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Enjoy your thoughts and reactions. Ball and Chain is a great Janis song or Cry, Baby. Please give Van Morrison's Caravan. Or Gary Moore's Still got the Blues.... Keep up thrills of older music reverberating in my ears....exciting my old grey matter.
Janis does a smokin' version of this tune. I'd love for you to check out this live version by Ella Fitzgerald in 1968. She does a particularly jazzy version that's all her own. A true classic as well th-cam.com/video/u2bigf337aU/w-d-xo.htmlsi=7Hv2dEF9doI-Niey
"Summertime" was written by famous American composer and pianist, George Gershwin, way back in 1933. This song was featured in the musical "Porgy and Bess". Janis certainly put her own divinely unique spin on this old showtune!
Picky detail, but Porgy and Bess is considered to be an opera. "Summertime" is an aria composed in 1934 by George Gershwin (music) for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose Heyward, the author of the novel Porgy on which the opera was based, and Ira Gershwin.
I'm a 72 year old grandma and I still get chills when I hear her sing. She was a badass, totally uninhibited. She was an original Hippie. She was just so caught up in the drug scene and I feel like she didn't have anyone to look out for her. We weren't shocked when she died, but just overwhelmed with sadness.
You and I are the same age and I was grief stricken as well. To not have been able to hear her sing through all these years is a tragedy, it really is.
I saw Janis when I was 15. It was my second concert ever. I'm 70 now. My first concert was The Association with "Never my Love" and then Janis with Big Brother and the Holding Company ❤❤❤
I’ve heard Robert Plant, lead vocalist of LED Zeppelin, talk about Janis Joplin. He said they were all together a a music festival, and he had a sore throat. Janis was doing everything she could to help him, including making him tea with lemon and honey. He said she was one of the kindest people he ever met.
One of Janis’s greatest inspirations was “Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith. Bessie’s grave had been unmarked for 33 years after she was killed in a car accident in 1937. In 1970 Janis was one of two people who paid to provide a headstone for Bessie’s final resting place.
I am a huge Janis fan, I have watched several docs and read a couple of books on her and I have not heard this. Thanks for this and sounds like something she would do 🤙
For anyone wondering, the reason the grave of such a popular singer (her funeral was attended by thousands) went unmarked is that her douchebag estranged hubby refused to get one. He even, twice(!), stole fundraising money that was meant for getting her a headstone.
wow I didnt know that. Bessie Smith was an incredible blues singer. I used to listen to all those old blues female singers from the 1930's. I was standing right in front of the stage, from her singing at the Toronto Festival Express. There is a film of it. She was amazing; she had an affair with Leonard Cohen, which he wrote about her called Chelsea Hotel.
I'm 80 years old and I cry everytime I hear her sing. She was most definitely one of a kind. Her heart and soul was in every song she sang. I so hope to meet her in heaven (if I make it) someday. Didn't know what we had till we lost her. R.I.P. Sweetie. 🙏✝️❤️
@@nodice8312 There was so much of her - maybe because she was SO open and exposed in all her humanity - to STEAL our hearts! So I would say that I agree with everything here except, "We didn't know what we had until we lost her." She wasn't just another singer - she was an EXPERIENCE - heart body, and soul. She CAPTURED us with every phrase she sang/emoted/lived!! I was obsessed with her and her music. I got to see her with Big Brother and the Holding Co. at the Fillmore West in SF, and whatever she was on vinyl, she was 100 times more in person!! The world must NEVER forget her!
Im 54 and my eyes got a little damp just reading your comment. As for Janis, I don't think a spirit like that could die....makes me believe she actually is up there.
I was blessed to know Janis . She lived around the corner from me in Height Ashberry in San Francisco in 1969. This lady was the real deal; she definitely lived hard, but transformed her difficult home life along with horrible bullying into the most raw jazz and soul music that plunged its hand into the heart of your being ,and took you apart piece by piece. All of us who lived there remember having her and Big Brother, The Grateful Dead, and Jefferson Airplane and others play a part of our everyday lives. It was devastating when drugs and alcohol took her life at such a young age. I’m thrilled that you pulled this up to listen to. I’m sure that there will be others who will suggest more of her amazing music.
Wow, you certainly have some great memories then. Nice of you to share that with us. Gordon Lightfoot might have sung, ‘If we could read your mind, love, what a tale your thoughts would tell’!
6 degrees,, your one was there ,, mad this dude is just now finding the late great Janis,,,, life is long,,,, I'm born 73,,, genx,,, Janis is one they no matter what,,, one stops and listen when ever in the radio👍👍 and yes at my home stead I do have an out door stereo,,,, and we have family gatherings,,,, the family of old is not lost,, some of us hold on to it ✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️
Janis was truly a free spirit. In doing so,she was rejected and made fun of and you can hear the pain in some of her songs. She was a ground breaker and one of a kind.
@@atsylor5549 She didn't invent it, you're right - but she didn't "imitate it" either - she FELT it ...LIVED it ... and it burst out of every pore of her being!
@@atsylor5549 Maybe she wasn't a ground breaker of soul, but I think she was one of the ground breakers of the times in singing from every fiber of her being,100% authentically and unapologetically - the ultimate free spirit - which was what the hippie movement was all about.
No one at the Monteray festival knew who she was but when she opened her mouth to sing Ball and Chain, it's like the world stopped. Cass Elliot's jaw dropped. She was like no other singer and her range was truly surprising. You'd like Ball and Chair and Me and Bobby McGee.
She was a brash, blues bad ass. Her most popular songs include her cover versions of “Me and Bobby McGee”, "Piece of My Heart", "Cry Baby", "Down on Me", "Ball and Chain", "Summertime", and her original song "Mercedes Benz", her final recording.
It shocked me a little that Polo wasn't aware of "Summertime", at least the Ella Fitzgerald version, if not the other 67,000+ times it's been covered. Guinness World Records lists the figure of 67,591 as the total number of times recorded (as of 2017). But hey, we all have our blind spots, even in genres we love, myself included. Janis was special. One of the most talented, painfully honest, and emotionally vulnerable stars of the 20th century.
Yes, love 'Ball and Chain' at Monterey Pop Festival, everyone stopped their beer runs to watch this woman sing, she looked beautiful that day also, Mama Cass was there in ahh, it was amazing.
OMG I was at the Monterrey Jazz Festival in 1967 And stood right in front of her by the stage as she sang Ball and Chain. I thought I’d pass out it was so powerful! ❤❤❤
“Summertime” is from “Porgy and Bess” an opera by George Gershwin with lyrics by Dubose Hayward. The opera can only be licensed to be performed by a Black Company. It was a feature within the movie “White Nights” starring Gregory Hines and Mikhail Baryishnikov and Helen Mirren.
Summertime was actually written in 1934 for the Broadway play Porgy and Bess. It is an incredible song and I was privileged to see Janis Joplin performance live. Treat yourself to some of her other tunes you won’t be disappointed
Porky and Bess was a black opera or perhaps operetta would be more proper . It played forever on Broadway. Sometime in 1950s (I think) it became a movie. She is great on this song,but my favorite rendition is by Bobby Hatfield. Best visual also. He will knock your sox off.
Summertime is a classic blues song that's been sung by so many people. Billie Holiday in 1936, and Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, Sonny and Cher, Paul McCartney, Annie Lenox, Willy Nelson, Muse, and hundreds more artists. I believe it holds a Guinness world record for the most covered track.
This song is, I believe, originally from "Porgy & Bess" - an early opera by George Gershwin. The song has been covered by many - but Janis made it her own! This is timeless, and beyond beautiful
We lost her way too soon. She let her pain out through her music. And everybody felt it. You should check out all of her stuff. She's a legend. Great show. Keep them comin'.
Bro, she was 26 in this video. Twenty six! So much soul, the feeling of lifetimes of sorrow and knowledge. They broke the mold after they made her. There will never be another.
We lost this treasure on October 4, 1970, at the tender age of 27. I was just 2 months into my first year of university. We miss you so so so so much, Janis. ❤
No autotune, just cigarettes, southern comfort and TALENT!!! Summertime an old show tune from Porgy and Bess, one of the first actual "Black broadway shows. "Summertime" is an aria composed in 1934 by George Gershwin for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose Heyward, the author of the novel ...
She was relatively unknown before her performance at Monterey Pop Festival, which was being filmed for a movie. Her initial appearance WAS NOT FILMED. Because she was such a surprise, she was brought back the next day for a repeat performance, and the film of her performance is so very pivotal. Not sure if you have reacted to any Mamas & Papas, but Mama Cass is shown in the audience with her mouth open in disbelief at what she is witnessing! An absolute must see!
I KNOW 💕 when I saw Mama Cass reacting I’m thinking… YES ! YES ! YES ! OMG now everybody knows, she had to be thinking WHERE HAS SHE BEEN TILL THIS MINUTE !?!?!?
So much to say about Janice… She felt like a misfit in her hometown of Port Arthur, Texas, and so she liked to go to New Orleans and listen to the artists in the clubs there. (She never did feel accepted at home.) When she heard that a favorite singer “Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith didn’t have a tombstone, Janice made sure she got one. Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin called her his “fairy godmother” for helping him with his voice (and liquid concoctions that she thought would help.) 😂 After hearing her sing at the Monterey Pop Festival (check out “Ball and Chain” live) she was signed by Clive Davis. She once hit Jim Morrison over the head with a whiskey bottle, and unfortunately we lost them both, along with her friend Jimi Hendrix at the age of 27. And the music is timeless.
This song, from Porgy and Bess, is a part of the great american songbook, is considered a classic jazz standard now and has been covered by tons of artists over decades. You'll find versions of this song in almost every genre, including blues, jazz, country, folk, etc. There's even a version done by young opera singer Charlotte Church that's pretty impressive. Proof that a good song transcends artist and genre, speaking to the soul of the listener without these silly limitations.
George and Ira Gershwin. Mr. Music and Mr. Words, respectively. Great versions by Billie Holiday and Sarah Vaughan. Great review of this classic song and Janis Joplin's performance. I appreciate your work. Just found you today! ❤❤
Summertime is one of my favorite songs IN THE WORLD. I have appreciation for Janis, and her version is rock soul for sure. But, do yourself a favor and listen to this song again from another strong singer, somewhat more mainstream, with a clearer voice. How anyone could hear that song and forget it is beyond me. As for Janis, you need to hear her do Me and Bobby McGee, her signature song.
I'm 65 and this still gives me chills 50 yrs later, as well as her other albums. Her singing (and her life) were so filled with pain. She died of a heroin overdose in a hotel room in 1970. She was 27. You'd think with a voice like hers she had many years of experiences. (She also performed at the important 1969 Woodstock Festival)
Janis Joplin’s, Take Another Piece of my Heart, saw her when I was 4 my dad took us to the Haight and watched her perform. My dad was into music, we were lucky to be exposed to every genre.
I'm 74 and have loved her forever. I'm envious of you hearing her for the first time. You must listen to more. So many good sound adventures await you with the great Janice!! Enjoy ❤ It's an old song. Both Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday sang it. I think it may be from the musical Porgy and Bess,
Janis was my girl. Saw her at Woodstock. Oh my stars!!! I could listen to her music for hours and hours, but I wanted to hug her for days. Her breakout performance of “Ball and Chain” complete with an awestruck Mama Cass in the audience, was legendary. R. I.P. Genius and thank you, from my soul to yours, for so much joy. PS: Polo, I love how you instantly connected with her. If you want to really see inside her, search TH-cam for her interview with Dick Cavett; she puts her fragile heart out there, and you just love her even more.
This song was written in 1934 by George Gershwin. I first heard it in the musical Porgy and Bess. Fantasia also sang this song for the win o. American Idol Beautiful love song… I love how many times this song has been interpreted and reinvented!!
Being a portuguese citizen, I am always amazed as an american music lover has never heard of the 3 J's who all died at 27 yo (Janis Joplin, jimmy Hendrix and Jim Morrison)... And not knowing that Summertime is one of the most covered songs in the world for ages... You have a lot to learn... Keep going because I really like the way you react...
Amy Winehouse. That talent comes from a very raw place. Painfully beautiful. Sometimes dark, but nothing evokes so much emotion. Love Janis and enjoyed the reaction.
She is the goddess of singers. All female singers to this day bow to her and admit they owe their strength to her. She ran a hard, yet short life. What wonders we would have heard from her if she had survived her turmoil. You found an extremely rare live version of this song! Thank you! I have never seen this version......she is always amazing!
Janis was hailed Queen of the Blues for her generation. She was influenced by Blues Queens Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey. And you summed her up perfectly with 'She's BADASS.' 😂❤❤❤
Definitely the Queen of the blues. She may not have been able to stay longer with us & hang onto her crown, but her BADASSNESS still reverberates down the years & lives on in the hearts of many senior women. Albeit, perhaps not quite as fiercely as it did back in the day, when we were teenagers & she came on the scene & showed us how to be fearless. Despite all her insecurities, she lead by example, stayed true to her music & carved out a place for herself as a blues artist. This little, white ass woman, amongst a multitude of big, black men. In her own small way, she helped fuel the fire in quite a few of us embracing the women's movement of the 70s. Sadly, she just left us too soon.
@@animerlon I was listening to her and writing her song lyrics on my wall as a teenager. Everyone else was listening to the Back Street Boys! I was born in the wrong Era. 😉
@@ladylisaromance8129 While you didn't get the chance to experience her time live, so to speak, at least you have access to recordings of her. In some of the videos of her, you get a good sense of the power in her performance, the rawness comes through loud & clear, but i'm not talking about volume,😄.
@@animerlon I love her so much. I'm 51 and to this day, I have books about her on my nightstand and her Cds displayed on a bookshelf with the novels I've written and published. I like keeping her close.
You’re so right: Janis had that “thing.” She was one of a kind. So young (27) when she died in 1970…Janis endured a ridiculous amount of bullying and cruelty, but her voice could not be silenced.
"Summertime" is the opening song of Act 1, Scene 1 in George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess, first performed in 1935. Based on a 1925 novel, Porgy, it takes place in a fictional slum in Charleston, it's the story of a disabled beggar, Porgy, trying to rescue, Bess, from an abusive relationship with a violent lover and a drug dealer called Sportin' Life. Billie Holliday's version will always be the jazz classic but the opera has been covered by a variety of greats from Ella Fitzgerald, to Miles Davis, Louis Armstrong to Nina Simone, from Phoebe Snow (you should check her out) to Christina Aguilera. Sadly, Joplin belongs to the 27 Club - a group of musicians who all died at the age of 27, between 1969 and 1971 - including Brian Jones (Rolling Stones), Jim Morrison (The Doors), and Jimi Hendrix. In 1994, Kurt Cobain (Nirvana) joined the 27 Club. In 2011, Amy Winehouse also died at 27. Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat also died at the age of 27.
The best female vocalist ever. I loved her the first time I heard her amazing soulful voice all the way back in 1968. News of her death in 1970 was absolutely devastating. No one will ever match her, past present, future. Many thanks for exploring this incredibly fascinating artist. 🙏
I have a 9 year old daughter and the day she was born my wife was crying, like, out of control... she was still on the surgery bed (here in Brazil you can stay in the room to hold your wife's hand) and so I asked her why, 'why u crying so much?' and she said 'because Luisa's (our daughter's name) cry reminds me of Janis Joplin's grasp voice'! I'll never forget that! 😂😂😂 Dude, PLEASE react to the 'Piece of my heart' live version!
When it comes to women of rock and roll, Janis is my number 1 favorite! I'm a huge fan of the bluesy type of rock. Janis touches my soul every time I hear her sing!
JANIS IS THAT WOMAN WHO SANG THE BLUES MIXED WT R & R. My idol no one will ever compare 😢to this highly talented young lady. Met her at Woodstock the nicest person ever. Way ahead of her x. Gone way to soon 😇🙏 She was a very lovely soul miss her still 2023 & I’m 70 now my favorite ❤️ ❤😢
When she sang it, she took ownership of that song, lock, stock & barrel. It's a bittersweet song that became even more so when i found out she recorded it just a couple of days before she died, & was released after she passed. Not a bad parting gift she left us.
@@markharrisllb I'm not so sure he wrote it especially for her since Roger Miller recorded it the year before she did. I do think they were in a relationship when she recorded it, so he probably had something to do with her doing it.
I'm 75 years old. So I not only was alive and at the right age to be appreciating Janis. But I saw her live about 3 months before she died at Madison square Garden. And this is the best version I've ever heard of the song Summertime, which was fairly well-known over the years before she got her hands-on it. But I'm here to say 2 things, number one. You've got to play a lot more Janis, Even though there are many other female singers I know you want to get to. Number 2 as great as this song is I have about. A 1/2 a dozen at the most. That I consider to be in my opinion. At least better than this song. You must make an effort over the coming months to react to some of if not, all of the following. Live version of ball and chain, which would be the recording of her at Monterey pops. Try. A Piece of My Heart. Cry Baby. Do her live version which was from Woodstock. Me and Bobby McGee.. Down on Me. And even Mercedes Benz, which is a little short cute song that she does, but still very worth hearing.
Ahh...I couldn't agree more with your list. I am 73, so yeah I remember the first time I heard her. A friend said. You have GOT to hear this. I was smashed. I love her, was heartbroken when she passed, and miss her so much. Never will there be another Janis.
Sorry to correct you but janis Joplin had her last concert with cosmic blues band at medison square garden december 19 1969.... not 3 months before she died october 4th 1970... But I am sure the concert at medison square garden was just great, nice to see that someone did see her preformance there. I have the book called Janis garden party with photos from that show.... hope u dont feel bad about me writing this we are all janis Joplin fans RIGHT... Thomas Engholm...
@ThomasEngholm-x3v I appreciate. Your comment and I appreciate your attitude regarding my feelings. It's not an issue. I was at that particular concert and I was referring to it being her last large concert because she, who the following months had other live performances. I was just separating it in terms of its size. As I recall Paul Butterfield blues band was also on stage with her that night. In any case, the only thing I actually had wrong because it was a long time ago and I knew she died sometime that following year. So essentially I should have said many months later. Rather than 3 months later, because I didn't recall when she passed away. And in my story it wasn't a matter of the specific facts. I was just making a comment about the fact that I saw her and that I knew it was her last large famous concert.
Janis was such an amazing and powerful singer who was influenced by many African American folk and blues performers such as Leadbelly, Odetta, Big Mama Thornton, Billie Holiday and Bessie Smith! She was just a simple soprano, but when she heard the powerful American Blues singers she admired so much, she knew that was the sound she wanted...powerful and gritty, leaving it all on the stage! When Led Zeppelin came to the States, Janis was a definite influence on Robert Plant. He loved American gritty blues singers, just as she did, and Steven Tyler of Aerosmith was also greatly influenced by Janis, as well as, Amy Winehouse and Lucinda Williams. Her life was so tragic and we lost her so young! She has been gone over 50 years (1970), Jimi Hendrix died only two weeks earlier at age 27 too. The 27 Club, Janis, Jimi, Kurt Cobain, Jim Morrison, Amy Winehouse + others, so sad to lose so much talent so young. I am always excited to see the younger generations finding and enjoying her music and keeping it alive!
This format has really opened my mind up to the brilliance of some of this music. I’m grateful to finally understand and appreciate the magnificence of some of these pieces. I love this show
You might want to listen to Janis singing the Kris Kristofferson song "Me and Bobby Magee". My mom used to play that song on repeat, as she was a HUGE fan of both Kris and Janis. It brings me to tears when I hear it now, but I'll shed those tears if it means sharing this iconic performance with you. 💜
One of the greatest voices in history and definitely in the top ten of Rock N' Roll / Blues / Folk. When she gets on the stage, just looking at her, you know you're about to witness something amazing. Her candle burnt on both ends and we lost her at such a young age... But what she left behind is nothing short of miraculous.
I saw Janice Joplin live in San Diego in 1969. She was a tiny little woman who had 20,000 people in the palm of her hand, a Texas gal who died too young. Absolutely magical performance.
That song is a cover. A lot of older jazz musicians have done it. Hers is a very original version. You need to listen to more of her. She was EPIC. RIP Janis!
I can't believe I never heard this before. I had no idea she covered this and I'm blown away. This is absolutely incredible. She was such a powerhouse.
"Summertime" is was composed in 1934 by George Gershwin. It has been performed by loads of great artists like Ella Fitzgerald, Janis Joplin and Sam Cooke (my favorite BTW) to name a few. It is a classic and still holds up after all of these years.
"Summertime" is a standard performed by many singers. Her version is incredible. The arrangement is how the song is sung, and the music supporting the words. Now that you heard Janis' version, check out Billy Stewart's version here on TH-cam. It's wild!
The song is from the 1935 George Gerswhin musical stage show "Porgy and Bess", which it's stipulated, can only be performed by a cast of black artists. It's set against a backdrop of poverty and prejudice in South Carolina. This stipulation ensures it could never be performed by white artists in 'black face'. Summertime is one of the most covered songs across many genres. This arrangement is amazing ❤
Many years ago a friend of mine was also a close friend of Janis and spent a lot of time touring with her and with her when she was off the road. He nearly died of sadness at her passing...he recovered, but it took time. During her life, she never fully realized how much the people around her truly loved her.
Joss Stone has a similar way about her. But Janice Joplin is mind blowing! Give, Piece of my Heart, Me and Bobby McGee and Cry Baby, a listen and you won’t regret it! She’s one badass that will blow you away!
She is truly amazing and I am so happy to see a younger person grok it for the first time. I also like how you pointed out her recognizing the band. Her backing bands, Big Brother & the Holding Company especially, are so, so talented. Thanks for featuring Janis!
Polo...I am a 69 year old dude. Vagabond. Wanderer. Music ties it all together for me. I have been tripping with you for a bit now, and I gotta tell you I am diggin' how much you enjoy the music I grew up on. I was in English class, junior year. My teacher was a big, hulking ex-college lineman with a seriously poetic streak. He was also...go figure...a football coach. New to us this year. Five weeks into the school year, the intercom squawked and announced that Janis had passed. He took two shaky steps and collapsed. Me? I was stunned twice! So I took a deep dive into Janis and fell in love with that woman's passion. I mostly play albums on my phone. "Pearl" still gets time when I just wanna be alone.
I watch these reaction videos because it’s just so cool to see others getting what I got! And then to see a genuine response from another person is in itself is watching art being accepted! Janice is still a tour de force. Nobody ever came after her with this much passion and interpretation. Sir, you give this form of response a respect for music itself. I don’t know if you even read these comments but it’s worth the time for me to thank you for genuinely going there for this fine lady from Texas who should have stayed making us treble with delight .
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Enjoy your thoughts and reactions. Ball and Chain is a great Janis song or Cry, Baby.
Please give Van Morrison's Caravan. Or Gary Moore's Still got the Blues....
Keep up thrills of older music reverberating in my ears....exciting my old grey matter.
Janis, gone way too soon!!!! Love. Her!!❤❤
Her entire catalog is this good 👏❤️👏❤️👏✌️🤠
Piece of my heart kicks butt!
Janis does a smokin' version of this tune. I'd love for you to check out this live version by Ella Fitzgerald in 1968. She does a particularly jazzy version that's all her own. A true classic as well
th-cam.com/video/u2bigf337aU/w-d-xo.htmlsi=7Hv2dEF9doI-Niey
"Summertime" was written by famous American composer and pianist, George Gershwin, way back in 1933. This song was featured in the musical "Porgy and Bess". Janis certainly put her own divinely unique spin on this old showtune!
I was looking for this comment. I knew someone had to mention it.
GBY 🕊️
Me too - now I don't have too. Thanks.
Picky detail, but Porgy and Bess is considered to be an opera. "Summertime" is an aria composed in 1934 by George Gershwin (music) for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose Heyward, the author of the novel Porgy on which the opera was based, and Ira Gershwin.
@@pamelah848 Thanks for the "detail". I didn't know it was an opera! 👍
Was in American pop too
I'm a 72 year old grandma and I still get chills when I hear her sing. She was a badass, totally uninhibited. She was an original Hippie. She was just so caught up in the drug scene and I feel like she didn't have anyone to look out for her. We weren't shocked when she died, but just overwhelmed with sadness.
Yes indeed! 😭
Pearl knew Blues RIP.
You and I are the same age and I was grief stricken as well. To not have been able to hear her sing through all these years is a tragedy, it really is.
I’m 77and love Me and Bobby Magee. AMGT’s Hadley is close to the sound.
Same age here. I was young again knowing every trill of her soul and whole sentences from the music. Ah Janice
Janis Joplin’s, Take Another Piece of my Heart, saw her when I was 4 my dad took us to the Haight and watched her perform.
Omg… First time hearing Janis?? Get ready for an insanely soulful experience
Janis was crazy as a loon bt insanely talented.
I concur!!!
me too
@@alnorwood134
My favorite song of hers
Great cover, maybe the best!
Her Monterey Pop performance of "Ball and Chain" is a must listen.
Yes, must listen!
Can't wait to see your reaction to her live performance @the pop festival of Ball And Chain!
A must WATCH!
Jimi Hendrix also performed at the '67 Monterey Pop Festival.
Definitely ball in chain Mpf
I saw Janis when I was 15. It was my second concert ever. I'm 70 now. My first concert was The Association with "Never my Love" and then Janis with Big Brother and the Holding Company ❤❤❤
Wow! That change up could give your ears whiplash!
I’ve heard Robert Plant, lead vocalist of LED Zeppelin, talk about Janis Joplin. He said they were all together a a music festival, and he had a sore throat. Janis was doing everything she could to help him, including making him tea with lemon and honey. He said she was one of the kindest people he ever met.
That was what Janis was, a sweet soul who never saw herself as a star.
Thanks for sharing that story! What I would have given to be at that festival.
@@teresawww You and me both!
She was a sweet soul with no armor protecting her soul.
It was her sweetness that probably killed her.😢
One of Janis’s greatest inspirations was “Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith. Bessie’s grave had been unmarked for 33 years after she was killed in a car accident in 1937. In 1970 Janis was one of two people who paid to provide a headstone for Bessie’s final resting place.
❤❤❤❤
That is an amazing true story!
I am a huge Janis fan, I have watched several docs and read a couple of books on her and I have not heard this. Thanks for this and sounds like something she would do 🤙
For anyone wondering, the reason the grave of such a popular singer (her funeral was attended by thousands) went unmarked is that her douchebag estranged hubby refused to get one. He even, twice(!), stole fundraising money that was meant for getting her a headstone.
wow I didnt know that. Bessie Smith was an incredible blues singer. I used to listen to all those old blues female singers from the 1930's. I was standing right in front of the stage, from her singing at the Toronto Festival Express. There is a film of it. She was amazing; she had an affair with Leonard Cohen, which he wrote about her called Chelsea Hotel.
I'm 80 years old and I cry everytime I hear her sing. She was most definitely one of a kind. Her heart and soul was in every song she sang. I so hope to meet her in heaven (if I make it) someday. Didn't know what we had till we lost her. R.I.P. Sweetie. 🙏✝️❤️
My feelings exactly, Janis stole my heart...RIP Janis...81 😅😅😅here
Amazed there are so many of us here and crying......❤
@@nodice8312 There was so much of her - maybe because she was SO open and exposed in all her humanity - to STEAL our hearts! So I would say that I agree with everything here except, "We didn't know what we had until we lost her." She wasn't just another singer - she was an EXPERIENCE - heart body, and soul. She CAPTURED us with every phrase she sang/emoted/lived!! I was obsessed with her and her music. I got to see her with Big Brother and the Holding Co. at the Fillmore West in SF, and whatever she was on vinyl, she was 100 times more in person!! The world must NEVER forget her!
Im 54 and my eyes got a little damp just reading your comment. As for Janis, I don't think a spirit like that could die....makes me believe she actually is up there.
The Rightous Brothers said it best; "If there's a rock and roll heaven, then you know they've got a hell of a band".
I was blessed to know Janis . She lived around the corner from me in Height Ashberry in San Francisco in 1969. This lady was the real deal; she definitely lived hard, but transformed her difficult home life along with horrible bullying into the most raw jazz and soul music that plunged its hand into the heart of your being ,and took you apart piece by piece. All of us who lived there remember having her and Big Brother, The Grateful Dead, and Jefferson Airplane and others play a part of our everyday lives. It was devastating when drugs and alcohol took her life at such a young age. I’m thrilled that you pulled this up to listen to. I’m sure that there will be others who will suggest more of her amazing music.
She seems to have been the sweetest and also the best-looking and most self-blaming person ever. And then her singing
Wow, you certainly have some great memories then. Nice of you to share that with us. Gordon Lightfoot might have sung, ‘If we could read your mind, love, what a tale your thoughts would tell’!
Thank you for the insight
6 degrees,, your one was there ,, mad this dude is just now finding the late great Janis,,,, life is long,,,, I'm born 73,,, genx,,, Janis is one they no matter what,,, one stops and listen when ever in the radio👍👍 and yes at my home stead I do have an out door stereo,,,, and we have family gatherings,,,, the family of old is not lost,, some of us hold on to it ✌️✌️✌️✌️✌️
Thank you so much for sharing your memory of her. I have loved her music for so long. But her life being too short makes me so sad.
Janis was truly a free spirit. In doing so,she was rejected and made fun of and you can hear the pain in some of her songs. She was a ground breaker and one of a kind.
Ground breaker? She’s imitating soul music not inventing it
@@RootofEcstasy thankfully the great thing about music is that you’re the only one needed to appreciate it even if someone else does not
@@atsylor5549 She didn't invent it, you're right - but she didn't "imitate it" either - she FELT it ...LIVED it ... and it burst out of every pore of her being!
@@atsylor5549 Maybe she wasn't a ground breaker of soul, but I think she was one of the ground breakers of the times in singing from every fiber of her being,100% authentically and unapologetically - the ultimate free spirit - which was what the hippie movement was all about.
No one at the Monteray festival knew who she was but when she opened her mouth to sing Ball and Chain, it's like the world stopped. Cass Elliot's jaw dropped. She was like no other singer and her range was truly surprising. You'd like Ball and Chair and Me and Bobby McGee.
When Janis Joplin sang she gave you a piece of her soul. An incredible talent whose life ended too quickly.
RIP our dear Janis. So many years we’ve missed you
I loved her. Still do. The voice of our hippie movement. I’m 73
She was a brash, blues bad ass. Her most popular songs include her cover versions of “Me and Bobby McGee”, "Piece of My Heart", "Cry Baby", "Down on Me", "Ball and Chain", "Summertime", and her original song "Mercedes Benz", her final recording.
It shocked me a little that Polo wasn't aware of "Summertime", at least the Ella Fitzgerald version, if not the other 67,000+ times it's been covered.
Guinness World Records lists the figure of 67,591 as the total number of times recorded (as of 2017).
But hey, we all have our blind spots, even in genres we love, myself included.
Janis was special. One of the most talented, painfully honest, and emotionally vulnerable stars of the 20th century.
I love them all but I still randomly sing Mercedes Benz at the top of my lungs!
Yes, love 'Ball and Chain' at Monterey Pop Festival, everyone stopped their beer runs to watch this woman sing, she looked beautiful that day also, Mama Cass was there in ahh, it was amazing.
@@vagaickieMe, too!
😘
OMG I was at the Monterrey Jazz Festival in 1967 And stood right in front of her by the stage as she sang Ball and Chain. I thought I’d pass out it was so powerful! ❤❤❤
What an amazing experience!😮
Yes. Best version of that song ever! I am so thankful that we have that recording for the ages!!
We had her for only a short time, but what she gave the world is forever. ✌🏼💙
How lucky you are to have seen her perform! ❤
I am so jealous!! I was way too young to have seen her, but I hope she's singing when I get to heaven!
“Summertime” is from “Porgy and Bess” an opera by George Gershwin with lyrics by Dubose Hayward. The opera can only be licensed to be performed by a Black Company. It was a feature within the movie “White Nights” starring Gregory Hines and Mikhail Baryishnikov and Helen Mirren.
Summertime was actually written in 1934 for the Broadway play Porgy and Bess.
It is an incredible song and I was privileged to see Janis Joplin performance live. Treat yourself to some of her other tunes you won’t be disappointed
Especially her version of Bobby McGee. Incredible.
Porky and Bess was a black opera or perhaps operetta would be more proper
. It played forever on Broadway. Sometime in 1950s (I think) it became a movie. She is great on this song,but my favorite rendition is by Bobby Hatfield. Best visual also. He will knock your sox off.
Written by Ira Gershwin and DuBose Heyward in 1934 for Porgy and Bess. Billie Holiday does an amazing cover as well. Janis We miss you ❤
I'm a huge Janis fan ❤ There will never be another like her...may she RIP 🙏🌹🕊
Summertime is a classic blues song that's been sung by so many people. Billie Holiday in 1936, and Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, Miles Davis, Sonny and Cher, Paul McCartney, Annie Lenox, Willy Nelson, Muse, and hundreds more artists. I believe it holds a Guinness world record for the most covered track.
Ngl, I thought this was Ella’s song.
Even Snoop Dog rapped it. I think he did it justice and I'm not a rap fan
Janis was always SO RAW. Like she left her heart, soul, and guts on that stage.
This song is, I believe, originally from "Porgy & Bess" - an early opera by George Gershwin.
The song has been covered by many - but Janis made it her own! This is timeless, and beyond beautiful
Not to forget the Ella and Louis version!
Other notable versions: Billy Holiday, Paul Robeson, Sam Cooke. They're all so different.
Bobby Hatfield (Righteous Brothers) does an incredible live version.
Yes, originally from 1935.
Miles Davis.
She still gives me chills every time i hear her sing.
We lost her way too soon. She let her pain out through her music. And everybody felt it. You should check out all of her stuff. She's a legend. Great show. Keep them comin'.
Bro, she was 26 in this video. Twenty six! So much soul, the feeling of lifetimes of sorrow and knowledge. They broke the mold after they made her. There will never be another.
One of one.
Well said.
I still miss her so very much. There will never ever be another Janis. The very best.
Beth Hart comes close.
We lost this treasure on October 4, 1970, at the tender age of 27. I was just 2 months into my first year of university. We miss you so so so so much, Janis. ❤
The 27 club ….so many genius but tortured souls 🥺
No autotune, just cigarettes, southern comfort and TALENT!!! Summertime an old show tune from Porgy and Bess, one of the first actual "Black
broadway shows. "Summertime" is an aria composed in 1934 by George Gershwin for the 1935 opera Porgy and Bess. The lyrics are by DuBose Heyward, the author of the novel ...
Facts
And one the best!!!
She was relatively unknown before her performance at Monterey Pop Festival, which was being filmed for a movie. Her initial appearance WAS NOT FILMED. Because she was such a surprise, she was brought back the next day for a repeat performance, and the film of her performance is so very pivotal. Not sure if you have reacted to any Mamas & Papas, but Mama Cass is shown in the audience with her mouth open in disbelief at what she is witnessing! An absolute must see!
Nailed it !
lol Mamma Cass looks she is thinking “WTF am I going to sing now after THIS?”
Cass Elliot and Janis Joplin are singing in Heaven ❤
And I was lucky enough to be there Saturday
I KNOW 💕
when I saw Mama Cass reacting I’m thinking… YES ! YES ! YES ! OMG
now everybody knows,
she had to be thinking
WHERE HAS SHE BEEN TILL THIS MINUTE !?!?!?
She was unbelievable.. I remember when she died.. I was 7. We already had the 8 track "Pearl". I love her... ❤❤❤
So much to say about Janice…
She felt like a misfit in her hometown of Port Arthur, Texas, and so she liked to go to New Orleans and listen to the artists in the clubs there. (She never did feel accepted at home.)
When she heard that a favorite singer “Empress of the Blues” Bessie Smith didn’t have a tombstone, Janice made sure she got one.
Robert Plant of Led Zeppelin called her his “fairy godmother” for helping him with his voice (and liquid concoctions that she thought would help.) 😂
After hearing her sing at the Monterey Pop Festival (check out “Ball and Chain” live) she was signed by Clive Davis.
She once hit Jim Morrison over the head with a whiskey bottle, and unfortunately we lost them both, along with her friend Jimi Hendrix at the age of 27.
And the music is timeless.
❤❤❤❤❤ no, not original - but she was one of a kind
There has never been another Janis Joplin.
A tortured being gone much too soon as so many have.
She was unique, one of a kind.
Check out Valerie June she not exactly the same but will give you them vibes ,she has a unique voice
Badass is exactly a perfect description of our ( my generation)Janis.
"She's badass." Perfectly stated and accurate.
This song, from Porgy and Bess, is a part of the great american songbook, is considered a classic jazz standard now and has been covered by tons of artists over decades. You'll find versions of this song in almost every genre, including blues, jazz, country, folk, etc. There's even a version done by young opera singer Charlotte Church that's pretty impressive. Proof that a good song transcends artist and genre, speaking to the soul of the listener without these silly limitations.
There are so many great songs in Porgy and Bess. Everyone should listen to the entire thing.
Look into the rendition by Andrea Motis. she’s a jazz singer from Spain. Not better than Janis but on the same level in a different way.
Written in 1934 during the Great Depression. His parents were Russian immigrants.
George and Ira Gershwin. Mr. Music and Mr. Words, respectively. Great versions by Billie Holiday and Sarah Vaughan. Great review of this classic song and Janis Joplin's performance. I appreciate your work. Just found you today! ❤❤
Summertime is one of my favorite songs IN THE WORLD. I have appreciation for Janis, and her version is rock soul for sure. But, do yourself a favor and listen to this song again from another strong singer, somewhat more mainstream, with a clearer voice. How anyone could hear that song and forget it is beyond me. As for Janis, you need to hear her do Me and Bobby McGee, her signature song.
I'm 65 and this still gives me chills 50 yrs later, as well as her other albums. Her singing (and her life) were so filled with pain. She died of a heroin overdose in a hotel room in 1970. She was 27. You'd think with a voice like hers she had many years of experiences. (She also performed at the important 1969 Woodstock Festival)
She became a star at the Monterey Jazz Festival.
Monterey Pop was her coming out event.@@ginabethcairns4955
From my understanding, it was a hot shot. That's when the dealer doesn't cut the product, and it's a lot more potent. She was murdered.
Janis Joplin’s, Take Another Piece of my Heart, saw her when I was 4 my dad took us to the Haight and watched her perform. My dad was into music, we were lucky to be exposed to every genre.
Her live performance of Cry Baby is amazing. Janis is my favorite singer, bar none.
I agree totally! I saw her many times live.She always gave her all, which was a lot! Gone too soon. RIP.❤❤❤❤
This is my favorite
Cry baby is the best.
The 60's was an amazing time for music.
I'm 74 and have loved her forever. I'm envious of you hearing her for the first time. You must listen to more. So many good sound adventures await you with the great Janice!! Enjoy ❤
It's an old song. Both Ella Fitzgerald and Billie Holiday sang it. I think it may be from the musical Porgy and Bess,
Her performance of Ball and Chain from the Monteray Pop Festival is unbelievable.
Yes. And "Work Me Lord", Stockholm 1969.
Cass Elliot agrees.
PLEASE do more Janis. I was on Guard Duty in Germany when I heard that She died. Made a Trooper cry.
Summertime is an opera song! That’s what’s cray about this.
Wasn't it Porgie and Bess? By Gershman
@@annhinz6326 yes
@@annhinz6326 Gershwin
@@annhinz6326 Gershwin wrote it in 1935. Janis and Big Brother and the Holding Company really made it their own.
@annhinz6326 yes. A show tune.
Janis was my girl. Saw her at Woodstock. Oh my stars!!! I could listen to her music for hours and hours, but I wanted to hug her for days. Her breakout performance of “Ball and Chain” complete with an awestruck Mama Cass in the audience, was legendary.
R. I.P. Genius and thank you, from my soul to yours, for so much joy.
PS: Polo, I love how you instantly connected with her. If you want to really see inside her, search TH-cam for her interview with Dick Cavett; she puts her fragile heart out there, and you just love her even more.
A great tragedy of modern music is that we will never replace Janis, but that's also part of what makes her so special.
The only person that I feel does Janis justice is Melissa Etheridge.
This song was written in 1934 by George Gershwin. I first heard it in the musical Porgy and Bess.
Fantasia also sang this song for the win o. American Idol
Beautiful love song… I love how many times this song has been interpreted and reinvented!!
Being a portuguese citizen, I am always amazed as an american music lover has never heard of the 3 J's who all died at 27 yo (Janis Joplin, jimmy Hendrix and Jim Morrison)... And not knowing that Summertime is one of the most covered songs in the world for ages... You have a lot to learn... Keep going because I really like the way you react...
The 27 club also includes Kurt Cobain and Amy Winehouse.
I just said that too. He needs history. Janis was mine. My husband loved the Jims.
@@ginamontminy4339 Shocking!!!
Amy Winehouse. That talent comes from a very raw place. Painfully beautiful. Sometimes dark, but nothing evokes so much emotion. Love Janis and enjoyed the reaction.
Amy also had the same jazz running through her music. And like Janis, she seemed to shred a little bit of herself for us in every performance.
Winehouse was alot more pop. Not near on this level.
@@chipsterb4946I totally agree ❤
Winehouse was also in the 27 club just sayin@@jeffwall3867she was truly a badass, as was Ms Joplin
@@jeffwall3867 she was a lot more than pop. There I changed it for you ;)
Every song she ever sang she was completely full of it,controlled it. One of my all time favorites.
She is the goddess of singers. All female singers to this day bow to her and admit they owe their strength to her. She ran a hard, yet short life. What wonders we would have heard from her if she had survived her turmoil. You found an extremely rare live version of this song! Thank you! I have never seen this version......she is always amazing!
Is this the performance at Montreat?
I think this is the Monterey Pop Festival
Janis was hailed Queen of the Blues for her generation. She was influenced by Blues Queens Bessie Smith and Ma Rainey. And you summed her up perfectly with 'She's BADASS.' 😂❤❤❤
Definitely the Queen of the blues. She may not have been able to stay longer with us & hang onto her crown, but her BADASSNESS still reverberates down the years & lives on in the hearts of many senior women. Albeit, perhaps not quite as fiercely as it did back in the day, when we were teenagers & she came on the scene & showed us how to be fearless. Despite all her insecurities, she lead by example, stayed true to her music & carved out a place for herself as a blues artist. This little, white ass woman, amongst a multitude of big, black men. In her own small way, she helped fuel the fire in quite a few of us embracing the women's movement of the 70s. Sadly, she just left us too soon.
@@animerlon I was listening to her and writing her song lyrics on my wall as a teenager. Everyone else was listening to the Back Street Boys! I was born in the wrong Era. 😉
@@ladylisaromance8129 While you didn't get the chance to experience her time live, so to speak, at least you have access to recordings of her. In some of the videos of her, you get a good sense of the power in her performance, the rawness comes through loud & clear, but i'm not talking about volume,😄.
@@animerlon I love her so much. I'm 51 and to this day, I have books about her on my nightstand and her Cds displayed on a bookshelf with the novels I've written and published. I like keeping her close.
Big Mamma Thornton was also a massive influence, wrote and originally recorded Ball and Chain.
No Autotune, just raw talent
You’re so right: Janis had that “thing.” She was one of a kind.
So young (27) when she died in 1970…Janis endured a ridiculous amount of bullying and cruelty, but her voice could not be silenced.
"Summertime" is the opening song of Act 1, Scene 1 in George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess, first performed in 1935. Based on a 1925 novel, Porgy, it takes place in a fictional slum in Charleston, it's the story of a disabled beggar, Porgy, trying to rescue, Bess, from an abusive relationship with a violent lover and a drug dealer called Sportin' Life. Billie Holliday's version will always be the jazz classic but the opera has been covered by a variety of greats from Ella Fitzgerald, to Miles Davis, Louis Armstrong to Nina Simone, from Phoebe Snow (you should check her out) to Christina Aguilera.
Sadly, Joplin belongs to the 27 Club - a group of musicians who all died at the age of 27, between 1969 and 1971 - including Brian Jones (Rolling Stones), Jim Morrison (The Doors), and Jimi Hendrix. In 1994, Kurt Cobain (Nirvana) joined the 27 Club. In 2011, Amy Winehouse also died at 27. Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat also died at the age of 27.
Nobody sings "Sumertime" like Janis..NOBODY.
Had Porgy and Bess at home growing up. Listened to it a lot.
Don't forget Bradley Nowell of Sublime. Another badass member of the 27 club
He rescued her from Crown. Sporting life came in later.
@@Az12er34ty "rescue, Bess, from an abusive relationship with a violent lover" - Crown.
One of my all time favorite artists... I love Janice Joplin!!! She has depth and knows how to pull all that emotion from her soul!!!
You really need to hear "Piece of my Heart". Janice was one of a kind
I think that’s my favorite.
The pick of the crop!
So true!!
That primal scream toward the end is raw pain.
Every live performance by Janis is jaw-dropping. Nobody else like her.
No one at 26 years old should have such pain in her voice. Amazing
Saturn Return in astrology
The best female vocalist ever. I loved her the first time I heard her amazing soulful voice all the way back in 1968. News of her death in 1970 was absolutely devastating. No one will ever match her, past present, future. Many thanks for exploring this incredibly fascinating artist. 🙏
Music isn’t a contest.
I have a 9 year old daughter and the day she was born my wife was crying, like, out of control... she was still on the surgery bed (here in Brazil you can stay in the room to hold your wife's hand) and so I asked her why, 'why u crying so much?' and she said 'because Luisa's (our daughter's name) cry reminds me of Janis Joplin's grasp voice'!
I'll never forget that! 😂😂😂
Dude, PLEASE react to the 'Piece of my heart' live version!
Yesssss, please!!!!
When it comes to women of rock and roll, Janis is my number 1 favorite! I'm a huge fan of the bluesy type of rock. Janis touches my soul every time I hear her sing!
Incredible performance, and there’s so much more. Loved Janis, she screamed my tears somehow.
I was born in 63, she was a beacon, a light for woman. .women had choices.. we could even be rock stars it was amazing
A princess , to great queen 😊😊😊😢
JANIS IS THAT WOMAN WHO SANG THE BLUES MIXED WT R & R. My idol no one will ever compare 😢to this highly talented young lady. Met her at Woodstock the nicest person ever. Way ahead of her x. Gone way to soon 😇🙏 She was a very lovely soul miss her still 2023 & I’m 70 now my favorite ❤️ ❤😢
You need to hear more of her. I am fortunate in that I grew up with her music
Me too! One of a kind. Loved her crazy voice!
I grew up with her too one of my favorite albums still is “Pearl”
Arent we just? The music from 67 to 69 I get high just thinking bout it.
I think I was 14 yrs., old when I first heard her back then. I also got to see her LIVE, and will always remember it. Wow is right!
Her cover of Me and Bobby McGee is one of the greatest recordings ever, by any artist!
When she sang it, she took ownership of that song, lock, stock & barrel. It's a bittersweet song that became even more so when i found out she recorded it just a couple of days before she died, & was released after she passed. Not a bad parting gift she left us.
Not a bad idea for another reaction. Also Ball And Chain live version is pretty powerful
I thought Kris Kristofferson wrote it for her while they were in their relationship? He still says she was the great love of his life.
@@markharrisllb I'm not so sure he wrote it especially for her since Roger Miller recorded it the year before she did. I do think they were in a relationship when she recorded it, so he probably had something to do with her doing it.
@@animerlon Thank you. I appreciate the information.
I'm 75 years old. So I not only was alive and at the right age to be appreciating Janis. But I saw her live about 3 months before she died at Madison square Garden.
And this is the best version I've ever heard of the song Summertime, which was fairly well-known over the years before she got her hands-on it. But I'm here to say 2 things, number one. You've got to play a lot more Janis, Even though there are many other female singers I know you want to get to. Number 2 as great as this song is I have about. A 1/2 a dozen at the most. That I consider to be in my opinion. At least better than this song.
You must make an effort over the coming months to react to some of if not, all of the following.
Live version of ball and chain, which would be the recording of her at Monterey pops.
Try.
A Piece of My Heart.
Cry Baby. Do her live version which was from Woodstock.
Me and Bobby McGee..
Down on Me.
And even Mercedes Benz, which is a little short cute song that she does, but still very worth hearing.
Ahh...I couldn't agree more with your list. I am 73, so yeah I remember the first time I heard her. A friend said. You have GOT to hear this. I was smashed. I love her, was heartbroken when she passed, and miss her so much. Never will there be another Janis.
She was a ball of fire. Piece of my heart is another one of her great ones. She was at Woodstock. Hated hearing of her passing.
I was lucky to have a friend in my young teens (1970s) who was completely into Janis Joplin, so he turned me onto all of her stuff. I was blown away.
Sorry to correct you but janis Joplin had her last concert with cosmic blues band at medison square garden december 19 1969.... not 3 months before she died october 4th 1970... But I am sure the concert at medison square garden was just great, nice to see that someone did see her preformance there. I have the book called Janis garden party with photos from that show.... hope u dont feel bad about me writing this we are all janis Joplin fans RIGHT... Thomas Engholm...
@ThomasEngholm-x3v
I appreciate.
Your comment and I appreciate your attitude regarding my feelings. It's not an issue. I was at that particular concert and I was referring to it being her last large concert because she, who the following months had other live performances. I was just separating it in terms of its size. As I recall Paul Butterfield blues band was also on stage with her that night. In any case, the only thing I actually had wrong because it was a long time ago and I knew she died sometime that following year. So essentially I should have said many months later. Rather than 3 months later, because I didn't recall when she passed away. And in my story it wasn't a matter of the specific facts. I was just making a comment about the fact that I saw her and that I knew it was her last large famous concert.
Having seen Janis Joplin in the 70's sing Ball and Chain and Summertime just gave me the shivers.
Janis was such an amazing and powerful singer who was influenced by many African American folk and blues performers such as Leadbelly, Odetta, Big Mama Thornton, Billie Holiday and Bessie Smith! She was just a simple soprano, but when she heard the powerful American Blues singers she admired so much, she knew that was the sound she wanted...powerful and gritty, leaving it all on the stage! When Led Zeppelin came to the States, Janis was a definite influence on Robert Plant. He loved American gritty blues singers, just as she did, and Steven Tyler of Aerosmith was also greatly influenced by Janis, as well as, Amy Winehouse and Lucinda Williams. Her life was so tragic and we lost her so young! She has been gone over 50 years (1970), Jimi Hendrix died only two weeks earlier at age 27 too. The 27 Club, Janis, Jimi, Kurt Cobain, Jim Morrison, Amy Winehouse + others, so sad to lose so much talent so young. I am always excited to see the younger generations finding and enjoying her music and keeping it alive!
Brian Jones from the Rolling Stones, Alan "Blind Owl" Wilson from Canned Heat, and many others.
Us old hippies and flower children had the BEST music!!!
For sure.
I'm glad you're discovering it.
Janis never wore makeup, her hair always looked like it had never been brushed, she was just natural raw talent!!
I've never found anybody like her. Beth Hart comes close sometimes but there's only one Janis. Please check out more of her music.
Susan Tedeschi reminds me of her a bit from time to time. But I've never heard anyone that compares.
I must agree whole heartedly...Beth Hart "Am I the one?" Live I think at paradiso. Very close to the heart and soul of Janice.
I agree, Beth comes closest to Janice🤗❤️🐝
Sweet soulful Little Girl Blue never knew what a gift to the world she was,never knew how much she was loved, RIP
A shame no one came to Cheer a Little Girl Blue❤️🩹
This format has really opened my mind up to the brilliance of some of this music. I’m grateful to finally understand and appreciate the magnificence of some of these pieces. I love this show
The only thing I can say is that you are a real, genuine person appreciating a real, genuine artist here. That's beautiful, thank you from Japan.
You might want to listen to Janis singing the Kris Kristofferson song "Me and Bobby Magee". My mom used to play that song on repeat, as she was a HUGE fan of both Kris and Janis. It brings me to tears when I hear it now, but I'll shed those tears if it means sharing this iconic performance with you. 💜
I lived right outside of San Francisco and went to many concerts in the 60's and 70's. RIP Janis, Jimmy and Jim. GREATEST MUSIC.
I saw her at strawberry fields Griffith park in 67, she was happy, beautiful and dancing through the day
Thank you for sharing that!! It's so wonderful to hear that she had such happy, free days, when she lived through so much heartbreak and burden!!!
Try her famous live performance of, "Ball and Chain." She's astounding.
"infamous" does not mean "really, really famous"
@@xqqqme Good catch. Corrected
She is and always will be my favorite female artist. She touched my soul early in life. I always said I have an old soul ❤
One of the greatest voices in history and definitely in the top ten of Rock N' Roll / Blues / Folk. When she gets on the stage, just looking at her, you know you're about to witness something amazing. Her candle burnt on both ends and we lost her at such a young age... But what she left behind is nothing short of miraculous.
Her candle burned at both ends. It would not last the night. But oh my foes and oh my friends, it gave a lovely light. We miss you, Janis. ❤️
I saw Janice Joplin live in San Diego in 1969. She was a tiny little woman who had 20,000 people in the palm of her hand, a Texas gal who died too young. Absolutely magical performance.
Janis
@@JamesFolkers Sorry about that, I let my iPad speak for me and it never knew about Janis. However you spell her name she was magic.
That song is a cover. A lot of older jazz musicians have done it. Hers is a very original version. You need to listen to more of her. She was EPIC. RIP Janis!
I can't believe I never heard this before. I had no idea she covered this and I'm blown away. This is absolutely incredible. She was such a powerhouse.
"SHE'S BAD ASS!"😂
Yes she is! Next up PIECE OF MY HEART!❤❤❤
Excellent choice.
Yes!
Yes she has all of that soul...soul...soul.
"Summertime" is was composed in 1934 by George Gershwin. It has been performed by loads of great artists like Ella Fitzgerald, Janis Joplin and Sam Cooke (my favorite BTW) to name a few. It is a classic and still holds up after all of these years.
Janis transcends all races! She’s just so soulful as a human being! Please do everything she has done! No one like her! RIP Janis ❤️
I have loved everything by Janis since I first heard her in the early 60s she was awesome
Polo, I am excited for you to finally experience Janis Joplin. I predict you will be blown away and wanting more, more, more!😄
"Summertime" is a standard performed by many singers. Her version is incredible. The arrangement is how the song is sung, and the music supporting the words. Now that you heard Janis' version, check out Billy Stewart's version here on TH-cam. It's wild!
Also ckeck out " The Righteous Brothers " cover of this song. Bobby sings this by himself and is so soulful.
The song is from the 1935 George Gerswhin musical stage show "Porgy and Bess", which it's stipulated, can only be performed by a cast of black artists. It's set against a backdrop of poverty and prejudice in South Carolina. This stipulation ensures it could never be performed by white artists in 'black face'. Summertime is one of the most covered songs across many genres. This arrangement is amazing ❤
Many years ago a friend of mine was also a close friend of Janis and spent a lot of time touring with her and with her when she was off the road. He nearly died of sadness at her passing...he recovered, but it took time. During her life, she never fully realized how much the people around her truly loved her.
Joss Stone has a similar way about her. But Janice Joplin is mind blowing! Give, Piece of my Heart, Me and Bobby McGee and Cry Baby, a listen and you won’t regret it! She’s one badass that will blow you away!
I love Joss Stone! I was thinking the same thing….😊
If you really want your heart to ache, listen to Janis' song: Little Girl Blue.
The band is killing it! Janis is one of my favorite singers of all time!
Just an FYI. That song was from the musical "Porgie and Bess". You should listen to that sometime. First black musical in 1940's if I'm not mistaken.
She is truly amazing and I am so happy to see a younger person grok it for the first time.
I also like how you pointed out her recognizing the band.
Her backing bands, Big Brother & the Holding Company especially, are so, so talented.
Thanks for featuring Janis!
@@RootofEcstasy
Just wait.
Sadly, you will see it used frequently in the near future.
Bonus points for "grok".
I'd forgotten grokking! 😅
Polo...I am a 69 year old dude. Vagabond. Wanderer. Music ties it all together for me. I have been tripping with you for a bit now, and I gotta tell you I am diggin' how much you enjoy the music I grew up on.
I was in English class, junior year. My teacher was a big, hulking ex-college lineman with a seriously poetic streak. He was also...go figure...a football coach. New to us this year. Five weeks into the school year, the intercom squawked and announced that Janis had passed. He took two shaky steps and collapsed. Me? I was stunned twice! So I took a deep dive into Janis and fell in love with that woman's passion.
I mostly play albums on my phone. "Pearl" still gets time when I just wanna be alone.
I watch these reaction videos because it’s just so cool to see others getting what I got! And then to see a genuine response from another person is in itself is watching art being accepted! Janice is still a tour de force. Nobody ever came after her with this much passion and interpretation. Sir, you give this form of response a respect for music itself. I don’t know if you even read these comments but it’s worth the time for me to thank you for genuinely going there for this fine lady from Texas who should have stayed making us treble with delight .