Happy Birthday Joni Mitchell!

Today is the birthday of Joni Mitchell. To be honest, I do not have a lot of her music on my iPod, but of course I have the outstanding album Blue (1971) and know many of her songs. Mitchell was born in Fort MacLeod, Alberta, Canada in 1943. She had polio as a child, resulting in a hand impairment that led her to experiment with non-traditional guitar tunings. She was later named the greatest female guitarist of all time by Rolling Stone magazine.
Joni Mitchell Big Yellow Taxi

Mitchell’s album Ladies of the Canyon (1970) includes the song “Big Yellow Taxi,” which was a hit in Canada, Australia, and the UK, but was not a hit in the U.S. when originally released. Mitchell released a live version of the song several years later that had more success in the U.S. but the most successful version of the song was a cover by the Counting Crows with Vanessa Carlton released more than three decades after Mitchell’s original.

The song’s most famous line was inspired by an actual event. Mitchell was visiting Hawaii when she opened the curtains in her hotel room in the morning to see beautiful mountains. She later recalled, “Then, I looked down and there was a parking lot as far as the eye could see, and it broke my heart … this blight on paradise. That’s when I sat down and wrote the song.”

“Big Yellow Taxi” mirrors the growing concern with the environment during the 1970s. For example, the song refers to the pesticide DDT, which was banned in the U.S. three years after the song was released:

Hey farmer farmer,
Put away that DDT now;
Give me spots on my apples,
But leave me the birds and the bees.

The song is brilliant in that it is not just a song about DDT. Mitchell ties together the environmental concerns with a personal story about “a big yellow taxi” that took away her “old man.” Although it is unclear from the song whether she lost her father or a lover, the message is clear. “That you don’t know what you’ve got / Til it’s gone.” The lesson works both for our personal lives and for the world.

Unfortunately, Joni Mitchell, who suffers from Morgellon’s syndrome, does not record or perform anymore. While many of us might not have known what we had until it was gone, at least we can still watch old performances.

Above is a live performance of “Big Yellow Taxi,” which Mitchell used to close her set at the 1970 Isle of Wight Festival.

What is your favorite Joni Mitchell song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    This Week in Pop Culture Roundup (Nov. 5, 2011)

    While you were too absorbed wondering whether or not Kim Kardashian’s wedding was a sham and in pondering the prospects of Herman Cain in light of the sexual harassment allegations, here are some of the pop culture stories you might have missed this week. Check out the links below.

    Movies

    FDR
    "An army without leaders is like a foot without a big toe." -- Stripes

    John Goodman and Justin Timberlake are in cast of upcoming Coen Brothers film about the 1960s folk scene, Inside Llewyn Davis.

    We have nothing to fear but . . . Bill Murray is playing Franklin D. Roosevelt in an upcoming film.

    Albert Brooks turned down roles in Dead Poets Society, Big, Pretty Woman, and Boogie Nights. Regarding the latter, he was up for the Burt Reynolds role, not the Mark Wahlberg role.

    What’s the story of Terrence Malick’s upcoming untitled film with Ben Affleck (in editing now)?

    The new James Bond film, featuring Javier Bardem as the villain, will be called “Skyfall.” I wonder if Bardem will flip a coin. I also wonder why the New York Daily News story at the link still has Bardem’s name misspelled in the headline a day after posting the story.

    James Franco plans to communicate with Tennessee Williams via Ouija Board.

    New movie “Tower Heist” make use of anger at Wall Street.

    In more serious film news, an Iranian appeals court overturned a sentence of prison and 90 lashes for actress Marzieh Vafamehr for appearing in a film.

    Music

    Director David Lynch is releasing his first music CD. Hear it on NPR.

    Writer-critic Chuck Klosterman wrote an article about the new Metallica and Lou Reed album . . . and how it relates to quarterback Tim Tebow.

    The official version of “Smile” from the Beach Boys was finally released. Also, here and you can stream all 40 tracks. (via @ThatEricAlper)

    Fallon spoofs Bieber. It’s not my baby, baby, baby. . .

    Liz Anderson, writer of several hit country songs for Merle Haggard and others, passed away. She co-wrote “I am a Lonesome Fugitive.”

    Television

    60 Minutes
    commentator Andy Rooney passed away on Friday in New York City. Embedding is disabled, but you may watch his final regular appearance on 60 Minutes here.

    Ellen DeGeneres talked about her experience on American Idol in a new interview.

    Conan O’Brien officiated a gay wedding on his late-night show.

    The U.S. State Department is employing a secret weapon to teach tolerance in Pakistan: Sesame Street. But Elmo leaves Big Bird in U.S.

    What’s the deal with this missing Regis guy?” Jerry Seinfeld will be first guest host on Live! with Kelly.

    What was your favorite story this week? Leave your two cents in the comments.

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    High School Trauma for Pop Stars

    Bob Dylan No Direction Home

    I once saw a story where Christina Aguilera told about her high school prom experience. She already had her first hit with “Genie in a Bottle” and was no longer attending regular classes. But one of Aguilera’s girlfriends found Aguilera a prom date at her old high school. So, Aguilera hoped for a somewhat normal experience for her age of attending prom, just as she was on the border between being a teenage student and pop star.

    Christina Aguilera Genie in a Bottle Everything went well at first. She had fun with her girlfriends and her date. The other students were on the dance floor. Then, the DJ put on “Genie in a Bottle,” and all of her former classmates stopped dancing and went to their seats. Aguilera felt embarrassed and heartbroken.

    I can imagine both sides in the story. There was Aguilera trying to hold onto normalcy for a few hours longer before her life became completely insane, and then she was rejected and scorned by those from whom she sought acceptance. But I also understand teenagers being teenagers and making a stand against someone who had effectively placed herself on another plane, one they would never reach. Therefore, they refused to play a part in some rich and famous person’s fantasy.

    I thought of that story recently when re-watching Martin Scorsese’s Bob Dylan documentary No Direction Home (2005). One of Bob Dylan’s high school classmates told a story about Dylan performing at a high school talent show. Dylan banged on the piano like Jerry Lee Lewis, belting out a rock and roll song. His Minnesota classmates did not know what to think and probably did not react the way the Dylan had hoped. The principal pulled the curtain while Dylan was still singing, thus ending one of the first public performances by the future icon in humiliation.

    Taylor Swift I know we often ascribe too much to childhood events. But I still cannot help speculating how Aguilera’s experience shaped her, just as our high school experiences shaped us. Similarly, in a October 10, 2011 New Yorker article, “You Belong With Me,” Lizzie Widdicombe recounted how Taylor Swift went through a similar period of exile in adolescence when her friends turned on her as she started becoming famous. Despite her success, like Aguilera, she still felt the sting. To get back at the mean girls, during her sophomore year of high school, Swift bought a silver Lexus convertible because in Mean Girls, that was the type of car driven by Regina George, who the girls in Swift’s high school idolized.

    Just as in those cases, I see a little of the teenage Dylan, facing rejection from his principal and peers, standing on the stage with his older self years later in 1966 in Manchester at the Free Trade Hall. As Dylan listened to a crowd booing his conversion from folk music to electric music, he might as well have been playing for his principal and high school classmates when he (or someone in his band) requested, “Play it fuckin’ loud.”

    Dylan found his high school revenge in an expression that was better than buying a car or anything else money can buy. While the lyrics of “Like a Rolling Stone” ask the listener, “How does it feel?,” there is never an answer back from the song’s target. But we know from the roar of the song what the singer is feeling. Redemption.

    Note: The above Free Trade Hall performance later became misidentified as the “Royal Albert Hall” performance. Bonus Trivia Question: What legendary group mentions Royal Albert Hall in a famous song?

    What do you think of these high school stories? Leave your two cents in the comments section.

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    Got My Mind Set on George Harrison

    George Harrison Living in Material World I recently watched the new two-part Martin Scorsese documentary, George Harrison: Living in the Material World. Overall, the documentary is interesting and informative, but often it seemed like the film was giving us hints about the man more than a story. But we can never fully understand a person, so really all we have are hints.

    The film used a lot of George Harrison’s music. Scorsese seems to have a real fondness for “All Things Must Pass,” which is an excellent title song from what is generally considered Harrison’s best post-Beatles work. But for the last part of Harrison’s career, the film gave us a short glimpse of his Traveling Wilbury’s work while completely overlooking his last solo hit, “Got My Mind Set on You.”

    “Got My Mind Set on You,” which appeared on Harrison’s album Cloud Nine (1988) after its release as a single, was Harrison’s last number one single in the U.S. The song, however, was not a Harrison original. It was written by Rudy Clark and was recorded by James Ray twenty-five years earlier in 1962. I love Ray’s version too.

    Maybe Living in the Material World did not use “Got My Mind Set on You” because there was a rights issue. Or maybe Scorsese saw the song as one of Harrison’s lesser works and sees it the same way “Weird Al” Yankovic does.

    Still, I recall in 1987-1988 that the song was a huge hit constantly playing on the radio. Along with the CD and the Beatle-esque “When We Was Fab,” the radio-friendly song was a nice return from Harrison, who had not released an album for more than a decade. The album also led to Harrison recruiting a few friends to record a B-side to one of the songs on Cloud Nine, “This is Love.” And those friends — Bob Dylan, Tom Petty, Jeff Lynne, and Roy Orbison — ended up forming The Traveling Wilburys. While Harrison’s recording of “Got My Mind Set On You” may not be Harrison’s best recording, that is no insult considering the quality of his catalog. And it is an excellent catchy pop song.

    {Note: Harrison made another video for “Got My Mind Set on You” too, intercutting his performance with scenes from a fair arcade.}

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    Werewolves of London

    Werewolf of LondonHappy Halloween! Warren Zevon was late in his career before I became a fan of his music. So my memories of him are mostly of him toward the end of his life. So I especially love seeing him rock out in this performance of the one of the great Halloween songs, “Werewolves of London.”

    Zevon once referred to “Werewolves of London” as “a dumb song for smart people.”  But, of course, it is quite brilliant.   Zevon wrote the song with LeRoy Marinell and Waddy Wachtel, but they had some inspiration from Phil Everly of The Everly Brothers.  Everly suggested the song title to Zevon after watching the 1935 film Werewolf of London, directed by  Stuart Walker and starring Henry Hull, on late-night television.

    Zevon, Marinell, and Wachtel began making up the lyrics for fun, adding in some howling.  Zevon’s wife at the time, Crystal Zevon, wrote down the lyrics.   The next day in the studio, Jackson Browne heard the new song, and he began performing it live years before Zevon got around to releasing it on an album in 1978.

    Upon it’s eventual release, “Werewolves of London” became a Top 40 hit for Zevon.  But according to George Plasketes, the author of a biography about the artist, Zevon initially felt insulted that the record label had selected that song for a single release over other songs Zevon preferred on the Excitable Boy (1978) album.  The label’s choice proved correct, in the sense that “Werewolves of London” became a beloved classic.

    The song even inspired the name for a baseball team in London, Ontario.  And there is that wonderful opening line, “I saw a werewolf with a Chinese menu in his hand.”  This live performance by Zevon is from Oct 1, 1982 at the Capitol Theatre in Passiac, New Jersey.   Check it out.

    But I still cannot get this Tom Cruise image out of my head anytime I hear the song.

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