JIMI & JANIS
by
WENDY SMITH
___________________________
Wendy Smith is a contributing editor of The
American Scholar. She frequently reviews books
for The Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, and
The Chicago Tribune, and is the author of
Real Life Drama: The Group Theatre and America, 1931–1940.
I was
14 when Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin died within 16 days of
each other. It was 40 years ago, the fall of 1970, hardly more
than three years since the Monterey Pop Festival had made them
both stars, but as far as my friends and I were concerned, they’d
always been around. They were part of our musical landscape,
along with the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, and Bob Dylan. Drugs,
I regret to say, were part of our landscape too; we bought into
the counterculture’s glorification of sex, drugs, and
rock ’n’ roll as the way to blast our generation
loose from the dead hand of conformity and the dreaded prospect
of turning into our parents. We shrugged off adult finger wagging
over the deaths of two 27-year-olds from heroin
overdose and suffocation due to barbiturate intoxication (though
Hendrix choking on his own vomit inspired a fair amount of gross-out
teen humour). When you’re 14, 27 seems far away, and premature
death can seem romantically tragic rather than criminally wasteful.
I accepted
that Joplin and Hendrix, both famous for their pursuit of excess
as a path to ecstasy, had paid the price for their rejection
of conventional wisdom, conventional behaviour and conventional
restraint. They were the first members of the pantheon I formed
in high school of heroes who had lived hard and died young:
Lenny Bruce, F. Scott Fitzgerald, John Garfield, Billie Holiday,
Bessie Smith. Joplin introduced me to Bessie Smith, whom she
always cited as her greatest inspiration, though I didn’t
start listening to the 1920s’ Empress of the Blues until
after Janis died. At 14, to my mother’s horror, Joplin
was my model of what a woman could be: a plain, unpopular teenage
girl who transformed herself into a flamboyant counterculture
diva through sheer talent and audacity.
I loved
Hendrix’s sexy singles, but to me he was merely the flashiest
in a well-populated field of rock-guitar gods. Joplin’s
music spoke to my soul. “Ball and Chain,” “Piece
of My Heart,” “Kozmic Blues” were the cries
of a grown woman, but they perfectly voiced my adolescent angst.
I fiercely defended her against a friend who declared, “How
can Janis Joplin sing ‘Summertime’? She’s
not black!” “Neither was the guy who wrote it,”
I shot back -- one of the few times in my teens that I actually
made the right rejoinder on the spot. When a classmate asserted
that Hendrix’s death was a greater loss to music than
Joplin’s, I resented the implication that she was just
a chick singer, while he was a serious musician.
I have
to admit, though, that when I started listening to Bessie Smith
and Billie Holiday, for a while it made me think less of Joplin.
“I don’t like her as much now that I’ve heard
the real thing,” I remember loftily telling someone, betraying
a misguided notion of authenticity that confines purists in
every field. Hendrix, whose weakness for self-in¬dulgent
solos was more noticeable in the material his record company
issued posthumously, also suffered by comparison when I en¬countered
the stinging, tightly focused work of Muddy Waters, Robert Johnson,
and other classic blues guitarists. I didn’t know that
Hendrix had carefully studied them all, and I didn’t really
hear the bluesy cadences that informed even his most psychedelic
songs. Similarly, I was startled by the country twang of “Me
and Bobby McGee” and “Mercedes Benz” on Joplin’s
final album, released after her death. All I’d ever heard
about her youth in Texas was that she hated every minute of
it, and I’d assumed that included the region’s music
as well as the jocks and sorority girls who mocked her. I had
thought of Hendrix and Joplin as fabulously new creatures who
had invented themselves and their music. I wasn’t entirely
wrong, but they had connections to the past that were more tenacious
than I realized.
I would
be a lot older when I figured that out. I wasn’t listening
to their records much by the time I finished high school in
1974. I’d pretty well had it with the whole ’60s
thing. The consequences of its extremism were grimly apparent,
both personally, in the drug-related nervous breakdowns of several
of my friends, and politically, in newspaper headlines about
Black Panthers killed in police raids and Weather Underground
members blowing themselves up or perpetrating lunatic bank robberies.
At the ripe-old age of 18, I felt as unmoored as the existentialists
I was reading. Sanity and a sense of limits were beginning to
seem a lot more appealing than ecstasy and excess. The music
I preferred in college was by singer-songwriters (including
Joni Mitchell and Randy Newman), whose work had the honesty
of Hendrix’s and Joplin’s, with less recklessness.
If they took drugs (and plenty of them did), they didn’t
promote LSD as a path to enlightenment. Their diminished sense
of possibility made me a little sad – Joplin and Hendrix,
especially in performance, always gave me the feeling that mu¬sic
could do anything and take you anywhere -- but their caution
seemed wise. Smashing through sexual, social, and political
restraints could be liberating, but it was also risky, sometimes
life threatening.
I learned
that lesson over and over as an undergraduate studying revolutionary
movements and radical dissent. I was still a child of the ’60s,
trying to find a way to make sense of the cultural and political
turbulence that unsettled my adolescence. Being bookish by nature,
I thought that finding precedents in history would help me do
it. And eventually it did, after depressing sojourns through
European revolutions that ended either with the restoration
of the monarchy and an oppressive class structure that took
hundreds more years to reform (England and France) or with a
police state arguably worse than what preceded it (the Soviet
Union). The collapse of the utopian dreams of the ’60s
appeared less toxic in that context, the conservative reaction
of the ’80s -- though still troubling to a very liberal
Democrat like me -- less final. It had all happened before.
I was
especially fond of two previous eras in American history that
intertwined personal, political and cultural transformations.
The transcendentalists, staunch abolitionists all, blithely
appropriated bits of Swedenborgian mysticism, German idealist
philosophy and English romanticism to create the first great
flowering of our national literature in the works of Emerson,
Thoreau, Hawthorne, Whitman, and Dickinson -- as well as a lot
of messy personal entanglements and at least one failed commune.
In the early 20th century, Greenwich Village rebels mingled
Marxist theory, modernist aesthetics and Freudian psychology
to preach socialist revolution, free verse and free love, outraging
the bourgeoisie at least as thoroughly as any tie-dyed hippie
while giving rise to the Provincetown Players, Eugene O’Neill,
and The Masses, a trenchantly radical magazine with
equally trenchant art.
None
of this necessarily had anything to do with music, except that
my first job after graduation was at Doubleday, which published
Dave Marsh’s biography of Bruce Springsteen while I was
there. Until then I hadn’t read any books about rock ’n’
roll -- I was immersed in history tomes and 19th-century novels,
and I’m not sure I knew that there were books on the subject.
But I was a Springsteen fan, picked up the book, and was hooked
as soon as I read the words, “I believe rock ’n’
roll has saved lives.” I’m always susceptible to
a writer with passion, and Marsh’s insistence that culture
has political implications jibed with the convictions I’d
developed studying history. I started to read more seriously
about popular music and discovered many intelligent critics
who astutely placed it within a social framework. Marsh, Peter
Guralnick and Greil Marcus (my three favourites) situated rock
’n’ roll on a continuum that stretched back to Stephen
Foster and slaves’ field hollers before the Civil War
and included country and jazz as well as folk and blues. They
prompted me to listen more closely to older music by artists
I knew mostly by reputation: Elvis Presley, The Coasters, Ray
Charles, Sam Cooke, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Louis Jordan, Jimmie
Rodgers, the Carter Family, Louis Armstrong and George Gershwin.
On their recordings I heard people refusing to be confined by
genres, mixing up traditions, picking up the pieces that were
mean¬ing¬ful to them and discarding the ones that didn’t
suit -- just like Emerson or O’Neill. American music was
part of a larger story about the American character.
With
this in mind, I could see that Joplin and Hendrix were more
than fabulous hippie icons, the counterculture that embraced
them more than a historical anomaly. Snippets of their biographies
that I’d known for years fit together in a new pattern.
Hendrix
had famously played backup for a variety of great African-American
singers on the chitlin’ circuit, the string of venues
that stretched from black theaters in Northern cities down to
the barbecue joints of the deep South. Just as famously, he’d
been fired by Solomon Burke, Otis Redding and Little Richard,
who weren’t about to be upstaged by some wild kid playing
behind his back, picking the strings with his teeth and humping
the guitar. When Hendrix hit New York in 1964, Harlem sophisticates
were equally unwelcoming to a performer who curled his hair,
wore a woman’s blouse and a bolero hat onstage, and inserted
rock solos into blues classics. Hendrix didn’t fit in.
He’d grown up in Seattle, attended integrated schools,
played guitar in various groups that mixed up blues, R &
B, rock ’n’ roll and jazz for multi¬racial crowds.
He revered Dylan’s Blonde on Blonde album as
a work of genius and was writing songs in that freeform vein.
It made sense that he finally found his audience downtown in
Greenwich Village, where denizens of the Cafe Wha were wowed
by the uniquely personal style he called “science fiction
rock ’n’ roll.”
Meanwhile,
the musical heritage that Hendrix found confining helped Joplin
free herself from Southern gentility. She defied her segregated
hometown by playing the records of African-American folk and
blues artists; listening to Leadbelly, Odetta, and, most of
all, Bessie Smith, she realized that singing could express the
ferocious emotions that Port Arthur insisted she suppress. But
the folk-music scene in 1963 wasn’t ready for a white
woman with such a raw sound; Joplin had to wait a few years
to find the setting her anguished, assaultive vocals needed.
She’d never seen a rock show or sung with an electric
band when she arrived in San Francisco to audition for Big Brother
and the Holding Company in 1966, but that didn’t matter
to a psychedelic group that played what one member described
as “blues in Technicolor.”
Hendrix
and Joplin came from different parts of America to cross racial
and cultural boundaries, I realized, but they wound up in the
same place: a place where they could be themselves. They took
what they needed from all the music they loved and transformed
it into something new. To their delight, they discovered that
there were a lot of other misfits out there who appreciated
what they did.
You
can see the exhilarating results in D. A. Pennebaker’s
1968 concert film Monterey Pop, which captures the early prime
of two artists who’d only recently figured out that they
could do it their way. Hendrix tears up the Troggs’ “Wild
Thing,” layering it with feedback and distortion, tossing
in a riff from Sinatra’s “Strangers in the Night,”
snapping his chewing gum all the while. At the climax, he straddles
his guitar, pours lighter fluid on it, sets it on fire and smashes
it. “Don’t think I’m silly doing this because
I don’t think I’m losing my mind,” he tells
the crowd, the grin of a naughty schoolboy on his face. “This
is the only way I can do it.” Backed by Big Brother’s
screeching guitars and frenetic rhythms, Joplin is equally incendiary.
The band does its slash-and-burn arrangement of Big Mama Thornton’s
“Ball and Chain;” Joplin shrieks and moans her way
through the song with scary, intoxicating abandon. When Thornton
sang “Ball and Chain,” it was a worldly reckoning
of the way things were between men and women. Joplin’s
rendering is an outraged protest, with the word “Why?”
stretched to the breaking point. She stomps her feet, throws
back her arms and howls, “This can’t be—b-b-b-b-b-b-b-be-be-be—in
vain!” In a shot of a dumfounded Cass Elliot, Mama Cass
mouths the words, “Oh wow,” and for once they’re
not a hippie cliché.
The
first time I saw Monterey Pop, in 1969, I loved it not just
because the performances were thrilling, but because it celebrated
what I viewed as my culture: the far-out music, the freaky clothes,
the militant politics of those who stood proudly outside the
mainstream. For a lot of years, it made me sad to watch the
film, thinking of the people and hopes that had died. Now it
makes me happy again, because I’m older and I know that
nothing lasts forever, which makes those moments of joy all
the more precious. I also know that the period of radical change
in which Hendrix and Joplin flourished was not unique (as I
once thought), that they belonged to a tradition no less real
for being eclectic and inclusive rather than rigid and strictly
defined.
A while
ago, buying kalamata olives and parmesan cheese at a Middle
Eastern shop in my neighbourhood, I saw a flyer announcing a
book signing by Arthur Schwartz, author of The Southern
Italian Table: Authentic Tastes from Traditional Kitchens.
A guy named Schwartz writing a book about authentic Italian
food and plugging it at a store run by Lebanese Christians --
that, I thought, is the American way. I also thought of Hendrix
playing “The Star Spangled Banner” at Woodstock
and of Joplin telling a record producer, “I want to be
the greatest blues singer in the world.” There is no authentic
here: we mix and match, we savour our own heritage and everyone
else’s.
“I
am large, I contain multitudes,” Walt Whitman declared
in “Song of Myself.” So did the skinny black kid
who was too weird for Harlem and the unhappy, unpopular white
girl who was way too weird for Texas.
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