I never know what to do with the 'NJC' thing... is this an 'NJC'?
Anyway...it may have already been posted on here....
from yesterday.
Richard in San Francisco
n.p. Grateful Dead "Sugaree"
---

Joni Mitchell 'Ashamed' to Be in Music Business
Reuters
Oct 14 2002 7:53PM
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hell hath no fury like Joni Mitchell on the 
subject of the music industry.

The veteran singer/songwriter, on the promotional trail for a new 
album, says she is "ashamed" to be part of the music business and may 
stop recording.

"I just think it's a cesspool," the 58-year-old folk-rock icon said 
in the latest issue of Rolling Stone magazine.

"I hope it all goes down the crapper. I would never take another deal 
in the record business, which means I may not record again, or I have 
to figure out a way to sell over the Net or do something else. But 
I'll be damned if I'll line their pockets."

Oddly, Mitchell just signed a new deal with Nonesuch Records, which 
will release her new album, "Travelogue" in November. Mitchell was 
previously based at Reprise Records where her last few albums sold 
poorly but won several Grammy Awards. Both labels are units of AOL 
Time Warner Inc .

Mitchell also lambasted MTV, complaining that her three-year-old 
granddaughter is already grabbing her crotch and dancing, imitating 
the video clips played on the music cable network.

"It's tragic what MTV has done to the world," opined Mitchell, who 
was voted the fifth greatest woman in rock 'n' roll by MTV's sister 
channel VH1. Both networks are owned by Viacom Inc .

Once described by her friend David Crosby as being "about as humble 
as Mussolini," Mitchell has previously described contemporary music 
as "appallingly sick ... boring chord movement and bad acting."

In holding up Bob Dylan and herself as the standard for songwriting, 
she has written off devotees like Sting, Alanis Morissette and Sheryl 
Crow.

Mitchell has also previously savaged her former label boss David 
Geffen for not paying her any royalties, although he has countered 
that her albums never sold enough copies to cover the advance 
payments that she received from him.

Born Roberta Joan Anderson in Canada, Mitchell has established 
herself as one of the most respected artists of her generation. Her 
eclectic career spans 35 years and includes such seminal albums as 
1971's autobiographical "Blue" and the 1974 jazz-pop excursion "Court 
and Spark." She was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 
1997.

10/14/02 19:51 ET

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