http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A6066-2002Dec3.html

Joni Mitchell Gets Back to the Garden


By Richard Harrington
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, December 4, 2002; Page C01


Fortunately, Joni Mitchell has backed off recent assertions that her new 
album, "Travelogue," would be her last. "I'm quitting after this, because 
the business has made itself so repugnant to me," Mitchell, 59, had told W 
magazine. "What would I do? Show my [breasts]? Grab my crotch? Get hair 
extensions and a choreographer? It's not my world."

The commercial pop world -- which has become crasser and coarser over the 
three-plus decades of Mitchell's career -- has never been hers. A 
passionately beguiling blend of literate poetics and exploratory music, her 
work has always deserved better, but given today's marketplace, 
"Travelogue" was surely going to be a tough sell.

And Mitchell's approach to the project may not help matters.

Two years ago, the lushly orchestral "Both Sides Now" offered Mitchell's 
take on American standards, including two of her own (the title track and 
"A Case of You"). That album wasn't just an evocative exploration of 
popular song but a celebration of Mitchell's mature voice, one deepened by 
a lifetime of experience (and, sadly, decades of smoking). Her instrument 
has gradually evolved from the reedy soprano of the late '60s to today's 
wearily elegant contralto, evoking a viola or muted trumpet. "Both Sides 
Now," as well as Mitchell's infrequent concert performances, suggested she 
was intent on exploring fresh meanings to old songs.

On the two-disc, 22-track "Travelogue," Mitchell reconsiders her entire 
catalogue, drawing from 12 of her 15 studio albums. She's helped once again 
by Vincent Mendoza conducting the 70-piece London Symphony Orchestra in his 
own evocative and empathetic arrangements. These days, Mitchell is all 
chanteuse, leaving the playing to others. Guests such as saxophonist Wayne 
Shorter and keyboard player Herbie Hancock pep up some of the jazzier 
tracks, but mostly add texture to Mendoza's symphonic strings, brass and winds.

Like Bob Dylan riffling through his back pages, Mitchell and Mendoza 
rearrange her songs in such a way that few replicate the originals. While 
some gain emotive and interpretive depth from their reworkings, several are 
clumsily re-imagined. Case in point: "Woodstock" is slowed to a funereal 
pace that subverts the original meaning and spirit of the song, replacing 
fragile celebration with weary melancholy. Mitchell seems to distance 
herself from the past, now singing, "I know we're stardust / I think we're 
golden." Thirty-three years ago, she was more confident in her generation's 
humanity.

Mitchell has never shied away from social critiques, but there's little of 
that here, apart from the taut jazz snap of "Sex Kills"; "Cherokee Louise," 
a sharp sketch of a troubled foster child; and the plaintive "The Sire of 
Sorrow (Job's Sad Song)," in which Job rails against a heartless God, 
demanding to know "what have I done to you / that you make everything I 
dread / and everything I fear come true?"

A few too many arrangements proceed at a glacial tempo that abandons the 
rhythmic intricacies of the originals, and Mendoza's string settings 
sometimes slip toward lugubriousness, making the material more somber than 
it warrants. Thankfully, there is an occasional burst of jazzy brass: Joni 
as bebop priestess on "You Dream Flat Tires" or swaggering hipster on "Be 
Cool." But too much of the album -- from song choice to interpretive 
decision -- feels like a portentous final testament. "Judgment of the Moon 
and Stars (Ludwig's Tune)" is less about Beethoven than Mitchell's lifelong 
"solitary path." When she intones, "They're going to aim the hoses on you / 
You show them you won't expire / not till you burn up every passion," it's 
obvious the song has become a career statement.

Another early work, "The Circle Game," takes on the bittersweet character 
of the previous album's version of "Both Sides Now." Having ridden the 
carousel of time through constant transformation and discovery, Mitchell is 
more convincing than ever when conceding that "we can't return, we can only 
look behind from where we came / and go round and round and round in the 
circle game." Looking back with the eyes of hard-won experience makes the 
ride that much more rewarding.

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Deb Messling  -^..^-
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