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Still singing after all these years — 26 Comments

  1. Diamonds & Rust is a beautiful song. Baez still sounds mostly as she did 50 years ago. I will admit I never listened to Collins much at all. For me her voice lacks depth. As far as Dylan’s cufflinks are concerned, you will have to ask him, but he is unlikely to answer.

  2. About those cufflinks — here’s a photo of Dylan in 1965, wearing a shirt that looks like one made for cufflinks.

    And according to this 2009 article, Baez didn’t just have an affair with Dylan, she “helped kickstart” his career and then he “dumped her”:

    It took 44 years, but Joan Baez finally got a public apology from Bob Dylan for the callous way he treated her when he broke up their 1960s love affair.

    And it happened, of all places, at Toronto’s Yonge-Dundas Square on Friday night.

    “I feel very bad about it,” Dylan said. “I was sorry to see our relationship end.”

    The occasion, and the source of the confession, was the world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival of Joan Baez: How Sweet the Sound, a PBS documentary set for broadcast next month. It was followed by a free mini-concert performance by Baez herself.

    The astonishingly candid film pulls back the curtain on a painful chapter of Baez’s life that she had long avoided talking about: her split from Dylan in the spring of 1965, during a British tour where he treated her as excess baggage, refusing to allow her onstage with him.

    Before that, the two had been inseparable as the king and queen of folk music, and one of the most talked-about young couples of the decade.

    Already a global star, Baez launched Dylan’s career after their first meeting in 1961 by inviting him to share her stage and tour with her at every opportunity, often scolding her fans who found his nasal singing a poor complement to her soaring soprano tones.

  3. Unfortunately, the left is not broadminded about those who disagree with them. Closed, Locked, and Bricked-over minds, and all that.

  4. I think we all knew, back then, that we were a brand new thing, and we didn’t know where we were gonna take it, and mostly, we didn’t care. Subsequent generations, eat your heart out.

  5. My aunt used to sing gospel professionally. One Christmas when she was 85, in remission from cancer, and her mind slipping she sang a hymn acapella at a family get together in an auditorium. I was stunned, her voice and delivery were amazing. And then everyone told me that the *really* talented one had been aunt Emmajane. So perhaps it is not too surprising that other singers can last into their later years.

    I did hear Joan Baez live at Club 47 in, IIRC, 1963, but don’t remember much except that it was packed.

  6. chuck:

    It does happen sometimes that the voice lasts pretty well. But a lot of singers find that their voice degrades a lot, particularly in the high registers.

  7. Etta James had a voice that changed, but in a good way, with age. Same goes, IMO, for Joni Mitchell although that may be attributed to her life long addiction to tobacco.

  8. I never could stand to listen to Joan Baez. Her voice seems flat and harsh and unmusical to me, and she sings the words as if she doesn’t really understand what they mean, or isn’t really feeling the meaning, or something. There’s not enough music in her music for me. She had a sister, though, Mimi Farina – maybe she’s still around? Now SHE could sing.

  9. Mrs Whatsit:

    I actually think that Baez’s voice has gotten warmer over the years. I like it better now. In the documentary she also said she used to have dreadful stage fright, but doesn’t have it anymore and feels very relaxed on stage.

    Unfortunately, her beautiful sister Mimi, to whom she was very close, died of cancer in July of 2001.

  10. In case you haven’t noticed the title, that gray book in the outtake photo is the I Ching. Interesting that they changed their minds about including it. Perhaps a little too California hip for Dylan?

    I agree that Mimi had a better voice. Or at any rate I liked it better. Joan’s always seemed thin and…I don’t know, stiff or something. But I do like some of her stuff. The two Richard and Mimi albums were favorites of mine.

    I still have my vinyl Bringing It All Back Home, too, and all the other Dylan albums of the sixties.

  11. I do separate art from politics. It’s what conservatives (in the true sense) need to do. Art, as it’s called, is always moving forward, chasing the new and the “better”….Which is Progressivism. That most artists are shlock, artists of dreck,whether visual or aural, does not diminish my view.
    The progressive American artists of the thirties were more talented than today’s, and many were communist. Pete Seeger wrote great songs that were pure Leftist propaganda: “I dreamed I saw Joe Hill last night, alive as you and me.” Really catchy, good music. But Joe Hill was a union thug, an “organizer’, who was convicted and executed for murder in the line of work, and became a hero and symbol in Seeger’s song.

  12. I think my favorite Baez album is her 1974 Spanish one, Gracias a la Vida. I don’t think it’s all that well known; a sample is here. My second favorite is the one of Dylan songs, Any Day Now; a sample here.

  13. Oh, that beautiful hair! Baez seemed to prefer hers short in later years. Nice to see Collins with the flowing white curls.

    Judy, of course, is the subject of Steven Stills’ song Suite: Judy Blue Eyes. It was a break-up song, apparently. So four famous musicians in their own right with two failed love affairs among them, resulting in two wonderful songs!

    Would that all relationships ended so productively.

  14. Blind Willie McTell
    Huddie Ledbetter (lead belly)
    Robert Winslow Gordon

    see broadside ballads

    “Lord Barnard and Little Musgrave”…

    in the early days of recordings, how hard is it to rework classic tunes and others for an audience compared to writing original stuff?

    baez, animals, bob dylan, and a bunch of others made their music by reworking others… and most gave them credit for the things…

    i prefer originals… or if your going to make a few millio dollars and be so famous, at least give the originals some $$$ and credit.. which they eventualy did (credit, not money)…

    in some ways, being at a certain point of history makes one famous easier than later on…

    and today its a lot easier given its about surface things and image, and not substance… even more so since the majority of people no longer learn to play an instrument, and no longer go to the music shop to buy a new song or such to play for friends or themselves.

    I dont think i will work the grammys again..
    It was fun the first time, but not now, when its all wackjobs in nutty costumes with minor talent but lots of narcisism.

    the voices of todays music bands like the group R Angels i worked with, Pharrel and the nerd project and all that… is nothing like it was…

    besides.. Baez is a communist and feminist

    same thing even if the followers and most of the public are ignorant of the great works that lay it out and what they were going to do, that they did post publication.

    the communists started overtaking that to control thewomen and the politics and business a la marx comment that all momvements start with women (even the ugly ones)..

    i even sent neo one of the books that no one reads any more among many:
    The red war on th famliy – 1922 – Samual Saloman

    a lot of books have been written after it by that title and various other titles that bury the old ones.. (they do this a lot to remove things from the public… ie. an old thing is not good for them, so create a new thing of the same name so that the searches go that way and its VERY hard to find anything about the inconvenient something!!!!!!!!!!!!)

    if you try to find it, its been covered by a bunch of others, and a few feminist versions to hide the original changes to the movement when it was co-opted (co-opting the democrat party didnt finish till the 1930s when browder said the CPUSA would no longer run candidates for president since their platform and the democrat platforms were the SAME)

    so the new versions make the old versions to be part of the irrational fear of the people that were birthed in WW!, started WWII, Did Vietnam, Invasion of south Korea, exterminated over 200 million between russia and china (their own people), and more

    Erica Ryan: Red War on the Family

    “Red War on the Family is a compelling book. It argues that an ‘Americanism’ movement of the post—World War I era fused anti-Bolshevik rhetoric with anxieties about gender and sexuality to call for a return to a traditional notion of a patriarchal family that could regulate sexuality–especially female sexuality–and restore social order.

    so the tearing apart of the family as a goal of the soviets to make the US dysfunctional (and we aer almost there given obama hillary bernie)…

    when the original was the 180 degree opposite

    so i sit and watch how they play with the heads of my contemporaries in discussion, and that these contemporaries prefer the piss water swill of lies and bs, over the actual history, facts, methods, mores, and techiques develolped over 100 years of trying.

    you guys realize that next year is the 100th anniversary of communisms birth as a real natoin? and given their penchant for word games, date games, color games etc… its not a good thing…

  15. Al Capp came up with a character for his cartoon strip called Joanie Phonie and Baez threatened to sue him. Capp said that if Baez looked anything like his cartoon character, he feels sorry for her.

  16. Saw Aretha Franklin at a smallish venue last year. Even though I am a huge fan, I wasn’t expecting much because of her age and health. The high notes took a little time and work getting there but everything else was amazing – I would say 95% of peak Aretha. That woman is a force of nature!

  17. Her politics can be ignored when you experience her incredible talent. I’ve been in love with Joan Baez for 50 years. And Yes, she still sounds great. We are the same age. It makes me sad.

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