8 on the album
Shades of Deep Purple (1968) by
Deep Purple.
Wilson Pickett released a version of the song that reached No. 59 on the US Hot 100 in August 1969, No. 29 on the US R&B chart, and No. 42 on the Canadian
RPM magazine chart.
Patti Smith released a cover of "Hey Joe" as the A-side of her first single, backed with "
Piss Factory", in 1974. Her version is unique in that she includes a brief and salacious monologue about fugitive heiress
Patty Hearst and her kidnapping and participation with the
Symbionese Liberation Army. Smith's version portrays Hearst as Joe with a "gun in her hand". In 1992,
gothic metal/
doom metal band
Type O Negative released a version (entitled "Hey Pete", after the band's vocalist's name) on their pseudo-live album
The Origin of the Feces.
The Make-Up recorded a version for their 1999 album
Save Yourself. In 1996, Brazilian
alternative rock band
O Rappa released a Portuguese version of the song on their second album
Rappa Mundi, featuring
rapper Marcelo D2 from Brazilian
rap band
Planet Hemp. Former
Led Zeppelin singer
Robert Plant recorded a longer and brooding version for his 2002 album
Dreamland. A version of the song was recorded by
Charlotte Gainsbourg for the soundtrack of the 2013 art film
Nymphomaniac. In
Wrocław,
Poland, several records were set for mass performances of "Hey Joe". The latest was on May 1, 2023, when 7,967 guitarists played the song outdoors. ==Charts==