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- <text id=91TT0468>
- <title>
- Mar. 04, 1991: Joni Mitchell:Navigator Of The Deep
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Mar. 04, 1991 Into Kuwait!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MUSIC, Page 74
- Navigator Of the Deep
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Joni Mitchell finds the way to her best record in a decade
- </p>
- <p>By Jay Cocks--Reported by Elizabeth L. Bland/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> "Look," she says, entirely untroubled on the subject, "I
- don't have a very good education. I'm musically ignorant. I'm
- intuitive. All I am is a freshness freak."
- </p>
- <p> If you buy this quick conversational self-portrait of the
- artist as an inspector of milk-carton dates, even for a second,
- the impression is immediately erased when Joni Mitchell's new
- album, Night Ride Home, kicks in with the title cut. The
- instrumentation is spare, the melody light and tight as a
- fresh-spun web, the lyrics casual, conversational and smooth
- as a stone in a Zen garden. It takes a good deal of practical
- education to make something as intricate as her music seem so
- simple. And--yes, all right--so fresh.
- </p>
- <p> Night Ride Home is Mitchell's first album in almost three
- years, her best in 10. It's easy to like and hard to forget,
- and it shows that Mitchell--for all her restless musical
- experimentation--has an undiminished skill in navigating some
- of the deeper estuaries of the mainstream. The album summons
- fond memories of Mitchell's formative years--the times of
- Woodstock and Court and Spark--but it's not an exercise in
- nostalgia.
- </p>
- <p> Night Ride Home follows Mitchell's 1988 Chalk Mark in a Rain
- Storm and comes on the heels, or paws, of her 1985 Dog Eat Dog,
- an intensely inward effort full of dank social speculation
- whose lack of wide acceptance is still a bit irksome to the
- singer-composer. "It was mistimed," she speculates. "It was
- viewed as negative and preacherly at the time of its release.
- It was an angry album." Mitchell seems heartened by the warm,
- early interest accorded the new record, and a little
- suspicious, as if she has produced something so attractive that
- it must be superficial. "It's not shallow," she says. "But it's
- not making you look at hard facts as much as Dog Eat Dog."
- </p>
- <p> If music is, as Mitchell defines it, "a diagram of emotion,"
- then Night Ride Home is a sort of filling-station road map of
- the heart. The 10 songs, including an adaptation of Yeats' The
- Second Coming called Slouching Towards Bethlehem, represent
- alternate routes to the kind of altered state some people call
- romance, and others irresolution. "I want things that match my
- emotional inner life," Mitchell says. "I like dissonance
- running through things because our lives are full of ongoing
- dissonances. Why not put a terrible tension running even
- through your pretty chords?"
- </p>
- <p> All the musicians on the record--including Mitchell's
- husband of eight years, bass player Larry Klein--have some
- jazz background. They know, as Mitchell puts it, "how to see
- around corners." They can lend her delicate rhythms a strong
- foundation without blowing them away. Mitchell's own prominent
- acoustic guitar gives the whole album a kind of casual, offhand
- luster. "Initially, I was taken for a folk singer," Mitchell
- reflects. "Then folk singing was out of vogue and folk rock was
- in. Then for a while I was considered to be a country musician.
- My music [now] is not jazz. I'm a bit of an explorer."
- </p>
- <p> Not just in music either. Mitchell, 47, has an exhibition
- of paintings traveling in Europe, and her photographs adorn the
- cover of Night Ride Home. She prefers to stay off the road--it's been eight years since her last tour--and likes to work
- in the deep night because she craves the quiet. "I'm a vampire
- now, full fledged," she says. When she speaks her mind, she has
- the unguarded passion of someone talking to herself late at
- night. Her thoughts on everything from photography to the gulf
- conflict are spoken as her songs are written and sung: in a
- tone of quiet asperity, but with public emphasis. "If this is
- a holy war," she muses about the gulf, taking a drag on one of
- her frequent cigarettes, "God is pissed at us, and damn right."
- Just goes to show: a little dissonance does no harm. And it can
- certainly make a fine Night Ride Home.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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