hey, don't shoot the messenger.

http://straitstimes.asia1.com.sg/life/story/0,4386,156242,00.html

Full text:

A long and tiring journey
Frustrated with the music industry, Joni Mitchell says she's retiring. But 
her fans deserve far better than Travelogue

By Chris Ho

LAST week, veteran singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell announced that her new 
album, Travelogue, would be her last because she feels disillusioned by the 
music business today.

While none can deny that MTV has created an imaging-beast in the marketing 
of popular music, Mitchell's calling the business as a 'cesspool' sounds 
like over-reaction.


TRAVELLIN' WOMAN: On Travelogue, Joni Mitchell sounds like she has bad jet 
lag.
She hit out at industry executives for 'looking for a look and a 
willingness to cooperate'.

The music business, being what it is today, has indeed relegated many 
former major-label artistes to indie status: Rickie Lee Jones, John Prine 
and Warren Zevon, for instance, have long resigned themselves to that fact.

'I've never had a willingness to cooperate,' she said.

In that case, she should be glad she is still signed to a major label, 
especially after Both Sides Now, her last album of standards (and two 
originals) performed with the London Symphony Orchestra, that was a futile 
affirmation of her artistic maturity.

There was, however, one standout track on it - her update of her own A Case 
Of You which prompted one to ask why she had not instead recorded an entire 
album of her own compositions with the LSO.

Well, that warranted notion is now the new two-CD, 22-song package named 
Travelogue. But sad to say, it sounds almost as tedious and pointless as 
Both Sides Now's inept setting. It certainly will not win her new fans, either.

Mitchell is, first and foremost, a distinguished singer-songwriter with a 
brilliant flair for rhythmic intricacies.

Her greatest strength as a song-stylist lies in her idiosyncratic and 
self-styled folk-rock-jazz leanings.

In the past, her music was remarkable in the way she expanded on the folk 
premise of lyrical rock 'n' roll to embrace jazz and World-beat influences, 
not to mention her talent for writing in an emotive and poignant language 
of romantic love.

On Travelogue, she sounds like she is singing Vince Mendoza instead - 
Mendoza being the arranger and conductor of the LSO behind her.

Taken out of her innate freewheeling context to go classical (it might work 
as a point of digression, or as novelty in doses), Mitchell's songs are apt 
to suffer in an ill-fitting skin. The sweeping dramatics of the 70-piece 
orchestra tend to overwhelm her free-folk/rock-fusion instincts, turning 
many of her fine compositions into meandering tales of obtuse anachronism.

One example of this is Judgement Of The Moon & Stars (Ludwig's Tune). The 
tribute to Beethoven must have seemedlike an ideal choice for a classical 
treatment.

The reason why the song worked so well first time around on For The Roses 
has all to do with Mitchell's free-spirited audacity as a (rock) outsider 
to re-write classical in her own terms.

The song's Beat-informed lyrical-style with its strong protest message and 
the awkward classical arrangement (in the original) gave it precisely the 
kind of maverick spirit to work as a personal tribute.

In contrast, the new version on Travelogue is glib and flat.

The tracks that work on Travelogue are the ones that offer the least 
orchestral fuss but more rhythmic/jazz inflexions to allow the singer to 
shine with a husky, worldly candour: Trouble Child, Be Cool, Sex Kills, 
most of disc two and the album's opener Otis & Marlena which highlights her 
prophetic vision made 25 years ago that 'Muslims hold up Washington'.

It is not easy to sit through most of disc one to get to the good stuff, 
unless one is a diehard fan.

Most pop fans get hungry for nostalgia, especially when an artiste has had 
a long and illustrious career. Travelogue will no doubt attract fans as a 
stately new revisit of the 59-year-old singer's past.

Ridiculous to say, it also sounds like some infliction of the artiste's 
disgust of the industry upon her fans, a dread weighed out by more than two 
hours of near-tedium.

It would make a dismal swan song for an extraordinary artiste who should 
not forget that her fans deserve more of her - be it on a major or an indie 
label.

Hopefully, she will hold her head up high to face the music and dance in a 
scene which, to borrow a Tom Wolfe title, may well be a bonfire of the 
vanities. But that is no reason to throw in the towel.

As Mitchell herself once wrote in Shades Of Scarlet Conquering: 'Out of the 
fire and still smouldering a woman must have everything.'


Travelogue will be in stores on Nov 28.


----------------------------------------------------------------------
Deb Messling  -^..^-
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
----------------------------------------------------------------------
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.419 / Virus Database: 235 - Release Date: 11/13/02

Reply via email to