Posts Tagged ‘Joni Mitchell’

JONI by Barney Hoskins

Posted: September 18, 2017 in MUSIC
Tags: ,

Nine Grammys. More than ten million albums sold. Named one of the greatest singers and songwriters of all time by Rolling Stone. Joni: The Anthology is an essential collection of writings on Joni Mitchell that charts every major moment of the famed troubadour’s extraordinary career, as it happened.

From album reviews, incisive commentary, and candid conversations, Joni: The Anthology includes, among other things, a review of Mitchell’s first-ever show at LA’s Troubadour in June of 1968, a 1978 interview by musician Ben Sidran on jazz great Charles Mingus, a personal reminiscence by Ellen Sander, a confidant of the Los Angeles singer-songwriter community, and a long “director’s cut” version of editor Barney Hoskyns‘ 1994 MOJO interview. A time capsule of an icon, the anthology spans the entirety of Joni’s career between 1967-2007, as well as thoughtful commentary on her early years.

In collecting materials long unavailable, rare, or otherwise difficult to find, Joni: The Anthology illuminates the evolution of modern rock journalism while providing an invaluable and accessible guide to appreciating the highs–and the lows–of a twentieth century legend.

“Once I crossed the border, I began to write and my voice changed. I no longer was imitative of the folk style. My voice was then my real voice and with a slight folk influence, but from the first album it was no longer folk music. It was just a girl with a guitar that made it look that way.”–Joni Mitchell, 1994

Released in October 1982, Joni Mitchell s 11th studio album, Wild Things Run Fast was, for some fans, a return to form. What this often meant in reality was that many such Mitchell enthusiasts had been somewhat perplexed by this remarkable composer and performer s output since 1975, when she introduced jazz and classical influences into her work, and even when such tendencies were included on such towering albums as Hissing Of The Summer Lawns and Hejira , a certain quarter longed still for the days of Big Yellow Taxi, The Circle Game and Woodstock. Nothing wrong, of course, with such majestic and beautiful songs, but to dismiss such a challenging and forward thinking artist s moves does appear to be a little stilted. But, when Joni Mitchell hit the road in early 1983 on one of her longest and widest reaching tours – taking in Europe, Asia and Australia in addition to dates in North America – it seems she was out to please all her fans: the sticklers, the modernists and the-somewhere-in-betweens. In fact so diverse and eclectic were the set-lists on this remarkable tour, they not only took in cuts from her classic years and her brace of mid-1970s challengers , she would often give numbers from her most reviled work (amongst the traditionalists), Mingus , a whirl. But she would always appease those disgruntled by a rendition of God Must Be A Boogie Man with a splendid A Case Of You, a well placed Both Sides Now or an encore of Carey. This superb FM radio broadcast, transmitted live from Joni s show at Tokyo s famous Nippon Budokan, is a fine example of such a show, mixing as it does the old, the new, the borrowed and – while the title track from her 1971 meisterwork is inconveniently absent – cuts from Hissing , Hejira and Mingus are all in evidence. Hopefully, therefore, a fine time was had by all those in attendance. For anyone listening today, a fine time is hereby guaranteed.

Let’s get straight to it, the reason you’re reading this review, you want to know what the sound quality is like. You can see the setlist, you know whether you like the songs, you’re already a fan and are familiar with this particular Joni era, but before you fork out for it. what is the recording quality like? Well, I’m pleased to report it is excellent. There are a lot of these old radio broadcasts floating around now and the sound quality varies from awful to excellent, I’ve been quite taken aback by the sound quality of this one, it is only just short of what you’d expect of an officially released live album, it really is that good. So if you’re holding back wondering whether or not this sounds like it was recorded in a tin can, hold back no,longer this is one of the very best of the plethora of old radio broadcasts that are being released now.

Songs On Joni Mitchell A Woman In The East:

1. Free Man in Paris
2. Edith and the Kingpin
3. You Dream Flat Tires
4. Refugee of the Road
5. You’re So Square
6. For Free
7. Big Yellow Taxi
8. A Case of You
9. God Must Be a Boogie Man
10. Wild Things Run Fast
11. Don’t Interrupt the Sorrow
12. Solid Love
13. Chinese Cafe/Unchained Melody
14. Help Me
15. You Turn Me On I’m A Radio
16. Love
17. Both Sides Now
18. Underneath the Streetlight
19. Woodstock
20. Carey

The Wells Fargo Theater, Los Angeles, 26th January 1995

While Joni Mitchell had made a few one-off appearances around this time, she hadn’t actually committed to a tour in more than a decade. Secondly, Turbulent Indigo was the revered singer-songwriter’s first album in three years, and first for Reprise Records since 1971. So Joni Mitchell s informal show in the Griffith Park facility’s Wells Fargo Theater was promoted by local triple-A station KCSA-FM and featured a selection of nearly two hundred invited guests. Here, Mitchell confirms once again that she’s an artist with a promising future as well as a celebrated past. Never one to rest on her illustrious laurels, she opens with Refuge of the Roads from Hejira, before making her way through a loosely thematic set of songs emphasizing her recent oeuvre.

I was surprised to see this product which is a radio concert from January 1995. Anything new from Joni Mitchell is worthy of investigation and here she was promoting the Turbulent Indigo album in front of just 200 invited guests and prize winners at the Wells Fargo Theatre in Los Angeles with a, for this period, rare fully acoustic performance. It’s an intimate setting which informs some of the inter-song stories, charmingly told and revealing too. To hear Joni live from this period is a treat indeed, with “Refuge Of The Roads”, “Hejira” and “Song For Sharon” being especially welcome to these ears. The concert is clear, though with evident background hiss and a radio ident towards the end between tracks, revealing its origins, and at 72 minutes good value too. For someone who has spent many happy hours listening to “Miles Of Aisles” and “Shadows And Light” finally hearing a later concert to compare these with is a find. Recommend for any Joni Mitchell fans.

Track listing

1. Refuge of the roads
2. Being Roy (rap)
3. Sex kills
4. Moon at the window
5. Night ride home
6. Loves cries
7. Yvette in English
8. Cherokee Louiseq
9. Sunny Sunday (rap)
10. Hejira
11. Just like this train
12. Happiness is the best facelift
13. Song for Sharon

There were singer-songwriters before Joni Mitchell , but with her 1971 masterpiece Blue, she pretty much set the template for almost everything that came after it.

Leading up to the album’s release on June 22nd, Joni Mitchell had released three albums, each an improvement — commercially and creatively — over its predecessor. Her 1968 debut, Song to a Seagull, barely cracked the charts and was short on any signature song. But by the following year’s Clouds, she was in the Top 40 and writing and recording numbers like “Chelsea Morning” and “Both Sides Now,” two of her earliest classics.

With 1970’s Ladies of the Canyon she cracked the Top 30 for the first time and scored three more of her most enduring numbers, “The Circle Game,” “Woodstock” (which Mitchell’s ex, Graham Nash, took to the Top 15 with his group Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young  and “Big Yellow Taxi,” which gave Mitchell her first sorta big single with its influence over the years looms way larger.

But Blue was something different, a hyper-personal collection of songs that sounded like they were ripped straight from Mitchell’s diary. The spare performances — most times it’s just Mitchell and her guitar or piano — add to the album’s intimacy, sparking a revealing listen that at times comes off like something maybe you shouldn’t be hearing. There are confessions, slipped-out secrets and the sense that the heart on display here was temporarily caught off guard.

When she first started recording the album in Los Angeles (with famous friend Stephen Stills and then current boyfriend James Taylor helping out on a handful of songs, along with pedal steel player Sneaky Pete Kleinow and drummer Russ Kunkel), Mitchell was unsure which direction her fourth album was heading.

Songs were recorded and later cut from the album, replaced by newer numbers that better reflected her state of mind at the time. Blue is as much about her breakup with Nash as it is her relationship with other men of the period, including Taylor, even though the couple was history by the time the album came out. The pieces come together like a fractured heart trying to mend itself.

Joni Mitchell didn’t try to hide any of this. The hurt you hear in some of the songs came from a very real place, as did the joy found in others. In songs like “Carey,” “California,” “River,” “A Case of You” and the title track, Mitchell paints a portrait of a life in shambles, in heartbreak, in excitement and in love. (Many of the joyous pieces were written about a man Mitchell had met during a quick retreat to Greece in 1970 after her breakup with Nash.)

But there was more to Blue than just veiled accounts of Mitchell’s flings. There were songs about the daughter she gave up for adoption in 1965 (“Little Green”), homesickness (“California”) and her early marriage (“The Last Time I Saw Richard”). Nobody ever opened up so much on record before. Not even Carole King, whose equally game-shifting singer-songwriter album Tapestry was released just four months earlier, and certainly not any of her male contemporaries.

Blue became Mitchell’s highest-charting album at the time, “Carey” and “California” were both released as singles, with only the former charting, But its influence was almost immediately felt. Her friends and peers celebrated her openness, her complex guitar tunings and her willingness to take music into a bold new direction.

With the charts dominated by macho braggarts like the Rolling StonesSticky Fingers and Rod Stewart‘s Every Picture Tells a Story, both of which sandwiched Tapestry in the No. 1 spot in 1971, Blue not only revealed rare vulnerability, it was willing to take responsibility for its creator’s f—-ups. Nobody else was doing that. All these years later, singer-songwriters of all sorts (sensitive, insensitive, confessional, regretful) can be traced back to Mitchell’s masterpiece.

Prince covering Joni Mitchell’s ” A Case of You “ from an obscure tribute album to Joni. I own no copyrights on this, and I offer it in memory of Prince. for such a beautiful song and a superbly executed cover

Prince made his last purchases at iconic Minneapolis record store the Electric Fetus on Saturday.

The artist had stopped in to support Record Store Day, said Bob Fuchs, the store’s retail music manager.

He bought six CDs, according to Fuchs:

1) Stevie Wonder, “Talking Book”
2) Chambers Brothers, “The Time Has Come”
3) Joni Mitchell, “Hejira”
4) Swan Silvertones, “Inspirational Gospel Classics”
5) Missing Persons, “The Best Of Missing Persons”
6) Santana, “Santana IV”

Fuchs said his store sold out of Prince merchandise in two hours after news broke that Prince had died.

“It’s a lot of sadness today. People coming in, sharing stories, and crying, and talking about their experiences and their love of his music,” Fuchs said. “It’s just kind of been a communal day of grieving at the store here. And celebration I suppose. People were dancing around, playing records, kind of a nonstop Prince fair today.”

The last tweet from Prince was a link to the store’s website on Saturday, where he was selling his Piano & A Microphone concert program.

“A WOMEN IN THE EAST” deluxe vinyl available from http://www.plastichead.com order link below

http://www.plastichead.com/item.asp…

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Label: ‪#‎LETTHEMEATVINYL‬
‪#‎JoniMitchell‬
‪#‎Plastichead‬
DELUXE VINYL EDITION!!!
A Joni Mitchell broadcast live from the Budokan, Tokyo 1983. A wonderful, career-spanning concert release from a ground breaking artist. Intermingled songs from various albums creates a snapshot of just how eclectic Mitchell’s repertoire is. This is a great album, well worth it for any fan of the greatest female singer songwriter ever.
SIDE A
1.Free Man in Paris (Live)
2.Edith and the Kingpin (Live)
3.You Dream Flat Tires (Live)
4.Refuge of the Roads (Live)
5.You’re so Square (Live)

SIDE B
6.For Free (Live)
7.Big Yellow Taxi (Live)
8.A Case of You (Live)
9.God Must Be a Boogie Man (Live)
10.Wild Things Run Fast (Live)

SIDE C
11.Don’t Interrupt the Sorrow (Live)
12.Solid Love (Live)
13.Chinese Cafe / Unchained Melody (Live)
14.Help Me (Live)
15.You Turn Me on I’m a Radio (Live)

SIDE D
16.Love (Live)
17.Both Sides Now (Live)
18.Underneath the Streetlight (Live)
19.Woodstock (Live)
20.Carey (Live)

While Joni Mitchell had made a few one-off appearances around this time, she hadn’t actually committed to a tour in more than a decade. Secondly, Turbulent Indigo was the revered singer-songwriter’s first album in three years, and first for Reprise since 1971. Mitchell s informal show in the Griffith Park facility’s Wells Fargo Theater was promoted by local triple-A station KCSA-FM and featured a selection of nearly two hundred invited guests. Here, Joni Mitchell confirms once again that she’s an artist with a promising future as well as a celebrated past. Never one to rest on her illustrious laurels, she opens with Refuge of the Roads from Hejira, before making her way through a loosely thematic set of songs emphasizing her recent oeuvre. This is available on Amazon

Track Listings
1. Refuge Of The Roads
2. Being Roy
3. Sex Kills
4. Moon At The Window
5. Night Ride Home
6. Loves Cries
7. Yvette In English
8. Cherokee Louise
9. Sunny Sunday
10. Hejira
11. Just Like This Train
12. Happiness Is The Best Face-Lift
13. Song For Sharon

 

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David Crosby  has the distinction of being a founding member of both the Byrds and Crosby, Stills & Nash who has survived drug busts in Texas (nine months in state prison for possession of heroin and cocaine), a hit-and-run driving accident, possession of a concealed pistol and drug paraphernalia, an arrest for driving into a fence in Marin County, a transplanted liver, the ire of Graham Nash, and fathering two children by Melissa Etheridge. He is a bit of a lightning rod to be sure! Love him or hate him, Crosby, now 79 years old, has had a stellar career. A singer-songwriter and guitarist, he wrote or co-wrote “Wooden Ships,” “Deja Vu,” “Guinnevere,” and “Lady Friend,” among others.

He is also noted for his soaring high harmonies, a trademark of his songs. In addition to performing on the Byrds first five albums (their best in my opinion), he also played on eight Crosby Stills & Nash albums including three with Neil Young), he has made solo albums, and collaborated with Graham Nash on five long players. Croz is  pretty prolific workhorse. He has been inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame twice with the Byrds and Crosby, Stills & Nash. He can be seen in an excellent 2019 documentary “Remember My Name,” in which he pulls no punches about his failed relationships, scrapes with the law, and regrets about years lost to drug abuse. Crosby is certainly a survivor.

David Crosby’s 1971 solo album “If I Could Only Remember My Name” was developed in a time of great emotional upheaval but also intense creativity for David Crosby and the contributing musicians. Many if not most of the finest San Francisco musician’s fingerprints can be found on this record. Often referred to as the ‘Planet Earth Rock and Roll Orchestra’ the combination of talents can also be discovered adding their unique abilities to other albums of that era. Jefferson Starship’s Blows Against the Empire, Graham Nash’s Songs for Beginners, Mickey Hart’s Rolling Thunder as well as Paul Kantner/Grace Slick’s solo excursions feature many of the same artists. David Freiberg, Neil Young, Michael Shrieve, Graham Nash, Joni Mitchell as well as the members of the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane all make appearances in various combinations equaling some mind expanding and amazing music created in the early 1970’s. This amazing time in rock history will never be witnessed again, a time where wonderful collaborations and a shared love of musical discovery took precedent over record contracts, royalties and tour receipts.

David Crosby’s 1971 masterpiece “If I could Only Remember My Name”. Emotionally recovering from the loss of his lover Christine Hinton from a devistating car crash,

“If I Could Only Remember My Name” is the result of David Crosby’s escape from depression and his eventual refuge found through music and his friends. The collaborations featured on the recordings did not occur in a vacuum, the relationships were developed early on in the respective musicians careers. Paul Kantner, Crosby and Stephen Stills collaborated on the songwriting of the CSN track ‘Wooden Ships’, Jerry Garcia was a ‘spiritual advisor’/producer for the Jefferson Airplane’s Surrealistic Pillow album and David Freiberg, Kantner and Crosby often cross pollinated each others work in the early stages of their careers.

Crosby gathered a superb supporting cast, one that featured the communal contributions of friends and fellow travellers, among them, members of the Grateful Dead (Jerry Garcia, Phil Lesh, Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart), Jefferson Airplane (Grace Slick, Paul Kantner. Jorma Kaukonen, Jack Casady), Santana (Gregg Rolie and Michael Shrieve) and Quicksilver Messenger Service (David Freiberg), along with faithful standbys Graham Nash, Neil Young and Joni Mitchell.

The LP opens fittingly opens with the aptly titled ‘Music Is Love’. The song features three of the four principals of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, with Stills the only member not appearing. The song encapsulates the pervading attitude of the record with the ‘Music Is Love’ mantra harmonized by Nash and Young while Crosby spreads a soaring free form vocal over the top. Young, Crosby and Nash interweave crystalline acoustic guitars with Young offering his personal rhythm section of bass and congas and a ghostly vibraphone. The campfire vibe song rises weightless like smoke, soaking into the glorious melodic sunshine.

The cinematic and epic ‘Cowboy Movie’ follows, spotlighting the rhythm section of the Grateful Dead with Hart, Kreutzman and Lesh in addition to featuring a Jerry Garcia and Neil Young in a dusty ten paces and turn guitar duel. The story line of the tail fictionalizes the CSNY break up through the premise of a spaghetti western and comments on some of the personal issues that haunted the band, like certain principals relationship with the ‘Raven’ (Rita Coolage). Garcia and Young go toe to toe through deft uses of moaning feedback and the perfect finishing of each other’s guitar phrases. The heavy footed groove slowly gains in intensity, Crosby shreds his vocals thrillingly eventually climaxing in an instrumental orgasm that fades out much too soon. (There is a thrilling and extended version of this track available on the David Crosby box set Voyage)

The cool night air of ‘Tamalpais High (At About 3)” settles in, again featuring the Grateful Dead’s Billy K. on drums and Phil Lesh on bass. Garcia and the Airplane’s Jorma Kaukonen hold the six strings while Nash and Crosby handle the delicate wordless melody. Crosby stated that this song was not really ‘received’ by ‘CSNY’ so it ended up on his solo record. A quintessential Crosby melody, circular and umbrageous in its design, lyrical content is not required due to the aural portrait conjured by the instrumental and vocal alchemy. The organic blending of Crosby and Nash’s melody lines slither over the morphing jazz groove driven by Lesh’s thumping Alembic bass and Kreutzman’s multiple arms. Garcia and Kaukonen trade virginal clean tone lines over the additively shifty composition.

One of Crosby’s most enduring melodies and enchanted compositions, ‘Laughing’ follows and closes the first side of the record. Opening like the birth of a vibrant sunrise, the songs design is again built around the Grateful Dead rhythm section featuring Lesh’s well timed and plump detonations. Crosby’s glistening twelve string strums sparkle like solar rays through rain drops. On top of all of the swirling magic Garcia lays a sleek and spectral pedal steel line that is extremely emotive, acting as its own independent star sailing melody line. The song lyrically is the search for answers and according to Crosby directed to George Harrison and expressed psychedelically through a collaborative chorus highlighted by the smooth styling of Joni Mitchell.

Flipping over the LP, the second side of the record begins with ‘What Are Their Names’ a still relevant song that still features in CSN and CSNY set lists , but now performed acapella. This original rendition is a full band performance constructed around a descending set of changes. Three crisp guitars wrap themselves around a central pole to open the song, Crosby, Garcia and Young gently caressing the songs internal melody. As the drums and bass enter (Shrieve and Casady) the song gains a slightly disturbing and dramatic edge, Young and Garcia’s guitars bite deep. The finger pointing lyrics are sung in huge super group choral fashion featuring but not limited to Crosby, Nash, Grace Slick, Paul Kantner, Laura Allen and possibly Crosby’s brother Ethan. A stunning start to side two and a commentary on the organic creation of the music contained on the record.

Traction in the Rain’ follows next and allows time for Crosby acoustic introspection. The drumless melody hangs weightless on woody strums and finds Crosby and Nash on shimmering acoustics and Laura Allen contributing on beautiful and cascading auto harp. Crosby’s vocals are some of the finest on the record and the song would become a highlight of future Crosby/Nash duo performances.

‘Song with No Words (Tree with No Leaves)’ is a prismatic meditation where in a role reversal, the music colours and supports the stunning wordless Crosby/Nash vocal melody. The supporting players act as one swirling instrument enveloped into each other through intent listening. The players cannot always be confirmed on these resulting tracks, but my ear hears, Garcia, Kaukonen, Shreive, Nash and possibly Young on piano. In the ‘rock room’s humble opinion one of the finest tracks on the record.

The final two songs of the LP are also wordless compositions. In many ways this increases the emotional effectiveness and melodic strength contained within the numbers. ‘Orleans’ is a traditional French children’s song that lists the cathedrals of France. Of course Crosby arranges it into a strange and weaving mood piece based around overdubbed acoustics and his perfectly stratified vocals.

The album closes with the exhilarating and supernatural ‘I’d Swear There Was Somebody Here’. A vocal only movement, Crosby is quoted as saying he was in a good place, high as a kite and experimenting with the echo chamber in Wally Heider’s studio. Crosby sang six different parts developed on the spot, vocally improvised and bringing into existence a masterful representation of his recently departed love. Crosby felt that the creation of this song was initiated by Christine visiting him and/or making her presence known to him during the song’s genesis. Something is definitely happening during the brief apparitional and aural experience. This song epitomizes what this music is all about, remembering, feeling, expressing and being in the moment. The track is a fitting conclusion to the record and inspiring statement of Crosby’s talent and the towering importance of the record in the pantheon of rock history.

David Crosby’s musical journey is a tale rife with contradictions. There’s the obvious brilliance he first shared while with the Byrds and then, later, his contributions to America’s first true supergroup, Crosby, Stills, Nash and (at times) Young. By having a hand in the writing of songs that helped define both bands—among them, such enduring classics as “Lady Friend,” “Why” and “Eight Miles High” for the former, and “Guinnevere,” “Wooden Ships,” “Almost Cut My Hair” and “Déjà Vu” for the latter—he played a major role in establishing a timeless template that reflected a freedom-first attitude of the ’60s that resonates even today. Likewise, his rich tenor and unmistakable jazz-like sensibilities imbued each group with a firm foundation for their exacting vocal harmonies. Crosby also helped establish a free-flowing communal kind of creativity, another distinctive element that led to a more synchronous sound.

Engineer Stephen Barncard had his reservations when he was assigned to do the record, referring to Crosby’s reputation as being that of an “asshole.” However in Crosby’s autobiography Long Time Gone, he describes the recording, which began in November 1970, as “the most exhilarating project I’ve ever done in my life…It was a loose setup…but I learned to relax with it and before we knew it we were ready to mix.”

Crosby and chief Byrd watcher Roger McGuinn clashed when Crosby insisted the group record his ode to hedonism, “Triad,” a song that celebrated the joys of a ménage à trois (they didn’t record it, but Jefferson Airplane happily included it on one of their albums). During 1967’s Monterey Pop Festival, Crosby broke ranks with a rant about a Kennedy assassination coverup, after which he famously took the stage with Buffalo Springfield, filling in for an absent Neil Young.

If I Could Only Remember My Name is not only a career defining statement for David Crosby it is also a commentary on the collaborative and communal environment surrounding music in the 1960’s and 1970’s. Friends created music on this record, credits or royalties did not matter. What mattered was sharing in the making of something bigger and better than its individual components. The songs contained on this record are inspired by the joy of giving and creating and the proof lies within the jagged grooves of its vinyl. The record is arguably David Crosby’s finest achievement and a photographic capture of some of the contributing musician’s finest moments ever committed to tape. The record is a standard of the rock room and a must have addition to any rock collection . (Note: an outtake from the sessions, “Kids and Dogs,” later included on Crosby’s Voyage anthology, would also have found a fit within that surreal setting.)(There are also a multitude of outtakes of the sessions available for those willing to search)

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The playlist of all the songs on Hissing Of Summer Lawns in their stripped down form as Joni Mitchell presented them to the record company as her proposed album. It is know as the ‘Hissing Demos’ as well as ‘The Seeding Of Summer Lawns’.

These unreleased demos and working versions appeared in a radically different finished form on the “Hissing Of Summer Lawns” released in November 1975.  On the album Joni had continued her change in musical direction begun on Court And Spark (1974), away from her folk stylings towards jazz and what we would now label world music.
The tracks recorded on these demos are performed mainly on acoustic guitar and piano, giving these stripped down versions a feel similar to the albums Blue, For The Roses (1972) and Hejira (1976). Missing from this collection of demos are The Jungle Line, Don’t Interrupt The Sorrow and the album’s title track The Hissing Of Summer Lawns. Of the nine tracks, two did not appear on the finished album, Dreamland was omitted and finally appeared on Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter (1977) in its completed form, Hunter is an outtake from perhaps Joni’s most famous and deeply personal album Blue (1971).
These demos also circulate as the Seeding Of Summer Lawns; same track-listing,

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Philadelphia’s newest electric soul-pop group Vita and the Woolf and their EP release “Fang Song” came out earlier this year. With Front woman Jennifer Pague is expected to impress the with her dynamic vocal range on tracks such as the passionate “Mary” and the circus-inspired “Slipping Hills,” both tunes off of their Fang Song EP,  The eight-track record is result of Prague’s dedicated two years of writing.  As  Xmas approaches here is a superbly worked cover of the Joni Mitchell song “River ”