
Joni Mitchell
Clouds (1969)
Song: "Both Sides Now"
lyrics |
sound clip (Falkner version) |
sound clip (Joni Mitchell version)
Tracklist:
1. Tin Angel
2. Chelsea Morning
3. I Don't Know Where I Stand
4. That Song About The Midway
5. Roses Blue
6. The Gallery
7. I Think I Understand
8. Songs To Aging Children Come
9. The Fiddle And The Drum
10. Both Sides, Now
Mini - Bio:
When the dust settles, Joni Mitchell may stand as
the most important and influential female recording artist of
the late 20th century. Uncompromising and iconoclastic,
Mitchell confounded expectations at every turn; restlessly
innovative, her music evolved from deeply-personal folk
stylings into pop, jazz, avant-garde and even world music,
presaging the multi-cultural experimentation of the 1980s and
1990s by over a decade. Fiercely independent, her work
steadfastly resisted the whims of both mainstream audiences
and the male-dominated recording industry -- while
Mitchell's records never sold in the same numbers enjoyed by contemporaries like Carole
King, Janis Joplin or Aretha Franklin, none experimented so recklessly with their artistic
identities or so bravely explored territory outside of the accepted confines of pop music,
resulting in a creative legacy which paved the way for performers ranging from Patti Smith
and Chrissie Hynde to Madonna and Courtney Love.
Born Roberta Joan Anderson in
Saskatchewan, Canada on November 7, 1943, she was stricken with polio at the age of
nine; while recovering in a children's hospital, she began her performing career by singing to
the other patients. After later teaching herself to play guitar with the aid of a Pete
Seeger instruction book, she went off to art college, and became a fixture on the Alberta,
Calgary folk music scene. After relocating to Toronto, she married folksinger Chuck
Mitchell in 1965, and began performing under the name Joni Mitchell. A year later the
couple moved to Detroit, Michigan, but separated soon after; Joni remained in the Motor
City, however, and won significant press acclaim for her burgeoning songwriting skills and
smoky, distinctive vocals, leading to a string of high-profile performances in New York City.
There she became a cause celebre among the media and other performers; after she
signed to Reprise in 1967, David Crosby offered to produce her debut record, a self-titled
acoustic effort which appeared the following year. Her songs also found great success with
other singers: in 1968, Judy Collins scored a major hit with the Mitchell-penned "Both
Sides Now," while Fairport Convention covered "Eastern Rain" and Tom Rush recorded
"The Circle Game."
Thanks to all of the outside exposure, Mitchell began to earn a strong
cult following; her 1969 sophomore effort Clouds reached the Top 40, while 1970's Ladies
of the Canyon sold even better on the strength of the single "Big Yellow Taxi." It also
included her anthemic composition "Woodstock," a major hit for Crosby, Stills, Nash and
Young. Still, the commercial and critical approval awarded her landmark 1971 record Blue
was unprecedented: a luminous, starkly confessional set written primarily during a European
vacation, the album firmly established Mitchell as one of pop music's most remarkable and
insightful talents.
Predictably, she turned away from Blue's incandescent folk with 1972's
For the Roses, the first of the many major stylistic turns she would take over the course
of her daring career. Backed by rock-jazz performer Tom Scott, Mitchell's music began
moving into more pop-oriented territory, a change typified by the single "You Turn Me On
(I'm a Radio)," her first significant hit. The follow-up, 1974's classic Court and Spark, was
her most commercially-successful outing: a sparkling, jazz-accented set, it reached the
Number Two spot on the U.S. album charts and launched three hit singles -- "Help Me,"
"Free Man in Paris" and "Raised on Robbery."
After the 1974 live collection Miles of Aisles,
Mitchell emerged in 1975 with The Hissing of Summer Lawns, a bold, almost
avant-garde record which housed her increasingly complex songs in experimental,
jazz-inspired settings; "The Jungle Line" introduced the rhythms of African Burundi drums,
placing her far ahead of the pop world's mid-1980s fascination with world music. 1976's
Hejira, recorded with Weather Report bassist Jaco Pastorius, smoothed out the music's
more difficult edges while employing minimalist techniques; Mitchell later performed the
album's first single, "Coyote," at the Band's Last Waltz concert that Thanksgiving.Her
next effort, 1977's two-record set Don Juan's Reckless Daughter, was another ambitious
move, a collection of long, largely improvisational pieces recorded with jazz players Larry
Carlton and Wayne Shorter, Chaka Khan and a battery of Latin percussionists. Shortly
after the record's release, Mitchell was contacted by the legendary jazz bassist Charles
Mingus, who invited her to work with him on a musical interpretation of T.S. Eliot's Four
Quartets. Mingus, who was suffering from Lou Gehrig's disease, sketched out a series of
melodies to which Mitchell added lyrics; however, Mingus died on January 5, 1979 before
the record was completed. After Mitchell finished their collaboration on her own, she
recorded the songs under the title Mingus, which was released the summer after the jazz
titan's passing.
Following her second live collection, 1980's Shadows and Light, Mitchell
returned to pop territory for 1982's Wild Things Run Fast; the first single, a cover of the
Elvis Presley hit "(You're So Square) Baby I Don't Care," became her first chart single in
eight years. Shortly after the album's release, she married bassist/sound engineer Larry
Klein, who became a frequent collaborator on much of her subsequent material, including
synth-driven 1985's Dog Eat Dog, co-produced by Thomas Dolby. Mitchell's move into
electronics continued with 1988's Chalk Mark in a Rain Storm, featuring guests Peter
Gabriel, Willie Nelson, Tom Petty and Billy Idol.Mitchell returned to her roots with
1991's Night Ride Home, a spare, stripped-down collection spotlighting little more than
her voice and acoustic guitar. Prior to recording 1994's Turbulent Indigo, she and Klein
separated, although he still co-produced the record, which was her most acclaimed work in
years. In 1996, she compiled a pair of anthologies, Hits and Misses, which collected her
chart successes as well as under-appreciated favorites. A new studio album, Taming the
Tiger, followed in 1998. Both Sides Now, a collection of standards, followed in early 2000.
- by Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
© 1999 AEC One Stop Group, Inc.
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