This document originated as a research paper for the Master of Arts (MA) program in Mass Communication at the University of Denver in mid-1970. The course was “Art and the Mass Culture”. At that time, Marshall McLuhan’s book “The Medium is the Message” had just come out, however basing a research paper on a popular singer/poet was unusual to say the least. Of course, that was long before Bob Dylan would be awarded the Nobel Prize, reinforcing the concept that our modern poets are worthy of serious consideration.
My professor liked the paper, yielding an ‘A’ for the course, I graduated and went on with my life. Fast forward 40+ years, while simplifying my life, I came across this paper in some basement boxes. Around this time, I had read that Joni was having some medical issues which generated an existential moment for me. It’s challenging enough coming to terms with your own mortality, however it was always comforting knowing of Joni exitance.
In our current era of music streaming, I can’t say that I listen to a lot of Joni’s music anymore, however whenever one of her songs pops up, it always makes me smile. Transcribing this paper to electronic form, made me revisit these early albums, which also made me smile quite a bit. Consequently, I’d like to share it to hopefully bring some smiles to others.
I don’t know if this will ever make it to Joni herself, I have no experience ever trying to contact a famous person. But if it does, I’d just like to say thanks, not only for touching the lives of all her fans … but helping me make it through grad school … in many ways. Hopefully that will make her smile as well.
- Art Rerecich
Converting this document to HTML 40 years after the fact presented some challenges. You can read the document as originally formatted by downloading it at the link above.
- JoniMitchell.com
Joni Mitchell’s Recorded Work (enumerated for reference) 4
Appendix- Songs by Category 19
As each day goes by, we, as humans, are confronted with a variety of problems. There are also an endless amount of circumstances and emotions, which color these problems. How we deal with these problems, depend largely on the individual. How these problems are confronted, or whoever does the confronting, one result occurs: there is no short cut to a viable answer.
Joni Mitchell takes the complexities of modern life and paints us ‘word pictures’, describing them. Most times it is easier to understand something when you are able to step back and observe from a distance, then you get a better picture of what’s really going on. Since we are all intimately involved in the human race, stepping back to observe presents a problem. Joni enables us to get a sort of overview, by her commentary. She is involved with life and her observations point out the major aspects of life’s difficulties. She, like all of us, is torn between alternate realities; how it is and how it should be. This is the beauty of her work, she not only describes how it is, but goes further to speculate on how good it could be.
Joni’s career is one of the growth and development, just as life is a maturation process. Because of this, some themes appear once or twice, while others run through all her work. Life is also like this, some concerns remain with us from childhood, while others come and go as we grow.
Let’s examine Joni Mitchell’s world and see just how close it comes to ours. I believe that after studying her work, we shall see that she is able to touch on the majority of human emotions and experiences. What I hope to find at the end of this examination, is not the answers (indeed some of these topics have puzzled mankind for centuries), but rather a thorough examination of the problem. A hopeful side effect will be an insight; to ourselves, our society and maybe even Ms. Mitchell herself.
“I seek not to know all the answers, but rather to understand the questions” Kung Fu
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This is by far one of her major themes as it runs the entire gambit of her work. She starts her career by commenting on the harshness of the ‘city’. Although New York is implied, it could just as well be any major city. The song is “Nathan La Franeer” 1e and the scene is a girl (presumably Joni) in a taxi, on her way to the airport, escaping form the city. As she rides with Nathan, she gazes out the window and reflects on the ills of the city. She sees it as a “ghostly garden” which is fed by the misery within the city:
I
asked him would he hurry
But we crawled the canyons slowly
Thru
the buyers and the sellers
Thru
the burglar bells and the wishing wells
With
gangs and girly shows
The
ghostly garden grows
The meanness of the city life extends to the people she meets, outward resentment to compensate inward frustration:
He
asked me for a dollar more
He
cursed me to my face
He
hated everyone who paid to ride
And
Share his common space
Until as:
You
feed it all your woes
The
ghostly garden grows.
Next she goes from social to political, this time commenting on power and war. The scene is an apprehensive view of a powerful neighbor (Canada/US perhaps) whose intentions are unknown and whose direction is frightening. The song is “The Fiddle and the Drum” 2i and is possibly her most dramatic statement, since she sings it unaccompanied. Rather than passing judgement, her tone remains one of bewilderment to the violent reaction she gets to her question:
And
so once again you are fightin” us all
And
when I ask you why
You
raise your sticks and cry, and I fall.
Now her tone changes slightly to confusion; of what was, and what is:
You
say I have turned
Like
the enemies you’ve earned
But
I can remember
All
the good things you are
Which poses the main question:
How
did you come?
To
trade the fiddle for the drum
…
To
trade the handshake for the fist.
This leads to outright fear:
We
have all come
To
fear the beating of your drum.
Next she returns to social situations again, claiming in “The Arrangement” 3f that:
You
could have been more
Than
a name on the door
On
the thirty-third floor in the air
More
than a consumer
Lying
in some room trying to die
More
than a credit card
Swimming
pool in the back yard
You
could have been more … you could have …
Although the songs we have examined so far, deal only with the ills of the topics discussed, she doesn’t stop here. Her ability to examine whole situations, gives her work further depth and significance. In the aptly titled “Both Sides Now” 2j she looks at life and love from these directions, first the illusion and then the reality. The complexities of growing up in a changing world are dealt with in the “The Circle Game” 3l; while “California” 4f suggests that homesickness can’t cover the ills that exist at home.
We also see that the nightclub scene isn’t all it’s supposed to be in both “Barangrill” 5c and “Down to You” 6g; nor is high society, as seen through “People’s Parties” 6d. Then she goes and tackles society as a whole, analogizing the ‘push-pull’, rat-race’ of society, to a very vicious “Banquet” 5a. All in all she paints a pretty bleak picture. After you compile all of this evidence, a logical conclusion would be to escape and leave it all behind. This is where we go next.
To Joni there are two kinds of escape; either through another person or through another situation (or set of situations). Therefore our analysis will take the following form:
Escape through another person or personal situation,
Through different circumstances or environments
A look at her alternate reality
Our first vehicle of escape is “Michael from Mountains” 1b. He is able to take her from the harshness of the city life, by turning ordinary things into something special. These types of arguments get more graphic detail in “Chelsea Morning” 2b. Here her painter’s eye describes with picture post card accuracy, what morning is like with someone special:
Woke
up, it was a Chelsea morning, and the first thing that I saw
Was
the sun through yellow curtains, and a rainbow on the wall
Blue,
red, green and gold to welcome you, crimson crystal beads to beckon
…
If
only you will stay
This same type of paradise is again encountered in “Morning Morgantown” 3a, the implication being that it wouldn’t be so wonderful, if that certain someone wasn’t there to share it with you. This is made even clearer in “My Old Man”4b, no implications here, she explains exactly what his absence means:
But
when he's gone
Me
and them lonesome blues collide
The
bed's too big
The
frying pan's too wide
But when that special someone is here, as in “Carey” 4d, you can:
Laugh and toast to nothing and smash our empty glasses down
While on the other hand, if you get romantically involved, solely for pleasure, or just to escape, it is destined for failure, i.e. “Raised on Robbery” 6i. Again we can see this “Both Sides, Now” attitude, first one side, then the other.
This is an attempt to get lost in the glitter; hopefully losing your problems in the crowds. We first encounter this in “Night in the City” 1c:
Night
time night time
Day
left an hour ago
City
light time
Must
you get ready so slow?
There
are places to come from
and
places to go
Night
in the city looks pretty to me
Night
in the city looks fine
Music
comes spilling out into the street
Colors
go flashing in time
Her desire for contentment through this atmosphere gets a frantic plea in “All I Want” 4a:
Alive,
alive, I want to get up and jive
I
want to wreck my stockings in some juke box dive
Of course these attempts are destined for failure and the albums where these tracks appear expound on this failure.
This was hinted at strongly in both “Morning Morgantown” and “Chelsea Morning”. Now it gets a through description in “Sisotowbell Lane” 1f, so complete in fact that:
Anywhere
else now would seem very strange.
It’s a place
where:
Jovial
neighbors come down when they will
With
stories to tell
…
We
have a rocking chair
Each
of us rocks his share
Eating
muffin buns and berries
,,, (and
if you) Go
to the city you'll come back again.
This theme is also the purpose of “Ladies of the Canyon” 3d, only here the emphasis on her neighbors. We see how good life can be, even in the suburbs (Laurel Canyon), where all you need for paradise are the right people. Sometimes paradise isn’t a person or a place, but rather a state of mind. Joni implies this by her preoccupation with freedom … the next topic.
Freedom gets looked at just like her other topics, from both sides. Sometime she is the leaver, sometimes she gets left; but at all times she explores the emotions involved in the separation. Her first piece to deal with this was “Urge for Going”3, which although written, didn’t make it on these first 6 albums. It equates the leaving of a lover with the changing of the seasons:
She
gets the urge for going
When
the meadow grass is turning brown
All
her empire's falling down
And
winter's closing in.
But leaving isn’t all one sided and this is where her empathy comes in to play:
I'll
lock the vagrant winter out and
I'll
bolt my wanderings in
In “Cactus Tree” 1j we see her as the woman who’s:
… so busy being free
While in “Help Me” 6b, the situation is near equal:
We
love our lovin’
But
not like we love our freedom
However, sometimes circumstances force separation; it can be unclear, where nothing is definite as in “I Don’t Know Where I Stand” 2c ; or it can be very clear what elements are causing the situation, as in Conversation” 3c , where:
I
bring him apples and cheeses
He
brings me songs to play
He
sees me when he pleases
I
see him in cafes
And
I only say hello
And
turn away before his lady knows
How
much I want to see him
Then she branches off from this topic, into tragic love, the next section.
This section is very diverse; sometimes the songs lament for an ended relationship, sometimes for one that is ending, still other times for one that has fallen into stagnation. It is around these themes that make up the bulk of her work in this examination (16 songs). Instead of covering them all, I’ll try to focus on some significant topics.
We see one of her few statements about marriage ‘per se’, in “I Had a King” 1a, which is a lament on an ended marriage:
I
had a king in a salt-rusted carriage
Who
carried me off to his country for marriage too soon
Beware
of the power of moons
There's
no one to blame.
It is this last line that I believe distinguishes Joni from many of her contemporaries, even when hurt very badly, she refuses to point a finger. It takes a special kind of person to own up to the fact that they are also partly to blame. She really bears down on herself in “River” 4h where she admits:
I'm
so hard to handle
I'm
selfish and I'm sad
Now
I've gone and lost the best baby
That
I ever had
However her view of marriage as an institution gets further explored in “My Old Man” 4b:
We
don't need no piece of paper
From
the city hall
Keeping
us tied and true
The implication in “I Had King” is that her lover (husband?) was an
artist of some description. Coincidentally, Joni has been involved
with artists herself, with unhappy results (singers- Chuck Mitchell
Out of the ‘artist involvement’ context, a broken relationship gets a classical treatment in “Pirate of Penance” 1h, while an apprehensive relationship gets a similar treatment in “Dawntreader” 1g. It’s interesting to note the symbolism here, as it is of a classical, rather than a contemporary nature. The remainder of the songs in this category concern themselves not with ended relationships, but rather with:
Skeptical Attempts-
Tin Angel 2a
The Priest 3h
The Same Situation 6e
Dismal Situations-
Willy 3e
A Case of You 4i
Woman of Mind and Heart 5k
You Turn me on I’m a Radio 5i
Car on the Hill 6f
As mentioned earlier, it is sometimes easier to see problems when you’re on the outside looking in. Joni also takes this position as she observes a friend’s tragedy … our next topic.
A further lament on lost love shows here, as she watches other relationships breaking up. The first example is “Marcie” 1d, the story of a girl waiting in the city, for a lover to return. As the story goes, he left in the summer, promising to return, so Marcie waits through the winter with no word from him, until she finally leaves also. The symbolism is very important, again she paints separation with the changing seasons and uses the city to point up loneliness. “Blue Boy”3i follows along similar lines, but the symbolism isn’t quite as clear. The best example of a dramatic breakup is seen in the “Little Green” 4c, where a child is concerned. The story is nothing new, only the delicate treatment it gets, puts it above the ordinary:
He
went to California
Hearing
that everything's warmer there
The inevitable breakup occurs, but all is not lost:
Weary
of lies you are sending home
So
you sign all the papers in the family name
You're
sad and you're sorry but you're not ashamed
Little
green have a happy ending
And somehow you believe she will.
The most abstract and symbolic examination of a relationship’s many facets is “Electricity” 5h. Here the complexities of love are equated with the complexities of electronics:
We
once loved together
And
we floodlit that time
Input
output electricity
But
the lines overloaded
And
the sparks started flying
And
the loose wires
Were
lashing out at me
She's
not going to fix that up
Too
easy
Although many times it is in the first person that she tells her tale, I feel that Joni is merely a bystander, whom ‘she’ (whoever ‘She’ is) turns to for help:
And
she holds out her flashlight
And
she shines it on me
She
wants me to tell her
What
the trouble might be
Joni might understand, because:
Well
I'm learning
It's
peaceful
With
a good dog and some trees
Out
of touch with the breakdown
Of
this century
But Joni won’t be able to explain it to ‘she’ because:
She
don't know the system Plus
She
don't understand
She's
got all the wrong fuses and splices
As a result:
She's
not going to fix it up
Too
easy
So far we have been concerned with a friend’s love life, but friends are a bit more complex than this. Here Joni reverts back to the questioning attitude of “The Fiddle and the Drum”, as she shows her concern for a friend she no longer understands in “Roses Blue” 2e:
I
think of Rose, my heart begins to tremble
To
see the place she's lately gotten to
…
She's
gotten to mysterious devotions
She's
gotten to the zodiac and Zen
She's
gotten into tarot cards and potions
She's
laying her religion on her friends
…
Friends
who come to ask her for their future
Friends
who come to find they can't be friends
Because
of signs and seasons that don't suit her
Her reaction to friends mentioned in “The Gallery” 2f that “… got into funny scenes”, is one of two actions. On one hand they can disappoint and depress her as in “Lesson in Survival” 5d:
I
went to see a friend tonight
Was
very late when I walked in
My
talking as it rambled
Revealed
suspicious reasoning
The
visit seemed to darken him
I
came in as bright
As
a neon light
And
I burned out
Right
there before him
On the other hand they come right out and prophesy her doom as in “The Last Time I Saw Richard” 4j:
The
last time I saw Richard was Detroit in '68
And
he told me all romantics meet the same fate someday
Cynical
and drunk and boring someone in some dark café
You
laugh he said you think you're immune
Go
look at your eyes they're full of moon
But the results are reassurance rather than depression and it works to strengthen her belief in herself (dark cafes are):
Only
a dark cocoon before I get my gorgeous wings and fly away
Only
a phase these dark café days
This leads us to another aspect of her evaluation process, here Joni considers the industry that she’s in, so let us consider this next.
She starts off with a very abstract view of her industry by comparing it to a carnival with “That Song About the Midway” 2d; she next moves on to playing for pay and the consequences in “For Free”3b; but she really tells the story in both “For the Roses” 5f and “Free Man in Paris” 6c . It is with these last two that we’ll examine this topic. Although they are both dealing with the industry, their differences is in direction. “Roses” is more concerned with the interaction between artist and manufacturer, while “Paris” concerns itself more with interaction between the artists. Let’s look at each separately.
“For the Roses” 5f tells us what it’s like for the struggling artist to get started (notice how her painter’s eye ‘paints’ little scenes for us):
In
some office sits a poet
And
he trembles as he sings
And
he asks some guy
To
circulate his soul around
Then the transition:
Up
the charts
Off
to the airport
Your
name's in the news
Everything's
first class
Then the confrontations; with yourself, with the industry and with the people that make it up. Most important is the precarious position the artist is left. The whole scene of where the artist was, is now, and is going looks like this:
Remember
the days when you used to sit
And
make up your tunes for love
And
pour your simple sorrow
To
the sound-hole and your knee
And
now you're seen
On
giant screens
And
at parties for the press
And
for people who have slices of you
From
the company
They
toss around your latest golden egg
Speculation
well who's to know
If
the next one in the nest
Will
glitter for them so
Now this statement by other artists would seem either hypocritical or like ‘sour grapes’. Joni transcends this by a further examination of the process, ending with an attitude reminiscent of “Richard’s”. Here we have a bit of self-examination and some pessimistic prophesy:
I
guess I seem ungrateful
With
my teeth sunk in the hand
That
brings me things
I
really can't give up just yet
Now
I sit up here the critic
And
they introduce some band
But
they seem so much confetti
Looking
at them on my TV set
Oh
the power and the glory
Just
when you're getting a taste for worship
They
start bringing out the hammers
And
the boards
And
the nails
There you have it, if you exchange ‘growing up’ with ‘the recording industry’, you’d have “The Circle Game” 3l all over again.
In “Free Man in Paris” 5c, she seems to take a slightly different attitude towards her fellow artists. You seem to get the implication that they belong in the industry which they are entering. There are no more ‘trembling poets’, everybody seems to want to get ahead, period. In her comment, she establishes her position and reflects on her surroundings:
Everybody's
in it for their own gain
You
can't please 'em all
There's
always somebody calling you down
I
do my best
And
I do good business
There's
a lot of people asking for my time
They're
trying to get ahead
They're
trying to be a good friend of mine
As always some self-justification must come in, you must constantly be asking why you’re here and where you are. Many times you don’t get much of an answer, but as long as you keep asking… In three lines she sums up her entire professional atmosphere and still has time to question:
I
deal in dreamers
And
telephone screamers
Lately
I wonder what I do it for
Then as a sort of explanation, her confrontation with reality and illusion, completes the circle:
I
was a free man in Paris
I
felt unfettered and alive
Nobody
was calling me up for favors
No
one's future to decide
You
know I'd go back there tomorrow
But
for the work I've taken on
Stoking
the star maker machinery
Behind
the popular song
This aspect of circular situations, although implied in all her work, gets brought up very strongly here. We shall see how this remains prominent as we approach our final section. This is where Joni comments on herself and her situations.
“Like her voice, Joni Mitchell’s lyrics have always suggested emotional life with startling highs and lows and an attenuated middle. Just because she knows herself, she reveals how dangerous and attractive such a life can be.”4
This I believe, is the intended end result of her work, for both her fans and herself; self-knowledge. As we have pointed out before, it’s sometime easier to learn when we can watch from the sidelines. Joni’s description of human problems, whether her own or someone else’s, tend to expose the conflicts encountered. However, you can’t learn from watching, you must participate, no matter what the consequences. If examination exposes the challenge, then experience reinforces it. That is what this final section is all about, learning lessons from experience. Again this is a bulky category (11 songs), I’ll try to focus on the most significant themes.
We began our journey with the elusiveness of dreams, symbolized by the free spirit of the seagull in “Song to a Seagull” 1i. We can see a conscious attempt to identify with the bird:
My
gentle relations
Have
names they must call me
For
loving the freedom
Of
all flying things
Here we have one of the first conflicts, wanting freedom yet being shot down for trying to attain it. As a result, only our imagination can help us to escape this reality which is so stifling:
My
dreams with the seagulls fly
Out
of reach out of cry
She now switches from the fantasy of dreams toward the reality of human problems and fears. “I Think I Understand” 2g tells us that:
Fear
is like a wilderland
Stepping
stones or sinking sand
However her work is a maturation process, growing up is a vital part of her personality. “Songs to Aging Children Come” 2h admits her position while the complexities of growing up in a modern society are crystallized in “Blue” 4e:
Well
there're so many sinking now
You've
got to keep thinking
You
can make it thru these waves
Acid,
booze, and ass
Needles,
guns, and grass
Lots
of laughs, lots of laughs
Everybody's
saying that hell's the hippest way to go
Well
I don't think so
But
I'm gonna take a look around it though
This so far is a setting, society is seen as the background and the real action is the internal conflicts. She confronts herself with her situation in “Judgement of the Moon and Stars” 5l, admitting that:
Cold
white keys under your fingers
Now
you're thinking
That's
no substitute
It
just don't do it
Like
the song of a warm, warm body
Loving
your touch“
She further explores her situation with “Lesson in Survival” 5d, not only describing where she’s at, but where she must go as well:
But
I know my needs
My
sweet tumbleweed
I
need more quiet times
By
a river flowing
So far she has been describing her learning process. We, as she, should learn from these experiences. The analogy of herself and a train in “Just Like This Train” 6h, enumerates some of the lessons learned or the positions realized:
I'm
always running behind the time
Just
like this train
…
I
used to count lovers like railroad cars
I
counted them on my side
Lately
I don't count on nothing
I
just let things slide
…
Jealous
lovin'll make you crazy
If
you can't find your goodness
'Cause
you lost your heart
The rest of the works in this category, more or less follow along these lines. Many of the songs are a series of thoughts, strung together by the same music and not following one central theme. A list of the songs and their categories is at the end.
The value of Joni’s work lies not in the results, but rather in the procedure/process. Joni has grown up in these six albums and she has shared her learning experiences with us. The result is not that we will be able to avoid the tragedies of life, if we try to do this we will proceed too carefully. You can’t let anything inhibit your emotions, as she explains in “Willy” 3e:
But
you're bound to lose
If
you let the blues get you scared to feel
I believe her aim is to show us the joy of being human. This example should inspire us to remain a whole person, no matter what the consequences. It is on this point that she deviates from her tradition of subtlety. Here she comes out and confronts us with the meaning of living. So far she has been painting us pictures, implying the right and wrong of the situation. She has kept her “Both Sides, Now” attitude, giving a valid picture of the entire situation. Now she breaks with this tradition, laying the fact bare, an appeal to preserve the joy of being human. She ends her fifth album with this plea again in “Judgement of the Moon and Stars” 5l which is the perfect place to end this discussion:
You've
got to shake your fists at lightning now
You've
got to roar like forest fire
You've
got to spread your light like blazes
All
across the sky
They're
going to aim the hoses on you
Show
'em you won't expire
Not
till you burn up every passion
Not
even when you die
Come
on now
You've
got to try
If
you're feeling contempt
Well
then you tell it
If
you're tired of the silent night
Jesus
well then you yell it
Condemned
to wires and hammers
Strike
every chord that you feel
That
broken trees
And
elephant ivories conceal
Bob Atkinson “Songs of the Open Road” (The Poetry of Folk Rock)
New American Library: New York 1974
Robert Christgau “Any Old Way you Choose It” (Rock & Other Pop Music 1967-73)
Penguin Book Inc.; Baltimore 1973
David Morse “Grand Father Rock” (The New Poetry and the Old)
Dell Publishing Co. Inc.; New York 1972
Lillian Roxon “Rock Encyclopedia”
Grosset & Dunlap; New York 1969
Bob Sarlin “Turn it Up” (I can’t hear the words)
Simon & Schuster; New York 1973
Christian Century 10/15/69
C.E.Fagen “Thumbs Down, Thumbs Up”
Look 1/27/70 p33-34
G. Astor “Joni Mitchell”
New Yorker 3/3/73 p104-105
E. Willis “Joni Mitchell: Still Travelling”
Time 4/4/69 p78+
“Into the Pain of the Heart: Contemporary Folk Composer”
Album # |
Title |
Label |
Number |
Released |
1 |
Song to a Seagull |
Reprise |
RS-6293 |
March 1968 |
2 |
Clouds |
Reprise |
RS-6341 |
May 1969 |
3 |
Ladies of the Canyon |
Reprise |
RS-6376 |
April 1970 |
4 |
Blue |
Reprise |
MS-2038 |
June 1971 |
5 |
For the Roses |
Asylum |
SD-5057 |
October 1972 |
6 |
Court and Spark |
Asylum |
7E-1001-B |
January 1974 |
Album # |
Song |
1 |
Nathan La Franeer |
2 |
The Fiddle and the Drum |
2 |
Both Sides, Now |
3 |
The Circle Game |
3 |
The Arrangement |
4 |
California |
5 |
Banquet |
5 |
Barangrill |
6 |
People’s Parties |
6 |
Down to you |
Album # |
Song |
1 |
Michael from Mountains |
1 |
Sisotowbell Lane |
1 |
Night in the City |
2 |
Chelsea Morning |
3 |
Morning Morgantown |
3 |
Ladies of the Canyon |
4 |
Carey |
4 |
My Old Man |
4 |
All I Want |
6 |
Raised on Robbery |
Album # |
Song |
1 |
Cactus Tree |
2 |
I Don’t Know Where I Stand |
3 |
Conversation |
6 |
Help Me |
Album # |
Song |
1 |
I Had a King |
1 |
Dawntreader |
1 |
Pirate of Penance |
2 |
The Gallery |
2 |
Tim Angel |
3 |
Rainy Night House |
3 |
Willy |
3 |
The Priest |
4 |
A Case of You |
5 |
See You Sometime |
5 |
Woman of Mind and Heart |
5 |
You Turn Me on I’m a Radio |
5 |
Blonde in the Bleachers |
6 |
Same Situation |
6 |
Car on a Hill |
Album # |
Song |
1 |
Marcie |
2 |
Roses Blue |
3 |
Blue Boy |
4 |
The Last Time I Saw Richard |
4 |
Little Green |
5 |
Electricity |
Album # |
Song |
2 |
That Song About the Midway |
3 |
For Free |
5 |
For the Roses |
6 |
Free Man in Paris |
Album # |
Song |
1 |
Song to a Seagull |
2 |
I Think I Understand |
2 |
Songs to Aging Children Come |
4 |
This Flight Tonight |
4 |
River |
4 |
Blue |
5 |
Judgement of the Moon and Stars |
5 |
Lesson in Survival |
6 |
Trouble Child |
6 |
Just Like This Train |
6 |
Court and Spark |
Category |
Album# |
Song |
Generations |
3 |
Woodstock |
Generations |
5 |
Let the Wind Carry Me |
Drugs |
5 |
Cold Blue Steel and Sweet Fire |
Ecology |
3 |
Big Yellow Taxi |
1 Since I quote from these works often, I’ve listed them according to album and position, for example: “Marcie”-1d. Any discrepancy will be noted.
2 Not written by Joni Mitchell
3 Atkinson “Sons of the Open Road”; ‘Urge for Going’ p23-24
4 Christgau; “Any Old Way you Choose it”, p217
Printed from the official Joni Mitchell website. Permanent link: https://jonimitchell.com/library/view.cfm?id=3601
Copyright protected material on this website is used in accordance with 'Fair Use', for the purpose of study, review or critical analysis, and will be removed at the request of the copyright owner(s). Please read 'Notice and Procedure for Making Claims of Copyright Infringement' at JoniMitchell.com/legal.cfm