Linda Ronstadt: oppinions sought

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she had at least a couple other stabs at this but this rare version is the best

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

buzza, Thursday, 3 October 2019 06:27 (four years ago) link

Saw the documentary last night. I've seen a couple of CNN documentaries that were interesting because they used nothing but actual footage--no voiceover, no interviews--but this one was much more conventional. Keeps it guard up, so you really don't learn a whole lot about what must have been a pretty wild few years in the late-'70s--a reliance on diet pills is as revealing as this gets--but if you're a fan (I'd call myself a very casual one), you'll love that about a third of the film is clips of Ronstadt performing in close-up. Her South African controversy is dealt with briefly; I didn't think her explanation (in a contemporaneous interview) was indefensible. I read someone somewhere (this thread?) saying that she wasn't all that beautiful, that you could walk onto any campus in the 1970s and find hundreds of young women more striking than her. I seriously doubt that.

clemenza, Thursday, 3 October 2019 15:28 (four years ago) link

three weeks pass...

Elvis repents!

In very different times, my reaction to having my songs recorded by other singers was downright suspicious, territorial and, at times even a little hostile. To say the least, I lacked grace.

Five years ago, shortly before an encore performance of "Alison", I told the audience at the Hollywood Bowl, that it was Linda Ronstadt's rendition of that song - which was featured on her big hit album "Living In The U.S.A." - that kept petrol in our tour bus at a time when we were sharing double bill with everyone from Talking Heads to Eddie Money for a $1.99¢ ticket.

Linda Ronstadt and I have never met, so the stage seemed the next best place for such an acknowledgement.

I recently went to see "The Sound Of My Voice" at the Film Forum in NYC on an afternoon double-bill with the new documentary about Miles Davis. While the Miles film was filled with his wonderful music and startlingly vivid photographs and footage, the film mostly told me things I already knew, while the Linda Ronstadt movie was a completely surprising, clear-sighted and unsentimental look at her career, revealing an intelligence, self-awareness and sense of humour that was not always apparent in some of her male contemporaries from the early '70s

I used to joke that musicians invited some terrible curse by taking on my songs and how, having recorded one of my songs, Linda decided to push her luck by recording three more on her album "Mad Love" and the next thing she was singing Gilbert & Sullivan.

Of course, as someone who has spent their career doing the exact opposite of what has been expected of me, this was really a joke that was told against myself.

Nevertheless, I can't imagine a G&S operetta was actually the top of the record company wish list for one of their top recording superstars even if the piece ended up being a spectacular success.

The film tells us that Linda Ronstadt had to persuade her label boss at the WEA record group to bankroll her album with Nelson Riddle in a way that I was never obliged to wrangle with Warner Brothers, regarding the funding of "The Juliet Letters" but then my pop and rock and roll records weren't selling triple platinum, so they had less to lose.

I can't think of an artist of her commercial status who would have even proposed such a collaboration with Nelson Riddle let alone two albums of Mexican folk songs but the documentary shows these records to be a testament to artistic curiosity and daring.

It was a 2019 performance of one of those traditional songs, filmed in Linda's front room, flanked by her cousins that brought me to uncontrollable tears, so much so that I had to slip out of the theatre before the lights came up after the final credits.

My father's Parkinson's related decline saw his senses gradually eroded, until even his sense of taste for a dram was lost but even after his speech was reduced to a hoarse whisper, he was able to still negotiate a challenging tune like "The Way You Look Tonight".

Linda's commentary is frank about the impact of her illness on her ability to control her voice and sing to her own satisfaction but in that precious moment she appears undimmed in the way she could access the emotion of song, in the company of those family voices.

This version of "Party Girl" is a clip from a performance around the release of "Mad Love" - a memento of my less generous youth in so many ways but I urge you to see this wonderful documentary, whether or not you regard yourself a fan of the singer or her musical choices. Perhaps there are human qualities that endure beyond the fashionable poses we may have once affected.

With much respect. Elvis Costello

From his FB page.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 26 October 2019 17:36 (four years ago) link

That's fantastic--will have to post that on Facebook.

clemenza, Saturday, 26 October 2019 19:30 (four years ago) link

one month passes...

At the State Dept. dinner for the Kennedy Center honorees Mike Pompeo wondered aloud when he would be “loved”. Then Linda Ronstadt got up to get laurels, looked the fucker right in the eye and said “maybe when you stop enabling Donald Trump”. Icon.

— sam greisman (@SAMGREIS) December 8, 2019

shared unit of analysis (unperson), Sunday, 8 December 2019 12:30 (four years ago) link

Just saw it. Trying to confirm its truth.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 8 December 2019 12:33 (four years ago) link

Mike Pompeo was an evil shit well before trump entered the picture

plax (ico), Sunday, 8 December 2019 21:37 (four years ago) link

four weeks pass...

The documentary was okay to very good. Like clemenza said, I liked the live clips. I wasn't the audience for it: my parents were, who called last night to let me know they had seen the CNN broadcast twice; for them, an education.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 5 January 2020 18:34 (four years ago) link

I saw it earlier this week and loved it, but have also been a fan since I was a kid.

I dont mind that it wasn’t hard-hitting, honestly I was just glad to see her get more credit for her creative choices & as an artist in general; it seemed like she was often dismissed as just a pretty jukebox bc she didnt write her own material. I loved seeing her perform the mariachi songs, i wasn’t as familiar with that part of her career. And Penzance! ISuch an incredible voice.

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Sunday, 5 January 2020 19:17 (four years ago) link

I grew up with "Somewhere Out There," the Neville collaborations, and Canciones de Mi Padre and especially Frenesí -- I appreciated the doc lingering on them.

TikTok to the (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 5 January 2020 19:21 (four years ago) link

Seeing her in 1976 or slightly later was one of my first concerts. Enjoyed but wasn't wowed is my vague recollection. I want to watch the doc.

curmudgeon, Sunday, 5 January 2020 22:35 (four years ago) link

That closing scene of the doc with her nephew and cousin is so touching. Other live footage over the years in this is good too.

Not in the doc- I forgot she covered “Girl’s talk,”

curmudgeon, Tuesday, 7 January 2020 04:39 (four years ago) link

The look in her eyes while she was singing along with them broke me up...like she consciousy knows how she wants to sound but her body is betraying her. I love that she did it on camera though

terminators of endearment (VegemiteGrrl), Tuesday, 7 January 2020 06:14 (four years ago) link


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