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Joni Mitchell: In Her Own Words

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When singer, musician, and broadcast journalist Malka Marom had the opportunity to interview Joni Mitchell in 1973, she was eager to reconnect with the performer she’d first met late one night in 1966 at a Yorkville coffeehouse. More conversations followed over the next four decades of friendship, and it was only after Joni and Malka completed their most recent recorded interview, in 2012, that Malka discovered the heart of their discussions: the creative process.In Joni Mitchell: In Her Own Words, Joni and Malka follow this thread through seven decades of life and art, discussing the influence of Joni’s childhood, love and loss, playing dives and huge festivals, acclaim and criticism, poverty and affluence, glamorous triumphs and tragic mistakes . . .This riveting narrative, told in interviews, lyrics, paintings, and photographs, is shared in the hope of illuminating a timeless body of work and inspiring others.

ISBN-13: 9781770411326

Media Type: Hardcover

Publisher: ECW Press

Publication Date: 09-09-2014

Pages: 284

Product Dimensions: 7.10(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)

Malka Marom began her career as a folksinger, in the popular duo Malka & Joso, who were the first to bring world music to Canada. As a soloist, Marom has performed on stage, TV, and radio around the world. She is also known and respected as a radio broadcaster and documentary maker and is the author of the bestselling novel Sulha. Marom lives in Toronto, Ontario.

Read an Excerpt

Joni Mitchell

In Her Own Words


By Malka Marom

ECW PRESS

Copyright © 2014 Malka Marom
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-77090-581-8


CHAPTER 1

PART I


Malka: I'm intrigued, Joni, with this part of the liner notes to your CD Dreamland: "Like her paintings, like her songs, like her life, Joni Mitchell has never settled for the easy answers; it's the big questions that she's still exploring."

What big questions?

Joni: The Garden. Adam and Eve. Original sin. I've been chasing around the story of Adam and Eve and the continuing expulsion from Eden, the planet Eden, earth Eden, which I explored and explored and explored ...

And just as Eve succumbed
To reckless curiosity
I take my sharpest fingernail
And slash the globe to see
Below me
("Paprika Plains")

They paved paradise
And put up a parking lot
("Big Yellow Taxi")

We are stardust,
We are golden
And we've got to get ourselves
Back to the garden
("Woodstock")


M: So let's go back to the Garden, to the early days — where did it all begin for you? When you were little, did you dream of singing on the stage, writing songs, composing music?

J: I always had starry eyes, I think. I mean, I always was interested in the glamour of it. Well, glamour for me then ...

I lived in the tail end of a horse-drawn culture. We still had our water and the milk delivered by horses, and at Christmas a mound of packages would come on an open sleigh. There were only two stores in town. My dad ran the grocery store and Marilyn McGee's dad ran the general store. She and I called the Simpsons-Sears catalogue "The Book of Dreams." It was so glamorous when I was a child, four or five. We'd be down on our bellies looking at every page, and she and I would pick out our favourite object from the front page to the back page. We would pick out our favourite matron's girdle and our favourite saw and our favourite hammer. "I like that one best." Every page, "That's my favourite." So in that way you learned to shop before you have money, you learn the addiction of the process of selection.

You could take me anywhere on any budget level and I'll go into "That's a good thing for that much money. That's a beautiful thing."

M: Even today?

J: Yeah. The Book of Dreams, when everybody had read it, because we were on rations, it became toilet paper. Even the mayor, if you could imagine, wiped his ass with the Simpsons-Sears catalogue, glossy coloured paper. We, at grocery stores, would try to save the orange tissue. Oranges used to come wrapped in orange tissue. We tried to stockpile that for toilet paper.

There was no sewage system in this town. It was like the Klondike, wooden sidewalks, electricity, but no running water, cisterns, no flush toilets. So you had to empty them. And next to the toilet can, basically, sat the Simpsons-Sears catalogue — the Book of Dreams. Either you ordered something or you just dreamed on it.

M: Was it that Book of Dreams that triggered in you the desire to draw pictures?

J: No, that was brought on by trauma and anxiety. And the trauma and anxiety was Bambi, of all things. The fire scene in Bambi, where Bambi's mother gets trapped in the fire, was horrific to me, and I couldn't exorcise the vision. For days, maybe a week afterwards, I was down on the floor drawing fire and deer running, day after day after day.

M: How old were you then?

J: Four or five, or maybe grade one. I'm not sure. I just drew and drew. That trauma and anxiety — the forest burning and the animals getting hurt — sparked an obsessive need to exorcise emotion, by drawing it out, drawing it out.

I think maybe that's the beginning of my contempt for my species and what it does. How ignorant it is of sharing this planet with other creatures. Its lack of native intelligence, common sense, or spirituality addressed to the earth ...

I couldn't get the image out of my head. I just had to draw deer running out of flames, draw it and draw it. It was very disturbing to me.

M: It reminds me of the drawings at the Altamira caves. You know, tens of thousands of years ago they painted on the walls of that cave the animals that terrified them. Perhaps it's an inborn instinct to exorcise fear. So that's what started you to paint. Did you continue?

J: Yes. One of the [assignments at school] was you had to draw a doghouse. I did the best doghouse in the class. At that moment, I forged my identity as an artist.

M: And did you like it? Was it a good feeling to be regarded as an artist?

J: Well, I wasn't. I was regarded as a dunce. It was either the second or the third grade when [the teacher] graded us and moved us out of our normal spontaneous desk positions into rows. The A students in one row, which she called Bluebirds; the B students in another row, which she called Robins; and C students in another row, which she called Wrens; and the flunkies in another row, which she called Crows. I was in the Wren row, which is like a third-class citizen. I looked at the A row and I thought, "Look at them, they're all so smug." Their little hands would clasp and they looked like they won something. "What is the prize here?" I thought. "All you did was spit back what the teacher told you." I don't remember the language that I thought at this particular time, but I do remember that I had this thought.

From here on in, I'm not interested unless she asks us a question that nobody knows the answer to. I had this need to discover in order to learn. There was this compulsion to originality. That's why I'm self-taught and outside the box in so many ways.

But at that time, I remember that the thing that gave me the strength and the confidence to be basically a sort of dodo bird was that I drew the best doghouse. It was then that I noticed my skill. And I said, "I'm an artist." I forged that identity so that later when they put me in the corner with a dunce cap and tried to ridicule me, I managed to make it into something sort of glamorous. It didn't make me put my tail between my legs. It made me kind of proud.

M: You were courageous already at that young age.

J: Well, I had to be really courageous because the following year I got polio, and when they found out what I had, they shipped me out of town, a hundred miles away.

When it was intimated that I would never walk again — it was never directly said, it was implied by a man who would never walk again, a man in a wheelchair — I couldn't accept that destiny and I said, "I am not a cripple. I am not a cripple."

M: Like a mantra.

J: Out of the question. By God, I was gonna get up and walk. "I am not a cripple ... not a cripple ..." I said to a Christmas tree, which my mother had placed in the room — the only time she came to visit me. She brought me that little Christmas tree and left. My father never came to visit me when I was in the hospital.

In the meantime, I was stuck there with Christmas coming on. Someone sent me a Christmas carol book, a Good King Wenceslas colouring book, which was Dickensian images of carols, for the most part with mutts, you know. No crayons. But I had ulcers in my mouth, which they would paint with Gentian violet, and sometimes they'd leave the swabs behind. So I would colour everything in this colouring book light purple, dark purple, purple dots, purple stripes — to get the different shades. But everything was purple. So it wasn't very exciting, one colour.

I was sharing a room in this trailer annex that was outside the hospital, because we were so contagious, with a six-year-old boy who was very sullen and picked his nose all the time.

On this particular day, they had given me some kind of therapy and left me sitting up at the edge of the bed, all kind of warped with my paralyzed legs dangling over the edge. A nun had rushed in and called me a "shameless hussy," and pushed me to the back and covered my legs. And I thought, "I'm nine and he's six. What's wrong with my legs?"

Anyway, I'm sitting at the back of the bed and I'm still kind of propped up, and I started singing these Christmas carols, and he picked his nose and told me to shut up.

"SHUT UP!" he kept saying. That was my first audience, right? [laughs]

They let me keep the Christmas tree that my mother brought with some reflectors and a few ornaments. That night or one night near it, after the lights-out, I said to the tree, "I'm not a cripple, I'm gonna get out of here ... I'm not a cripple, I'm gonna get out of here ..."

It was a private ritual praying for my legs back. And because I broke with the church the year before — church was interesting, still I broke with it because when I asked questions, they looked at me and their eyes called me a bad girl. "Adam and Eve were the first people on earth, and they had two sons, Cain and Abel, and Cain killed Abel, and Cain got married. Who did he marry? Eve?" "Bad girl." So it wouldn't be Jesus or God [I prayed to].

"I'll make it up to you," I said to someone. I don't know who. Maybe it was the Christmas tree? "I'll make it up to you. Just get me out of here. Give me back my legs."

A year later, I did finally stand up and walk well enough that they let me go back home. I was good to my promise. When they asked me to join the church choir, I said yes. I took the descant part, which most of the kids couldn't follow because it had very radical intervals. It rolled over and under the tighter harmonies, which were easier for kids to learn. I thought descant was quite adventurous, very exciting, and that's probably why it has been a major influence on my melody, why I like odd intervals too.

Well, I'd only been to about three choir practices when a girl bought a package of cigarettes and we all went down to the empty church pond, passed the cigarettes around. One girl threw up. There was a lot of coughing. I took one hit and went, "This is great."

M: You were smoking since then?

J: Yes, since I was nine.

M: Was it at that time that the minister of your church became your hero?

J: Yeah. I was in the fourth grade when my friend, Anne Bayin, and her father, Allen Logie, who was going to be the minister, arrived. He didn't call me a bad child when I asked him questions. He was one of my early heroes. Thank you for respecting my questions.

He told me ... what was the word he used ... symbolic. Never heard that word before but I understood it. "Oh, that's just symbolic. Adam and Eve weren't really the first man and woman. It's symbolic." He dared to tell me it was myth.

M: Was it from then that your fascination with the story of the Garden started?

J: Right. This story has been a favourite of mine since I was a child. Adam and Eve were living happily off the land in harmony with nature. So there they are. And, according to the story, what happens is, Eve gets curious, right? And the snake, seeing her curiosity, sticks it to her, so to speak. He says, "Ah, this chick's curious." He makes it even more enticing.

Symbolically, she makes the mistake of eating. She's curious for knowledge. She eats from the tree, but she doesn't eat from the tree of immortality first. There's the curse. If you had the immortality, my interpretation is you would have the foresight. If you had immortality, you would have a God-vision. You would be able to withdraw and see far into the future. But unfortunately, they just chose knowledge and it's a little knowledge in the hands of fools.

Spirit of the water
give us all the courage and the grace
to make genius of this tragedy unfolding
the genius to save this place
("This Place")

J: One time I asked my grandmother why my mother was so pathologically horrified of snakes, horrified. And she said to me, "Oh Joan, ever since Eve was in the garden, women haven't liked the serpent very much." So again, the story comes back to me.

The truth of the matter was that my mother had handled snakes, garter snakes. She was a farm girl and was cool with them. But one day she stepped on one in a dark root cellar with a bare foot, and it freaked her out. I've seen her touch a photograph of a black and white snake going through the encyclopedia, and shudder. The whole experience would come back, horrifying. A movie like King Solomon's Mines when the snake would drop out of the tree — in the movie theatre my mother would practically die.

So as I was growing up, I thought if I ever stepped on a snake in my bare feet, I would die. It was like a curse on the family. And I spent many years watching the grass carefully in the country so I wouldn't step on one, being horrified if I even saw one.

Finally, one day in Laurel Canyon, I woke up out of bed, blurry eyed, carrying my nightgown out to the laundry hamper. I stepped on a snake in my bare feet in my living room, of all places. This is when the symbolism began to really pick up.

For a while I bought Freud's thing, the phallicness, it's such an obvious symbol. But I don't see sex as the original sin. To me, that's not it at all. The fact that when they had knowledge they saw that they were naked, they saw their humanness, their vulnerability ... I've been chasing around that symbol ...

M: Fire compelled you to paint; was it anything in particular that brought you to music?

J: I had, as a child, I don't remember what age, a hurdy-gurdy that had a rope around the neck. It had circus images and it was made of heavy cardboard and it had a rubber thing that when you wound it, it hit some prongs, which played the melody "London Bridge Is Falling Down."

I used to always play it backwards because backwards it rocked. It had a different rhythm. The melodic intervals were quite surprising. It was really entirely a different piece of music — almost African in its rhythm. Once I played it backwards, playing it forward was kind of corny. Played backwards, it was a much more interesting piece of music, the first piece of music that inspired me.

The second one was when I was in the fourth grade. I had one friend who was a classically trained grade eight piano student, Frankie McKitrick. He let me dream big without any kind of contest. He was the only kid I could kind of play with, and I was exposed to a lot of music and ballet and things like that because of his interests. He was a real musician. I never thought of myself as a musician. He and I went to some pretty far-out movies together. My mother was horrified that the principal, his father, let us play hooky to go and see them. And among them was a movie called The Story of Three Loves, which had Rachmaninoff's Rhapsody on a Theme of Paganini as a theme song. And that piece of music thrilled me to no end. It was the most beautiful piece of music that I ever heard. I had to hear the record of it. I asked my parents to buy it for me, but it wasn't in the budget. It would be seventy-five cents or something. So I would go down to Grobman's department store, take it out of its brown sleeve, and go in the playback and play it maybe two or three times a week and just swoon.

I saw [the movie] recently. It was really corny, but the piece of music is still stupendous. There isn't another piece of music on the planet that has touched me like that.

When I heard it as a child, that music was like pleading to my mother. "Don't interpret the situation that way. You're breaking my heart. And I'm trying to explain to you ... I'm not trying to wiggle out of anything. I'm just trying to explain. And you won't let me. You insist on creating this barrier by getting it wrong." There isn't a piece of music that affected me emotionally like that. Then I started to dream that I could play the piano beautifully.

M: To dream or to wish?

J: To dream. In my dreams, my hands would be on the keyboards and I'd be composing these fantastic pieces of music, like Story of Three Loves, that I could play and make emotions come out like that.

And I also dreamed I could drive a car. [laughs]

So I told my mother that I wanted a piano, but it wasn't in the budget. I begged, I wheedled, I pleaded, and finally, one winter night, because there was no piano store in North Battleford, this van pulled up with a lot of spinets on the back. Mine was not a good instrument at all.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Joni Mitchell by Malka Marom. Copyright © 2014 Malka Marom. Excerpted by permission of ECW PRESS.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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