Painting with word and music


Joni Mitchell

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Joni Mitchell’s exquisite voice and guitar playing are on display in this satisfying hour-and-a-half-plus of the iconic performer directed by Joan Tosoni and filmed in an intimate setting. The dominant instruments are, no surprise, the singer’s voice and her guitar, which is heavy with liquid effects. Much effort went into the circular set and the six cameras have unobstructed views with graceful pans and elegant zoom-ins. Mitchell is the set designer and editorial director with her own paintings adding to the decor, positioned on the walls that swing around the set. There’s a two-and-a-half minute discussion of the event before actress Rosanna Arquette introduces the star and the festivities begin. A semi-pensive and solo «Big Yellow Taxi» opens the show, Mitchell not worried about being under this stunningly beautiful microscope that is the colorful set and the all-revealing eye of all these cameras. «Just Like This Train» has the singer close to her artwork and strumming the guitar as if with a paint brush, quite possibly an intentional metaphor from the clever singer always exposing her intuition with a bit of flair. She announces the band early on, just prior to «Night Ride Home,» and the musicians ease into the program like drawings that quietly and slowly come to life. The pop style is maintained throughout the jazz leanings of this group of performers, «Black Crow,» «Amelia,» and «Hejira» getting not only the sustained sound of the perfectly fluid ensemble, but complementary camera work which drives around the set and the performers as well as capturing the faces of audience members and Mitchell’s moves, all to wonderful effect. The concert is top-notch with material that stretches across her career up to the 1998 release Taming the Tiger, and it features Mitchell telling some stories in between songs; there’s a warm rapport with those in attendance which translates well to the viewer. The final song, which appears after the concert on track 19, is a percussive «Dream Land,» once covered by Roger McGuinn, with Mitchell and her musicians on couches casually performing as the credits roll. Bonus tracks include a discography and filmography, but it is the main event that will keep your attention. Taped at Warner Brothers Studios in Burbank, CA and produced in association with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, this is a very contained production, a high quality presentation put together with the refinement Mitchell fans expect.

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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on December 19, 2012

You can tell from the heading of this review I am a fan… and have been since Joni released her first LP. I don’t know why it took me so long, but I didn’t see her perform until the gig she did with Van Morrison and Bob Dylan at Pauley Pavilion in L.A., circa 1998. Although Dylan was in good form that night and Van was borderline miraculous, it was pretty much a bummer for me seeing Joni in that cavern of a place amongst a crowd that didn’t seem to be there for her. I told the friends who accompanied me I felt Joni should only play in small settings and almost wished I had not gone it was so unfulfilling.

Now, fast forward a couple of months and imagine my bliss when I got the chance to attend the two performances that were edited into one for this DVD. It was recorded in a small venue on the Warner’s lot in Burbank, perfect for a Joni concert and just what I had imagined would be ideal for her. The band was most excellent, tight and all great players, well known and accomplished in their own rights. The set was good even though I would have liked hearing a few older tunes. And it was great fun watching Joni interact with the audience and tell a few stories along the way… and witnessing Graham Nash present her with the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductee trophy. Of course I had to have this DVD as a souvenir of the two nights I was enveloped in Joni’s music. My only complaint: to my ear, the volume of Joni’s voice is a little too low and should have been a tad more in the «front» of the mix. Otherwise, an awesome couple of nights for me that I can remember well by kicking back and enjoying this DVD. If you are a fan of Joni, I think you will enjoy it too.

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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on August 10, 2004

Not withstanding the sound problems mentioned many times by reviewers,

this was a pretty nice overview of Joni Mitchell’s work,

presented as she is now. The voice has lost much of its

original spectacular presence BUT I really like the new deeper

Joni voice. She is still capable of doing great work, just

at a lower register. The new guitar she uses is perfectly suited for

her stylings, still love the way she moves her hand across the frets making little percussive noises along the way, nobody

plays likes this. The Band is such a compliment to her music,

dreamy, lonesome, searching always relevant. Nice pedal steel

and especially the BASS work is terrific. I especially

enjoy the likes of «Comes Love» and how much she enjoys herself

taking on this style. Shes never been afraid to explore her

muse so this show comes off beautiful for the most part, whatever happened to the mixing, the most important part to me

I’ll never know, it just should have been more striking considering all the time taken to look so good. This show is

a must for those who’ve traveled with Joni all these years and just let her be who she’s become as she ages and

well for those forever lost to the 1970s and unable to deal with

the artist evolving and changing and getting along its sad. She

smokes big deal, she pays the consequenses of this but getting

back to the show, it has many great moments to recommend.

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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on April 22, 2003

Joni Mitchell is a counterweight to Grace Slick. They both started out singing for what they thought was a revolution. When they found out they were wrong, when the revolution melted down into disco, cocaine and «greed is good,» they had to go on somehow. Grace went on by letting the beautiful and wonderful Jefferson Airplane become «Starship,» a mindless, schlock-rock money printing machine that fed her and some other people during the 80’s. Joni put on her walking sandals, shed a tear for all that was Woodstock, then put the revolution in her pocket and kept going.
This DVD is the culmination of that journey so far, and it showcases her beautiful music, her heart-wrenching lyrics and her skills as a painter. Anyone who loved her in the 60’s will be thrilled to see the beautifully mature musician, artist and woman she’s become since, and anyone who isn’t familiar with her, will be in for a pleasant surprise. You’ll be richer by far spending a little money on this DVD.
And Grace, it isn’t too late. I’m guessing that Peace and Love are due for a comeback any time now, and I’m pretty sure that we who are trying to make that happen all miss you and wish you were here. :-)

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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on March 26, 2013

Joni Mitchell released only one all-original album after this concert (and two albums of covers), so this concert is something of a career retrospective. Mitchell performs here with a minimal band in a small venue, so her singer-songwriter talent takes center stage. The first half of the concert is a bit too sedate, but it picks up energy in the middle and sustains it through to the end. Mitchell’s guitar work is excellent, as usual. Her voice had begun to take on a soft velvety quality that’s well suited to her own particular, somewhat odd, signature vocal phrasings. She really has come into her own here. Joni Mitchell is an aquired taste; she’s not for everyone — many of her most popular songs were bigger hits in the hands of other performers than in her own — so this DVD is really for her fans.

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Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on July 12, 2002

One of the many wonderful aspects of this DVD is Ms. Mitchell’s storytelling, the most striking of which was how she came up with the title of her album Hejira. She explained that the definition of the word is, «…leaving the dream, no blame.» Well, she has not left the dream. I have been listening to her music for 30 years, have all her albums, most on vinyl as well as CD, and I was SO mesmerized by this DVD. While she has lost the high end of her vocal range, she MORE than compensates with her style, her presence, and her incredible talent. My only complaint about the DVD is the sound quality which is spotty at times, otherwise it would be a 5 plus. The dream lives on.
If anyone knows where you can get prints of her paintings, please contact me.

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J. McDonald 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

5.0 out of 5 stars

Painting With Words & Music.

Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on October 14, 2020

A 2008 studio concert with a live audience filmed on Warner’s Lot in Los Angeles; there`s a brief look around an exhibition of Mitchell’s paintings and a short, slightly embarrassing introduction by Rosanna Arquette but otherwise this is a relaxed and entertaining concert featuring Mitchell with a small electric band which consists of Mark Isham, Larry Klein, Greg Leisz and Brian Blade; the music is a fair mix of 18 songs from Mitchell’s career (up until the recording date) with a few (then) recent songs and a few covers.
Mitchell clearly has a good time and everyone performs well.
The concert can be viewed in it’s entirety or there’s a menu option to go to a song.
The DVD has a playing time of 98 minutes approx. and the picture is 4:3 screen format; there are no extras or subtitles.

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5.0 out of 5 stars

JONI — NEVER BETTER…

Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on February 10, 2018

Joni sings her beautiful, timeless songs…beautifully…with a CLASS band…amazing and ‘essential’.

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3.0 out of 5 stars

Enough there to enjoy

Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on February 22, 2013

Despite a rather fawning start (and at 1-2 other points, such as the Graham Nash interlude), for most of the time the music speaks for itself; unfortunately for my particular taste in Joni’s work (phase 2 if you like, For The Roses — Hegira), quite a lot of it is a little too recent. The menu system of the DVD doesn’t help to ID/select indiv songs, so the low cost of the DVD does come at a price….

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5.0 out of 5 stars

Interesting DVD

Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on December 8, 2021

It is exactly as described and suits my purposes and so I am pleased with this purchase.

5.0 out of 5 stars

Joni Live at her best

Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on December 20, 2014

This is a great collection of Joni’s later music (plus Big Yellow Taxi) played live and with some interesting guests and audience interaction. Well worth owning if you like Joni Mitchell.

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  • 1998
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 39m

Joni Mitchell: Painting with Words and Music (1998)

Joni Mitchell, Canada’s queen of folk/pop, performs before an intimate audience on the Warner’s Lot in Los Angeles. Playing in the round with a small band she delivers tracks from across her… Read allJoni Mitchell, Canada’s queen of folk/pop, performs before an intimate audience on the Warner’s Lot in Los Angeles. Playing in the round with a small band she delivers tracks from across her career including all her best loved songs.Joni Mitchell, Canada’s queen of folk/pop, performs before an intimate audience on the Warner’s Lot in Los Angeles. Playing in the round with a small band she delivers tracks from across her career including all her best loved songs.

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  • Mark Isham

    Joni Mitchell

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    Not Bad

    If you like Hejira, this is right up your alley. I saw this on ovation not too long ago. If you get ovation, they have a website. Go to their website and simply look up «Joni». This concert should come up… check back ever so often to see if they have it scheduled. She plays with her ex-husband, who plays electric bass, alongside a drummer, steel-guitarist, trumpet-player, and of course, herself, on guitar. She plays amelia, hejira, coyote, big yellow taxi, sex kills, and others. She plays an amazing version of Woodstock, on guitar, at the end, that set me into a trance. If you like her early stuff, this is way different. I love Song To A Seagull, but I like her later work as well. It’d be nicer to see this film with out all the commercials, so rent or buy a copy if you can, and if you like Joni, especially her album Hejira.

    • kongssonur
    • Dec 20, 2005

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    Movie · 1998

    Tracklist

    1. Tiger Bones
    2. Big Yellow Taxi
    3. Just Like This Train
    4. Night Ride Home
    5. Crazy Cries Of Love
    6. Harry’s House
    7. Black Crow
    8. Amelia
    9. Hejira
    10. Sex Kills
    11. The Magdalene Laundries
    12. Moon At The Window
    13. Face Lift
    14. Why Do Fools Fall In Love?
    15. Trouble Man
    16. Nothing Can Be Done
    17. Song For Sharon
    18. Woodstock
    19. Dreamland

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    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    For paintings and other art incorporating text, see Word art.

    Word painting, also known as tone painting or text painting, is the musical technique of composing music that reflects the literal meaning of a song’s lyrics or story elements in programmatic music.

    Historical development[edit]

    Tone painting of words goes at least as far back as Gregorian chant. Musical patterns expressed both emotive ideas and theological meanings in these chants. For instance, the pattern fa-mi-sol-la signifies the humiliation and death of Christ and his resurrection into glory. Fa-mi signifies deprecation, while sol is the note of the resurrection, and la is above the resurrection, His heavenly glory («surrexit Jesus«). Such musical words are placed on words from the Biblical Latin text; for instance when fa-mi-sol-la is placed on «et libera» (e.g., introit for Sexagesima Sunday) in the Christian faith it signifies that Christ liberates us from sin through his death and resurrection.[1]

    Word painting developed especially in the late 16th century among Italian and English composers of madrigals, to such an extent that word painting devices came to be called madrigalisms. While it originated in secular music, it made its way into other vocal music of the period. While this mannerism became a prominent feature of madrigals of the late 16th century, including both Italian and English, it encountered sharp criticism from some composers. Thomas Campion, writing in the preface to his first book of lute songs in 1601, said of it: «… where the nature of everie word is precisely expresst in the Note … such childish observing of words is altogether ridiculous.»[2]

    Word painting flourished well into the Baroque music period. One well-known example occurs in Handel’s Messiah, where a tenor aria contains Handel’s setting of the text:[3]

    Every valley shall be exalted, and every mountain and hill made low; the crooked straight, and the rough places plain. (Isaiah 40:4)[4]

    In Handel’s melody, the word «valley» ends on a low note, «exalted» is a rising figure; «mountain» forms a peak in the melody, and «hill» a smaller one, while «low» is another low note. «Crooked» is sung to a rapid figure of four different notes, while «straight» is sung on a single note, and in «the rough places plain», «the rough places» is sung over short, separate notes whereas the final word «plain» is extended over several measures in a series of long notes. This can be seen in the following example:[5]

    Handel's Messiah Every Valley.png

    In popular music[edit]

    There are countless examples of word painting in 20th century music.

    One example occurs in the song «Friends in Low Places» by Garth Brooks. During the chorus, Brooks sings the word «low» on a low note.[6] Similarly, on The Who’s album Tommy, the song «Smash the Mirror» contains the line «Rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise, rise….» Each repetition of «rise» is a semitone higher than the last, making this an especially overt example of word-painting.[7]

    «Hallelujah» by Leonard Cohen includes another example of word painting. In the line «It goes like this the fourth, the fifth, the minor fall and the major lift, the baffled king composing hallelujah,» the lyrics signify the song’s chord progression.[8]

    Justin Timberlake’s song «What Goes Around» is another popular example of text painting. The lyrics

    What goes around, goes around, goes around
    Comes all the way back around

    descend an octave and then return to the upper octave, as though it was going around in a circle.

    In the chorus of «Up Where We Belong» recorded by Joe Cocker and Jennifer Warnes, the melody rises during the words «Love lift us up».

    In Johnny Cash’s «Ring of Fire», there is an inverse word painting where «down, down, down» is sung to the notes rising, and ‘higher’ is sung dropping from a higher to a lower note.

    In Jim Reeves’s version of the Joe Allison and Audrey Allison song «He’ll Have to Go,» the singer’s voice sinks on the last word of the line, «I’ll tell the man to turn the juke box way down low.»

    When Warren Zevon sings «I think I’m sinking down,» on his song «Carmelita,» his voice sinks on the word «down.»

    In Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart’s «My Romance,» the melody jumps to a higher note on the word «rising» in the line «My romance doesn’t need a castle rising in Spain.»

    In recordings of George and Ira Gershwin’s «They Can’t Take That Away from Me,» Ella Fitzgerald and others intentionally sing the wrong note on the word «key» in the phrase «the way you sing off-key».[9]

    Another inverse happens during the song «A Spoonful of Sugar» from Mary Poppins, as, during the line «Just a spoonful of sugar helps the medicine go down,» the words «go down» leap from a lower to a higher note.

    In Follies, Stephen Sondheim’s first time composing the words and music together, the number «Who’s That Woman?» contains the line «Who’s been riding for a fall?» followed by a downward glissando and bass bump, and then the line «Who is she who plays the clown?» followed by mocking saxophone wobbles.

    At the beginning of the first chorus in Luis Fonsi’s «Despacito», the music is slowed down when the word «despacito'»(slowly) is performed.

    In Secret Garden’s «You Raise Me Up», the words «you raise me up» are sung in a rising scale at the beginning of the chorus.

    Queen use word painting in many of their songs (in particular, those written by lead singer Freddie Mercury). In «Somebody to Love», each time the word «Lord» occurs, it is sung as the highest note at the end of an ascending passage. In the same piece, the lyrics «I’ve got no rhythm; I just keep losing my beat» fall on off beats to create the impression that he is out of time.

    Queen also uses word painting through music recording technology in their song «Killer Queen» where a flanger effect is placed on the vocals during the word «laser-beam» in bar 17.[10]

    In Mariah Carey’s 1991 single Emotions word painting is used throughout the song. The first use of word painting is in the lyric «deeper than I’ve ever dreamed of» where she sings down to the bottom of the staff, another example is also in the lyric «You make me feel so high» with the word «high» being sung with arpeggios with the last note being an E7

    In Miley Cyrus’ ‘Wrecking Ball’, every time the title of the song is mentioned, all instruments engage in one huge wall of sound, therefore mimicking the sound of a wrecking ball whenever the chorus comes in.

    Burt Bacharach uses word-painting in the song ‘In Between the Heartaches’ from Dionne Warwick’s Here_I_Am album. The song opens on an A-flat minor 11th chord. Dionne sings on the 11th of the chord (on the words…’In Between…’); a high E-flat briefly (on the word ‘the’); and back to the 11th and the 9th of the chord (on the word…’Heartaches…’) Those notes fall IN BETWEEN the notes of an A-flat minor triad (A-flat, C-flat, E-flat) making it a highly sophisticated example of word-painting.

    See also[edit]

    • Mickey Mousing
    • Musica reservata
    • Program music
    • Eye music

    References[edit]

    1. ^ Krasnicki, Ted. «The Introit For Sexagesima Sunday». New Liturgical Movement.
    2. ^ Thomas Campion, First Booke of Ayres (1601), quoted in von Fischer, Grove online
    3. ^ Jennens, Charles, ed. (1749). Messiah – via Wikisource.
    4. ^ «Isaiah#Chapter 40» . Bible (King James). 1769 – via Wikisource.
    5. ^ Bisson, Noël; Kidger, David. «Messiah: Listening Guide for Part I». First Nights (Literature & Arts B-51, Fall 2006, Harvard University). The President and Fellows of Harvard College. Retrieved 7 September 2021.
    6. ^ «Word painting in songwriting…» The Song Writing Desk. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
    7. ^ Ellul, Matthew. «How to Write Music». School of Composition. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
    8. ^ Ellul, Matthew. «How to Write Music». School of Composition. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
    9. ^ «A LEVEL Performance Studies: George Gershwin» (PDF). Oxford Cambridge and RSA (Version 1): 16. September 2015. Retrieved October 29, 2020.
    10. ^ «Queen: ‘Killer Queen’ from the album Sheer Heart Attack» (PDF). Pearson Schools and FE Colleges. Area of study 2: Vocal Music: 97. Retrieved October 29, 2020.

    Sources[edit]

    • M. Clement Morin and Robert M. Fowells, «Gregorian Musical Words», in Choral essays: A Tribute to Roger Wagner, edited by Williams Wells Belan, San Carlos (CA): Thomas House Publications, 1993
    • Sadie, Stanley. Word Painting. Carter, Tim. The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians. Second edition, vol. 27.
    • How to Listen to and Understand Great Music, Part 1, Disc 6, Robert Greenberg, San Francisco Conservatory of Music

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