Posts Tagged ‘Joni Mitchell’

What’s it about this time?

Good morning all. It’s the return of Rambler5319 for his Wednesday guest post. Enjoy!

I was thinking again about LLM’s post last Sunday and a few of the replies. Time is one of those things we can’t stop happening. It’s also one of those things that people seem to try not to think about too much: the fact that it’s getting less every day we’re alive. There are plenty of analogies about life being a never ending circle. Now it is really only never-ending when we speak about it in general terms: people and animals are always being born whilst others are dying so there is a cycle of life and death. However for us as individuals time is linear: it is a straight line from conception to last breath. Try as we may we can’t stop it. We can try and stop ourselves displaying the signs of aging by maybe dressing in a younger way, maybe talking younger and so on but no matter what we do we are the age we are. We can try and fool ourselves but if you’ve lived for 20/30/40/50 or however many years – you are that old.

Many singers have touched on the subject of time. A number of hit records have covered the idea of it and what it means to us. (Apologies for the selection as apart from one the rest are all from my own collection and also the number of vid clips.)

There is no such place as Tír na nÓg (The Land of Eternal Youth)! No matter how many times Van Morrison, on his album No Guru, No Method, No Teacher tells us we can walk there – WE CAN’T. Likewise Xanadu, Valhalla & Nirvana all sound great – but real? NO. They make a good subject for a song; remember Olivia Newton-John (& ELO) topped the UK charts in 1980 singing about Xanadu. I think the expression is “In your dreams” and that’s where they’ll stay. Nice diversion for 3 minutes but if you and I can’t go there don’t spend too much time looking for & thinking about them.

In 1969 Joni Mitchell wrote the song which became the theme for the Woodstock Festival. It was just called Woodstock & covered by a number of other artists including one by Matthews Southern Comfort who topped the UK charts with their version.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pyTUF5gP2KE

(Check out the two nuns walking past the camera.)

In one verse Mitchell wrote that she didn’t know who she was but that life is for learning. In 1970 she sang about us being “captive the carousel of time” on her Ladies of the Canyon album; but we’re not are we? We’re not on a merry-go-round, we’re on a train and at some point we will have to get off. We can’t take any luggage with us but those still on the train will open our cases and divide up the things we had with us! Others will stay on because they’re not getting off at the same place.

Eva Cassidy (sadly no longer with us), along with many others, sang about life being like getting on a train. Here’s the clip

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8W9rPxxnP4

A 25 year old Paul McCartney, on The Beatles’ Sgt Pepper album (1967), famously sang about when he would be older losing his hair. He asked would he still be needed when he got to 64.

Booker T. & the MGs recorded an instrumental called Time is Tight on Stax Records. It made no.4 in the UK charts back in 1969. Here’s a live vid:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nbBcXvKvB08

In 1964 The Rolling Stones sang Time Is On My Side but of course ultimately it isn’t is it? At some point you might not have much to do so time seems to go slowly. It does that when you’re looking forward to something you say you can’t wait for doesn’t it?

(In 1990 Kim Wilde had a song called “Time” and she sang about something so good it was worth waiting for.) Sometimes you just want time to go quicker so you can have that something without having to go through the waiting period. (If we want things we can’t afford we don’t wait till we have enough money, we borrow the money and pay it back later; you can’t do that with time.)

I suppose one of the best songs about time is the one by Pink Floyd on their 1973 album Dark Side of the Moon just called Time. Sales of Dark Side of the Moon, since its release 40 years ago, are estimated at 50 million (just over 1 million per year)! In the US it is the top selling album of all time (excluding compilations) with 15 platinum discs (meaning certified total of 15 million sales, although it is believed the real figure is much higher). Curiously it held the no.1 spot for just 1 week but stayed in the charts for 741 weeks including 591 consecutive weeks. (Now divide that by 52, and what do you get? Yep that’s right just over 11 continuous years! And all together 14 years in the US album charts, WOW!). Incidentally Booker T (mentioned above) also had an influence on one the Dark Side tracks.

If you’ve got 6/7 mins have a watch of the video. (The intro is quite long so if you don’t fancy it all wind forward to 2 mins and the singing starts at 2.20)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtvC8a3BRlQ

And, if you can, open another tab then window and put the lyrics alongside the vid.

Here are the lyrics:

http://www.azlyrics.com/lyrics/pinkfloyd/time.html

Great song that encapsulates lots of those ideas associated with time and its passing.

So there you have it a brief meditation on the subject of time from my record collection. If you’re still alive – congratulations, you’ve just aged another 5 minutes! And remember that Philosopher’s Stone is no nearer.

And do you see what I did with the title of this post?

Five voices

It’s Wednesday and time for Rambler5319 to entertain us again…

Remember LLM’s piece on “Songs that remind me of stuff”. I have those as well but I also have artists that stand out in my musical memories. They stand out because they have endured, not necessarily in terms of long life as 2 died in their early thirties, but because I still love and listen to them today.
In 1999 Yes produced an album called The Ladder and track 11 was called “Nine Voices”. I’ve decided to do five of my favourite female voices. I won’t do the biographies, there’s enough on the internet if you want to look them up but a few facts will be included. They are voices, each unique in its own way, which remind me of particular things. Any musical choice will inevitably be personal and bound to divide opinion so I don’t say these are the best five voices in the world EVER. I simply say that these voices had a great effect on me. They have touched and continue to touch my heart today. They are not in order like a top of the charts list; they are more chronological in that this is the order in which they came into my life. Ok so here we go:

1. LESLEY DUNCAN
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Probably an artist few of you will know but one who was a big part of my growing up musical history. I heard a track on the radio and bought the first album. Then I got each new one as it came out. She sang backing vocals for a number of more well-known artists (Donovan, Ringo Starr, Dusty Springfield who also sang on Lesley’s singles, Walker Brothers). If you check out the track listing for Jesus Christ Superstar on Amazon you will see her as one of a number of singers on many of the tracks. She is credited on Pink Floyd’s (1973) Dark Side Of The Moon and here is a pic of the inside of the album cover with her name in the “Backing Vocals” section (with Lesley incorrectly spelt with an ‘ie’ ending rather than the ‘ey’ which she herself used):

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She appears on Elton John’s 3rd album (1970) Tumbleweed Connection. She plays acoustic guitar in a duet with him on her self-penned song, Love Song (Side 2, Track 2). It’s the only non Bernie Taupin/Elton song on the album. She appeared with him in 1974 at The Royal Festival Hall to perform it. According to the Guardian newspaper, it was covered by more than 150 artists (including Olivia Newton-John, David Bowie and Barry White)! It’s worth checking out the lyrics to Love Song. (Also on YouTube.) Elton played piano on Lesley’s first album Sing Children Sing in 1971. Unfortunately she made only the 5 albums you can see in the picture but her voice was very special for me. She died fairly recently, on the Isle of Mull, (her home since 1996), in March 2010 aged 66. The Guardian, in its obituary, said this:
“Her songs had an astonishing emotional depth and her voice a rare combination of warmth and clarity, bringing an intimacy to the experience of listening to her records. For those who discovered her music in the early 1970s, she stood out from all the other pop and rock of the era.” (March 23, 2010).

2. KAREN CARPENTER
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Interesting the group was called “Carpenters”: there is no “The” in the official name. Karen was initially a drummer in the duo with her brother Richard on piano. She was quite happy to play the drums and sing whilst doing it. She didn’t want to be “out front” but folks wanted more of her – her voice: a contralto voice that spanned 3 octaves. She was forced to reconsider. Eventually she played the drums less and less. I’ve got just the one album of Greatest Hits but what a voice. She was noted for her low range and Richard would adapt songs (& covers) to fit it. Just listen to the way she can hold the notes she sings. Out of the 5 here hers has to be the purest voice and who can fail to be moved by some of those famous songs: Yesterday Once More, Hurting Each Other, Close to You and the ubiquitous We’ve Only Just Begun played at so many weddings around the world. Died a month short of her 33rd birthday from anorexia. Very sad.

3. JONI MITCHELL
I suppose she is remembered, by most people, for her single Big Yellow Taxi (1970) and the rather silly laugh at the end of the song. However, over the last 44 years, she has produced many albums. My collection, of just some of them, is in the pic below:
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Hers is a voice that has sung in many different styles with a uniqueness that no-one has come close to imitating. Some of Kate Bush’s songs do give a feel of her style. Joni has ploughed her own furrow not allowing people to be able to pigeon-hole her and constantly changing. Once again a voice I heard and bought one album and then began to add to as the years went by. A very unusual voice and variety of singing styles and unusual cadences make her one of my top five voices.

4. SANDY DENNY
Lead singer of Fairport Convention for a short time and produced solo work as well. She formed the group Fotheringay (1970) and released one album (Fotheringay). Fotheringay Castle was where Richard III was born (1452) & where Mary Queen of Scots was tried and executed (1587). Sandy was given the accolade “Britain’s finest female singer/songwriter” by three publications at the time. She was voted “Britain’s No.1 Singer” for two consecutive years in the music paper Melody Maker’s readers’ poll.
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Amongst others, wrote the song Who Knows Where The Time Goes? (Have a listen on YouTube). And I suppose we all echo that as we look back. Time does pass incredibly quickly. Sadly for Sandy and her fans she died aged just 31 in 1978. One newspaper obituary referred to her as having been: “Equipped with an incredible voice and an immense songwriting talent….” For me, a great voice which stirs up the emotions.

5. MADDY PRIOR (INCL. STEELEYE SPAN & THE CARNIVAL BAND)
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A founding member (in 1969) and and lead singer of Steeleye Span. Who can forget those words: “All around my hat I will wear the green willow……..And if anyone should ask me the reason why I’m wearing it, It’s all for my true love who’s far, far away…”. It’s about a young man whose fiancée has been sentenced to 7 years transportation to Australia. He mourns his loss by wearing a green willow sprig in his hat. Excellent voice range, and a number of projects jointly with the Carnival Band have produced albums of folk versions of many of the old hymns, demonstrate how good it is. Still going strong today.
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There are of course many more (Stevie Nicks, Christine McVie, Kate Bush, Eva Cassidy, Dido, for example) I could have included but the list would never finish. You will have your own favourites and maybe mine might seem a bit old or not of interest but they’re mine and I love them! All I’d say is have a listen before you discard them. If JM & MP have survived for 40 years or more in a very fickle business they must have something special about them; likewise those whose lives were cut short but are still remembered & played today. Go on, give them a listen.

D is for…

DEFINITION!

Today, a guest blogger is going have a little look at some words he feels need closer examination…

CAN I HAVE A WORD? (Part 3)

“Nothing to breathe but air,
Quick as a flash ‘tis gone;
Nowhere to fall but off,
Nowhere to stand but on.” (Benjamin Franklin King, 1857-94)

Can I have a word? – Again? Yes it’s part 3. We’ve done authors using words we don’t know; we’ve done us trying to beef up our vocabularies; now we’re going to look at a difficult, some may say impossible, couple of words to define properly: nowhere & everywhere.

Have you heard people (often children or teenagers) answer the question, “Where do you think you’re going?” with that innocent sounding, “Nowhere”; someone asks you where you are and you say, for example, “in the middle of nowhere”. That’s a rather longer answer than a simple “I don’t know” which, it seems to me, does the same job. You could shorten it to ‘ITMON’ if you wanted to invent a new word (for something that doesn’t exist anyway?). Not sure that’ll catch on.

First, let’s investigate “Nowhere” and the whole concept of it. Let’s start by checking the dictionary: it means either ‘in or to no place, not anywhere’ or ‘out of the running’. It’s an adverb so you can’t actually go to nowhere or come from nowhere. It’s not a noun like a place name would be. What I want to know is how can you be ‘not anywhere’? In other words how can we define a place that doesn’t exist by using a concept that also doesn’t exist with words that actually don’t make sense? Now there’s the problem. Perhaps we are moving into the realms of philosophy here. However, Ambrose Bierce (1842-1913) pulls the rug from under our feet by giving us this quote: “Philosophy: a route of many roads leading from nowhere to nothing”. Not a great deal of help there then. Hmm…. Ok, so maybe philosophy isn’t the way to go.

Remember, though, it’s physically impossible to be nowhere because, when you think about it, there is always a latitude & longitude for wherever on the Earth’s surface you stand; if you’re underground (or under the sea) there is still a location simply with an added dimension of “X” no. of metres under the surface. The same is true if you’re above the ground even right to the top of Mount Everest except you don’t need the extra dimension because the latitude & longitude cross at the particular height where you are.

Therefore you must be somewhere! You might not be in an actual place that’s named on a map or even known locally by a particular name but you just can’t be nowhere. Also it’s important to remember nowhere is an adverb. That means Talking Heads got it wrong when they sang about being on the Road to nowhere (1985); Dusty Springfield got it wrong when she sang about being In the middle of nowhere (1965); and the Beatles got it wrong when they sang about a Nowhere man sitting in his nowhere land, making all his nowhere plans, for nobody (1966); and perhaps the most confusing lines on the subject come from Jeff Beck in the opening lines of his song Hi-ho silver lining: “You’re everywhere and nowhere baby…” (1972). Now, just in case you were totally confused as to where that might be, Mr Beck helps us out by explaining that you’re (probably), “…..going down a bumpy hillside in a hippy hat.” Ah well, that’s a lot clearer then, eh?

So why do we use it? Is it to sound cool? Or to convey the idea that we are some kind of free spirit? Is it to emphasise the fact that you’re in a desolate place? – The middle of nowhere. Or is it because, really, we don’t understand what we’re saying? So why not stop using it or say it a different way. Go on you know you could. In the song Cotton Avenue, Joni Mitchell said it this way: “If you got no place special, well then you just go no place special”. Not nowhere just a “not special” other place.

I’ve tried looking for Erewhon but there’s nowhere so mixed up as that place!
However, I know what you’re thinking: will he be joining in after he’s heard those distinctive, foot-tapping, opening bars of the Jeff Beck song on the radio by singing along with “You’re everywhere and nowhere, baby, that’s where you’re at……….”? Course I will!
But hang on a minute…… I’ve just had a thought – where’s everywhere? How can anything, let alone a person, be everywhere? Is it all places……. except nowhere (or including nowhere)? And what about ITMON? Einstein gave us E=mc2; the Rambler has come up with E=E-N, (where E=everywhere, N=nowhere). Will it catch on? I doubt it but have a serious think about it!