joni mitchell - blue - poll

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this is pert near impossible.

Mountain Dewm (M@tt He1ges0n), Monday, 7 December 2009 18:18 (sixteen years ago)

"River", because it's coming on Christmas.

Euler, Monday, 7 December 2009 20:18 (sixteen years ago)

'Carey'. Gah, I need to listen to this again, right now.

Gavin in Leeds, Monday, 7 December 2009 20:35 (sixteen years ago)

Little Green breaks my heart every single time.

sonofstan, Monday, 7 December 2009 21:27 (sixteen years ago)

Could vote for any of these, but I'll go with "River."

Action Orientation (Eazy), Monday, 7 December 2009 21:29 (sixteen years ago)

but when he's gone
me and them lonesome blues collide
the bed's too wide
the frying pan's too wide

those lines from "my old man" have always made so much sense to me. definitely one of the contenders for best song not only lyrically but also musically. what a sweet sad melody. it's less sentimental than "little green". but there is a down to earth feeling which makes "my old man" quite special in the course of songs of this album. "the last time i saw richard" is the next song on the subject of leaving. but choosing a best is something impossible, there will be a favourite for each day of the week, a fave for each month of the year, a fave for each decade in your life. did we ever have a thread about the one album you would take to the island?

alex in mainhattan, Monday, 7 December 2009 22:02 (sixteen years ago)

I don't know if I could choose a favourite but I think "The Last Time I Saw Richard" is the one that amazes me the most - it's so, um, dialogic in a Bakhtin sense... she's right about Richard, but he's right about her, and each person's truth is the point where the truth of the other falls down (the fact that the song is not even about a relationship between the two only makes this more interesting).

"He drinks at home now most nights with the TV on and all the house lights left up bright." This could come off as really judgmental but it's not at all, the singer doesn't know if she envies Richard his escape or not, doesn't know if sitting in dark cafes is any more "real".

I'm sceptical of people praising Blue at the expense of other Joni albums but where I think it really is distinct is that it's an album where you can really feel her songwriting changing, reacting to external pressures placed on her. "Little Green" and "My Old Man" are both amazing but they're clearly older songs. With "This Flight Tonight", "A Case Of You" and "The Last Time I Saw Richard" in particular you can feel the whole approach change - that new sense of nervousness, that air of having chosen what she's about to sing at the very moment of singing it, the structuring of everything as a fraught conversation - is it you? is it me?

That's what makes it remarkable - not the confessionalism per se, but the way the album exposes a relationship between feeling and style, Joni having to find new ways to write songs in order to get across the cards James Taylor life has dealt her.

Tim F, Monday, 7 December 2009 22:10 (sixteen years ago)

'carey' for when i'm in a good mood, 'richard' for when i'm not

an error has occurred (electricsound), Monday, 7 December 2009 22:32 (sixteen years ago)

dunno if i'd ever play this record when i'm in a good mood ...

tylerw, Monday, 7 December 2009 22:36 (sixteen years ago)

"will you take me as i am, STRUNG OUT ON ANOTHER MAN"

booming lyric imo

plaxico (I know, right?), Monday, 7 December 2009 23:27 (sixteen years ago)

I'm not sure I could say this about many other albums, but every time someone has quoted a lyric in this thread I've been able to immediately place it in my head, exactly what song it's in, what it sounds like, what I feel about it -- it's like I know every inch of this album intimately.

Mordy, Monday, 7 December 2009 23:29 (sixteen years ago)

But the whole first verse makes up for that. xpost

Action Orientation (Eazy), Monday, 7 December 2009 23:30 (sixteen years ago)

I'll go for Carey for sheer pleasure, Little Green for lyrical elegance.

― Dorian (Dorianlynskey), Monday, December 7, 2009 5:55 PM (5 hours ago) Bookmark Suggest Ban Permalink

p-dog, Monday, 7 December 2009 23:32 (sixteen years ago)

"will you take me as i am, STRUNG OUT ON ANOTHER MAN"

booming lyric imo

^^^^

Tim F, Monday, 7 December 2009 23:34 (sixteen years ago)

The Last Time I Saw Richard

derrrick, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 06:17 (sixteen years ago)

All I Want - how could anyone turn down her persona in this song??

that's not my post, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 06:47 (sixteen years ago)

this is making me reconsider

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-q4foLKDlcE

that's not my post, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 07:41 (sixteen years ago)

^reconsider my vote that is...

that's not my post, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 07:41 (sixteen years ago)

All I Want - how could anyone turn down her persona in this song??

I love the plaintiveness of "I wanna have fun..." - you can almost here a bracketed "is that too much to ask?" afterwards.

Tim F, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 08:35 (sixteen years ago)

it's less sentimental than "little green"

I don't think 'Little Green' is sentimental at all; the gap between the wishes expressed- 'there'll be icicles and birthday clothes and sometimes there'll be sorrow'- and the fact that the narrative voice knows fully the enormity of what is being done and size of the wound being consciously deliberately opened up for both mother and child, mocks the wish as it is expressed. It's an astonishing song because Joni accepts the size of what is being done and doesn't attempt to clothe it in sentiment: she explains the situation but doesn't excuse either herself or the father, but nor, in the strangest most devastating line, does she cloth herself in false guilt: 'you're sad and you're sorry, but you're not ashamed'.......

Even the way it ends, with the little riff repeated an uneven number of times, and the resolving chord coming in slightly off- time and too loud points to this lack of fit between the words said - between anything that words could say - and what is being done.

sonofstan, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 09:05 (sixteen years ago)

Could've sworn we did this already but "All I Want," Carey," and the title track are my shit. I went for "Blue" because I can never tell when it ends.

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 09:23 (sixteen years ago)

"River" is my shit too. And "Richard." And.........

Kevin John Bozelka, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 09:26 (sixteen years ago)

i meant the melody not the lyrics of "my old man" being less sentimental than "little green's". the first chords of "little green" immediately stir up emotion in me, touch something deep inside whereas "my old man" has a more relaxed, more ripe, bluesy down-to-earth vibe.

alex in mainhattan, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 21:09 (sixteen years ago)

i didn't know until recently that this album was a result of being bummed out over james taylor. understandable though. he was one hot junkie.

http://blogs.sltrib.com/burger/uploaded_images/James-Taylor-69374-14-757585.jpg

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 21:24 (sixteen years ago)

there's a recording of them playing live together at some point -- they sound great! Nice blend.

tylerw, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 21:26 (sixteen years ago)

man that live youtube clip...wow....what a talent.

eight woofers in the trunk sb'n down the block (M@tt He1ges0n), Tuesday, 8 December 2009 21:32 (sixteen years ago)

He is pretty dreamy. I think only a couple of the very final songs written are about Taylor though - most of the album predates it. "My Old Man" is about Graham Nash for instance (as a side note, when I first got into this album at about 13, it didn't occur to me that "old man" might be used to describe yr boyfriend, i thought it must mean "father", and was kinda confused by the song as a result). There's also an argument that "A Case Of You" is about Leonard Cohen, though I find that unlikely.

Heaps of For The Roses is about Taylor as well - "See You Sometime", "The Blonde In The Bleachers", "Lessons In Survival".

Tim F, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 21:51 (sixteen years ago)

yeah i meant that the actual "blue" vibe of the album was cuzza james. not all the actual songs.

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 21:57 (sixteen years ago)

man, reading that hotel california book i was really tempted to start writing down whose songs were about who, but it was endless. joni in particular. but all those laurel canyon people really.

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 21:59 (sixteen years ago)

^loved that book. all the stuff about joni was fascinating

an error has occurred (electricsound), Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:13 (sixteen years ago)

I still have to read Hotel California! But I recently read Girls Like Us, about Joni Carole and Carly. That was great.

Tim F, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:14 (sixteen years ago)

i was gonna read girls like us, but someone bought it before i could make up my mind to read it. cuz i sell books. hotel california kinda depressed me. everyone got so gross.

scott seward, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:17 (sixteen years ago)

Do you think 'For The Roses' is a little sidelined?

I love that album every bit as much as Blue, maybe more, but I wonder if it would provoke as much discussion.

MaresNest, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:34 (sixteen years ago)

Also, 'Hotel California' WFT??? at the topless pic of Judee Sill.

MaresNest, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:35 (sixteen years ago)

post (mellow) n00dz

eight woofers in the trunk sb'n down the block (M@tt He1ges0n), Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:40 (sixteen years ago)

i meant the melody not the lyrics of "my old man" being less sentimental than "little green's".

Sorry, should have read your post more carefully.

Until that clip, I'd no idea so much of the record was her playing dulcimer!

sonofstan, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:47 (sixteen years ago)

was just looking at this book -- new, I think: http://www.amazon.com/Will-You-Take-Me-Mitchells/dp/1416559299
my wife's old company published a Joni Mitchell bio a few years ago which was one of the worst things I have ever read. In the intro, the author describes meeting Joni as "like Gaguin meeting Van Gogh!"

tylerw, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 22:59 (sixteen years ago)

Really want to read that book, but it's always been too expensive, considering it's pretty slim.

MaresNest, Tuesday, 8 December 2009 23:04 (sixteen years ago)

Do you think 'For The Roses' is a little sidelined?

Yes. Sandwiched between two masterpieces, it's been overlooked, and the melodic/harmonic density is difficult to absorb in a casual listen (considering that most of these songs are just piano and guitar solo pieces, that's a lot to ask). But "Woman of Heart and Mind," "You Turn Me On," "Barandgrill," "Cold Blue Steel and Fire," and "Lesson in Survival" are just brilliant on first listen too.

Hell is other people. In an ILE film forum. (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 9 December 2009 00:00 (sixteen years ago)

"will you take me as i am, STRUNG OUT ON ANOTHER MAN"

booming lyric imo

OTM.

It's definitely between California and Case of You, but Carey and This Flight Tonight are close behind.

wrapped up, packed up, ribbon with a donk on it (Alex in Montreal), Wednesday, 9 December 2009 01:05 (sixteen years ago)

MMmmm. BUT. The dulcimer on "All I Want" is also made of win.

wrapped up, packed up, ribbon with a donk on it (Alex in Montreal), Wednesday, 9 December 2009 01:05 (sixteen years ago)

"you said love is touching souls / ...surely you touched mine / cause part of you pours out of me / in these lines from time to time"

wrapped up, packed up, ribbon with a donk on it (Alex in Montreal), Wednesday, 9 December 2009 01:07 (sixteen years ago)

"I met a woman / she had a mouth like yours / she knew your devils and your deeds and she said..."

I love these lines, so subtle and evocative - did Joni meet his mother or his sister or...?

Tim F, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 02:03 (sixteen years ago)

I always assumed she met a former lover -- her mouth was like his, ie: his manner of speaking and words had rubbed off on her.

Mordy, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 02:23 (sixteen years ago)

Yeah that's the other interpretation. Or maybe it's Carole King?

Tim F, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 02:29 (sixteen years ago)

do yall think the fact that Joni Mitchell name drops kids reading Rolling Stone & other hippie-era icons in "California" dates the song?

lukevalentine, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 02:56 (sixteen years ago)

Nah. I love those name-drops.

Mordy, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 03:06 (sixteen years ago)

The whole song goes out of its way to carbon-date itself, and not in a bad way - "readin' the news and it sure looks bad / seems they won't give peace a chance / that was just a dream some of us had."

Tim F, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 03:14 (sixteen years ago)

Almost gave River an automatic vote because it's December but I played it all over and the cocoon escape fantasy at the end of Richard blew me away.

dad a, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 03:23 (sixteen years ago)

It's gotta be "River" for me but under the right circumstances I could be tempted by "A Case of You" too.

Sean Carruthers, Wednesday, 9 December 2009 04:29 (sixteen years ago)

^^^ beautiful.

I assume that k3vin hasn’t gotten to Night Ride Home yet and I am very excited about it.

Tim F, Sunday, 1 September 2019 11:25 (six years ago)

k3v's still traveling traveling traveling through her catalog

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 1 September 2019 11:59 (six years ago)

this is obviously a fantastically gut-wrenching break-up record and pretty much exactly what I need right now. I am really into “all I want”, “carey”, and “river” as well, but “a case of you” is the one I keep coming back to. her view of the object of the song seems incredibly complicated, and so verisimilar: the refrain (“I could drink a case of you / and I’d still be on my feet”) seems to suggest a perception of weakness, and even the two times she quotes him (“just before our love got lost you said / ‘I am as constant as the northern star’”) (“you told me: ‘love is touching souls’”), they’re not his words but literary allusions (shakespeare and rilke), which suggests to me a perception of insincerity. but then there’s the end of the second verse: “surely you’ve touched [my soul] / ‘cause part of you pours out of me / in these lines from time to time”. it’s all so very real and, honestly, rude that she would call me out like this


ILM (Alfred I think?) turned me onto Prince's cover of "a case of you". My life has been richer since then.

lefal junglist platton (wtev), Sunday, 1 September 2019 20:13 (six years ago)

Weird, I was eating breakfast and I got "oooh you're a mean old daddy but I like you fine" in my head. My mom was so taken with that song that she fucked off to Greece and lived in a lean-to for a year until my grandfather demanded she come home.

flamboyant goon tie included, Sunday, 1 September 2019 20:26 (six years ago)

prince’s cover is great. I wonder why he omits the first verse...I assume it’s because there’s no way it could be improved upon

k3vin k., Sunday, 1 September 2019 21:05 (six years ago)

what stage of fandom am I in when I’m really into “both sides now”?

k3vin k., Tuesday, 3 September 2019 05:36 (six years ago)

Which version?

Tim F, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 06:07 (six years ago)

Weird, I was eating breakfast and I got "oooh you're a mean old daddy but I like you fine" in my head. My mom was so taken with that song that she fucked off to Greece and lived in a lean-to for a year until my grandfather demanded she come home.

Amazing!

willem, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 07:35 (six years ago)

Which version?

― Tim F, Tuesday, September 3, 2019 2:07 AM (four hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

carly rae jepsen’s

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=97EiUOofOuk

I like both joni versions pretty equally, the main appeal is the lyrics for me

k3vin k., Tuesday, 3 September 2019 10:54 (six years ago)

I've always enjoyed Sarah McLachlan's cover of Blue

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s38dMRb2j6w

MaresNest, Tuesday, 3 September 2019 12:14 (six years ago)

one year passes...

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/06/20/arts/music/joni-mitchell-blue.html

50 Reasons to Love Joni Mitchell’s ‘Blue’
The singer-songwriter questioned everything on her fourth album. Twenty-five musicians speak about the LP’s enduring power on its 50th anniversary.

She produced it herself. There weren’t women producers then. And she didn’t try a lot of different musical arrangements. So it was very singular. There are few albums that change your life. “Blue” came out when I had just turned 16 and it came at this fulcrum of going out of childhood — feeling all the passion of what I wanted to do with my life, and the urgency and the fear and everything, and then “Blue.” This is a weird thing to be a revelation, given my childhood and my family, but I understood for the first time that a woman could be a songwriter. She just laid it out in these almost journalistic lines that were still so poetic, so dark, and I thought, “That’s what I want to do.” I probably would not be a songwriter had it not been for “Blue.” - Rosanne Cash

Indexed, Sunday, 20 June 2021 12:39 (four years ago)

This is even more impressive: https://www.npr.org/2021/06/20/1008271419/joni-mitchell-masterpiece-at-50-her-kind-of-blue

So who you gonna call? The martini police (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 20 June 2021 13:32 (four years ago)

^That Ann Powers is brilliant.

that's not my post, Sunday, 20 June 2021 18:25 (four years ago)

Subscriber exclusive: Joni Mitchell opens up to Cameron Crowe about singing again, lost loves and 50 years of ‘Blue’ https://www.latimes.com/entertainment-arts/music/story/2021-06-20/joni-mitchell-cameron-crowe-50th-anniversary-blue

search term: buttrock (morrisp), Sunday, 20 June 2021 21:15 (four years ago)

‘I wanna talk to you/I wanna shampoo you’ is one of my favourite lyrics of all time

flopson, Monday, 21 June 2021 19:29 (four years ago)

If you haven't already read it, this is a really great essay kind of tangled up in Blue, by the English poet Amy Key. I believe she's now working on a whole book about Joni etc

https://granta.com/a-bleed-of-blue/

Piedie Gimbel, Monday, 21 June 2021 19:59 (four years ago)

these are awesome:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYyyf9rRurc

tylerw, Monday, 21 June 2021 20:18 (four years ago)

will this embed?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KS1lzfDmKL4

brimstead, Monday, 21 June 2021 23:34 (four years ago)

^^the vocals are joni, gorgeous arrangement imo

brimstead, Monday, 21 June 2021 23:35 (four years ago)

Those demoes illustrate what a singular record Blue is in her career - "Hunter" sounds like Ladies of the Canyon, and "River", when the French horns come in, is a flash-forward to some of the orchestral overdubs on For the Roses. But neither of those outtakes would fit on Blue as we know it.

Joni was wise (or lucky) that she has kept such a tight grip on these sorts of outtakes over the last 35 years. It gives a real sense of occasion to the release of these Archives boxes that wouldn't be there if the albums had already been reissued two or three times with bonus tracks, demoes, live shows etc.

It's funny that that Paul Horn recording has more down votes than likes, do people think he kidnapped her and forced her to do a wordless version with his flute?

Halfway there but for you, Tuesday, 22 June 2021 00:22 (four years ago)

It's so good to hear Hunter properly at last, it has always been tagged on at the end of the Hissing demos.

Maresn3st, Tuesday, 22 June 2021 10:56 (four years ago)

woah, never thought the second Archives box would come so fast! thats a nice surprise.

Hmmmmm (jamiesummerz), Tuesday, 22 June 2021 11:15 (four years ago)

three years pass...

no big news here to anyone who knows me but i put this album on today and wept uncontrollably through the whole thing

ivy., Tuesday, 21 January 2025 18:06 (one year ago)

<3 this album and this thread

Tim F, Wednesday, 22 January 2025 00:07 (one year ago)

“Shittin’ in a park in Paris France”

This album is too much of a downer, prefer C&S

calstars, Wednesday, 22 January 2025 00:17 (one year ago)

You're too much of a downer.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Wednesday, 22 January 2025 00:45 (one year ago)

Little Green kills me every time.

River was the first Joni song that clicked with me after a friend put it on a mix cd. I struggled with her swoopy singing until then, but once it clicked I was fully on board.

Cow_Art, Wednesday, 22 January 2025 01:04 (one year ago)

In France They Shit On Main Street.

the talented mr pimply (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 22 January 2025 01:10 (one year ago)

Perhaps a little too unfettered and alive

Tim F, Wednesday, 22 January 2025 01:18 (one year ago)

My dog does it, why can't I?

birdistheword, Wednesday, 22 January 2025 06:26 (one year ago)


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