Read Girls Like Us: Carole King, Joni Mitchell, Carly Simon — and the Journey of a Generation Online
Authors: Sheila Weller
Like small-town girls turned writers before her, Joni took the measure of the city through windows, which provided both protection and voyeuristic satisfaction. In the same way that, twenty-nine years earlier, Ohioan Ruth McKenney had recorded how she and her sister Eileen had slept so close to open windows in their Greenwich Village basement that men would stick their heads in and say “Hiya, babes!” and “urchins ran sticks across the iron window bars, creating a realistic imitation of machine gun fire”; and in the same way that, eighteen years after
that,
fresh-from-Sacramento Joan Didion, “on a certain kind of winter eveningâ¦already dark and bitter,” peered into East Seventies windows at dinners being made, and imagined candles lit and children bathed; so too, Joni from Saskatoon pressed her nose to her glass pane. “Now the curtain opens on a portrait of today,” she announces, in “Chelsea Morning.” She's proudâthis country girlâto be peering out, from her own perch, at all of this roiling urbanity. “Chelsea Morning”
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is a Summer of Love love letter penned by a young woman alone in Manhattan. Here was the fruition of the promise she held out to her female Second Fret audience. Here was the new “Norwegian Wood.”
Joni eventually booked herself into the Cafe Au Go Go, where the headliners included her mentor, Eric Andersen, and, on other nights, the cape-wearing, Brooklyn-born black folksinger Richie Havens. One night in late spring, she walked around the corner from the Au Go Go to a new restaurant upstairs from the Dugout called the Tin Angel. Dave Van Ronk was holding forth at the Angel's bar, waxing proud and protective of the girl he'd met as part of Chuck-and-Joni at the Chess Mate. He would soon record “Both Sides, Now,” renaming it “Clouds,” retrofitting its feminine mulling of “rows and flows of angel hair and ice cream castles in the air” to his sandpaper growl. Joni was suddenly making a name for herself as a songwriter. In January, country-western star George Hamilton IV had an improbable country hit with “Urge for Going”; a month later Ian and Sylvia recorded “The Circle Game,” as would Buffy Sainte-Marie, who would also imminently record Joni's newly written “Song to a Seagull.” So Van Ronk was showing off Joni to a crowd at the bar that included his former guitar student Steve Katz. The guitarist and vocalist for the Au Go Go's house band, the Blues Project, Katz was a lean young man whose somber-Jewish-boy manner exerted a pull on women. He would later have a passionate affair with Joan Baez's sister Mimi Fariña.
A small group including Van Ronk and Katz ended up at Joni's apartment. “We jammed, and then I asked Joni if she wanted to go back to my place, which we did,” Steve Katz recalls. “We spent the night together, and the next day Joni was going off to play a gig or two somewhere in the South. We looked forward to seeing each other when she came back.” One of Joni's Southern engagements was at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, an army base where, “hippie” though she was, she entertained the Vietnam-bound soldiers. (“You got a lot of nerve, sister, standing up there and talking about love!” one war-scarred private she referred to as “Killer Kyle”
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angrily admonished, at her dressing room door. “So,” she would later recall, “I sat down, and he poured his little heart out to me [about] how the war had robbed him of his sensitivity because of the atrocities he'd experienced. Even the tender act of touching a woman, he felt, was beyond him. So I held him, I hugged him, I felt bad for him.”)
Within days of their evening together, Steve Katz was surprised to find in his mailbox “a card from [Joni] which was essentially a love letter.” The prematurity and strength of Joni's affection took him aback (and indicate how vulnerable she was at the beginning of this freewheeling time during which she would soon make so many conquests). “At this point in my very chauvinistic young life I did not want to get tied down,” he recalls, “and I certainly didn't feel as strongly toward her as that letter might have assumed.” He decided, discreetly, to hand her off.
When Joni returned to town, she called Steve, and Steve invited her over, along with his friend Roy Blumenfeld, the Blues Project's drummer. Tall and handsome in a sunny-faced way, Blumenfeld had a girlfriendâa young Frenchwoman named Marie, “who was a very, very fiery Sagittarius,” Roy says. Marie was “sexy and European; she had a mockingly combative style and smoked Gauloises.” She was back home in Bordeaux for the summer, which turned out to be very convenient.
Roy Blumenfeld remembers entering Steve's living room, “and I see long blond hair draped over the guitar. Joni was playing. She turned toward me, andâ¦I was absolutely stunned, knocked off my feet. The high cheekbones, the sculpted faceâ¦she was the perfect
shiksa.
She was the epitome of the woman I had dreamed of.”
Joni and Roy took a walk and talked about their shared love of music and art (Roy had been a student at Pratt Institute). They wound up in Joni's apartment, and, as was her standard gesture, she played Roy her compositions: “Little Green” (she did not disclose the song's meaning) and “Both Sides, Now,” as well as the never-to-be-recorded “Go Tell the Drummer Man.” “I was listening to a lot of R&B and Motown at the timeââI Heard It Through the Grapevine,' âMustang Sally,'” Roy says, “so I was used to macho music; Joni's music was light and melodic and different, but it straddled so many forms. Musically, I was enamoredâher music was more original than Dylan's.”
Joni and Roy spent most of the summer of 1967 together. To Roy, Joni was “somewhat like a Canadian Dorothy from
The Wizard of Oz
âpure, clear, surrounded by light, on a mission to get home and that [mission] was her muse and her power source. She was like aâ¦
scientist
of love, and I was like other lovers accompanying her on her journey: small dots on [what would be] a great metaphoric line drawing.” It was with Roy's help that Joni papered a whole wall of her apartment in aluminum foil,
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a flower child touch that gave the room a soft underwater feeling. They danced to the Temptations' “Beauty Is Only Skin Deep” and “I Want a Love I Can See” on the painted floor of Roy's small, $80-a-month East Village loft. They had dinner at Emilio's, an inexpensive Italian restaurant on Sixth Avenue, where, in its tree-swept garden, umbrellaed tables teetered on a pebbled ground, and young couples felt sophisticated. Roy gave Joni musicianly advice: attack the guitar as if it were a drum. They talked astrologyâshe was a Scorpio, a water sign; he was the opposite, a Taurusâso “we were really connected.” They traveled to Philadelphia together and stayed with Joy and Larry Schreiber while Joni played the Second Fret. They frequented the Tin Angel (the sad song she wrote about finding love “in a Bleecker Street café,” which she titled “Tin Angel,” is likely about Roy). “I was crazy in love with Joan Mitchell,” Roy says today. “The way I felt about herâ¦it scared me, because I felt I was going to go into this spiral of crazy love.” Joni seemed to reciprocate Roy's feelings.
In August, Roy's girlfriend Marie returned from France, found out about Joni, and flew into a rage. Roy did what he thought was the right thing (although he regretted it later). In order to keep peace with Marieâwho, after all, had prior claimâhe told Joni he had to stop seeing her. Devastated by the news, Joni sat sobbing at the bar at the Tin Angel.
But a very consequential silver lining would emerge that night, by way of one of Roy's best friends.
Consoling Joni at the bar for three hours was Roy and Steve's bandmate Al Kooper, the Blues Project's keyboardist, lead singer, and composer. Kooper was famous in recording circles; two years earlier, his inspired organ-playing on Dylan's “Like a Rolling Stone,” which opened the cut in what sounded like a riot of calliopes, had done much to make the song the marvel it was held to be. Al Kooper was crashing at Judy Collins's apartment; the established folksinger was a kind of big sister to young rockers. Joni was still lamenting over Roy at “Last call!” so Al offered to walk Joni home. When Joni invited him up to hear her songs, “she, being sorta pretty, had me bounding up the stairs figuring if the songs were lousy, maybe I could salvage the evening some other way,” Kooper recalled in his 1977 autobiography
Backstage Passes,
written with Ben Edmonds. But “in a few minutes, that became the furthest thing from my mind. Her songs were incredible and totally originalâ¦She would finish one, and I would say: more, more. And she had enough to keep going for hours, most of them brilliant. One song especially killed me, âMichael from Mountains.' I thought it would be great for Judy.” Even though it was the middle of the night, he decided to call Judy Collins and tell her about his discovery.
With almost otherworldly-luminous blue eyes and long light-brown hair, twenty-seven-year-old Judy Collins had, by the summer of 1967, already lived a remarkably full life. Raised in Washington state and Colorado, the daughter of a blind songwriterâradio personality, she'd become a virtuoso classical pianist at thirteen and, like Joni, had weathered polio. She'd fallen in love with folk music in her teens and switched from piano to guitar. At nineteen she married graduate student Peter Taylor and traveled with him from campus to campus as he completed his Ph.D. in English, supporting him with clerical jobs and, with increasing success, by folksinging. She juggled the care for their baby son, Clark, with her blossoming cabaret career, despite disapproval from her mother-in-law and others for being a workingâand performingâmother.
In 1963, divorced from Taylor, Collins moved to Greenwich Village with Clark; Taylor sued for custody. In those days, mothers almost automatically received custody of their young children. Judy was that very rare exception. After a highly acrimonious battle waged by her ex-husband and his family, Judy lost her son (she believes that being in psychoanalysis led the court to disfavor her), a blow that left her reeling.
Jac Holzman had discovered Judy at the Village Gate one night, and, defying the “she's-just-another-Baez-clone” naysayers, signed her to his Elektra Records. After she recorded her debut
Maid of Constant Sorrow,
Judy was diagnosed with tuberculosis. She had no health insurance; Holzman advanced her against future albums so her hospital bill could be paid. She rebounded and recorded four more albums for Elektraâthe latest,
In My Life,
featured her deeply felt version of the Beatles hit of that name, as well as the art song “Suzanne” by her friend, Canadian poet and novelist Leonard Cohen, who was about to release his own
Songs of Leonard Cohen,
offering “Suzanne” and his other poem-songs in his brazenly unmusical drone of a voice.
Collins was a woman who had definitely looked at life “from win and lose”âand, like Joni, she had the WASP choir girl voice and appearance that could render the idea of female worldweariness unthreatening. She was searching for a few last songs for her album-in-progress,
Wildflowers,
which would include two Leonard Cohen songs, “Hey, That's No Way to Say Goodbye” and “Sisters of Mercy.” So when Al woke her up, she was receptive. In a few hours Judy would be driving to Newport for the first day of its folk festival, of which she sat on the board of governors. “I asked her to take Joni in her car with her to Newport, listen to Joni sing her songs on the ride, and see if she could find a spot on the bill for her,” Kooper says today. Judy agreed to do so.
The next day, an excited Joniâpacked and readyâwaited, in vain, for Judy Collins to show. “Judy stood me up,” Joni has said, “and she was my hero, [so] it was kind of heartbreaking. I waited and waited and waited, and she never cameâ¦A day went by, and I got a phone call from her, and she sounded kind of sheepish. She said somebody had sung one of my songs in a workshop. It was a terrible rendition, she said, but people went crazy [over the song]. Judy thought I really should be at Newport.” She had a car pick Joni up and take her to the festival.
After Joni arrived at the festival grounds, Judyâwho had by now fallen in love with “Both Sides, Now” (she has said that the minute she heard it, she “knew it was a classic; I had to sing it”
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)âfelt deeply committed to getting Joni onstage. An obstruction materialized in the form of Joan Baez and Mimi Fariña's mother, “Big” Joan Baez. Using her considerable influence, the matriarch had Joni barred from the schedule, presumably fearing that the comely arriviste would steal the thunder from her daughters.
At this point Judyâwho was known as one tough ladyâstepped in and pulled weight of her own. Judy told Mrs. Baez, “If Joni doesn't perform, then
I
won't perform and Leonard [Cohen] won't perform.” By dint of Judy's threat, Joni got onstage at Newport. (So did Cohen, who was beset by such stage fright he would only sing with Judy standing next to him, holding his hand.)
Two very important things came of that day for Joni. First, she was riveted by Leonard Cohen. As she would later describe it (in “That Song About the Midway”), in one of her most memorable lines, Cohen “stood out like a ruby in a black man's ear.” Her recent fascination with Jewish menâKatz, Blumenfeldâfound its ultimate destination in this hound-dog-faced unlikely rock star (whose visage would be uncannily twinned in another handsomely unhandsome young manâ
The Graduate
star Dustin Hoffmanâwho would, within a few months, similarly emerge as an against-type sex symbol). Cohen was a poet in a sea of lyricists. His first volume of verse,
Let Us Compare Mythologies,
had been published while he was a McGill University undergraduate. His lauded second collection,
The Spice-Box of Earth,
had earned him acclaim, and his second novel,
Beautiful Losers
âmystical, ecstatic, tortured, and sexual: refracting his life with lover Marianne Jensen on the island of Hydraâhad moved one critic to liken him to James Joyce.