Joni Mitchell's Blue
Series: Oxford Keynotes;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 31 March 2026
- ISBN 9780197686836
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages126 pages
- Size 210x140x7 mm
- Weight 150 g
- Language English 692
Categories
Short description:
The book weaves together a range of reactions to Joni Mitchell's most beloved album, Blue. Critics have ranked it among the greatest; fans become devoted to the songwriter for her ability to speak to their own troubles; listeners are awed by the music's visceral impact and extraordinary beauty. Whitesell situates Mitchell as a key figure in the singer-songwriter movement and shows how Blue represents a turning point in the confessional approach. He illustrates how Mitchell captures snapshots of the counterculture and explores new choices available to women. In detailed analyses of lyrics, melody, harmony, and vocal performance, he identifies the qualities that set Mitchell's music apart for its ingenuity and sophistication.
MoreLong description:
Critics have ensured its place in a canon of greatest works. Fans grow deeply attached to the songwriter for her honesty and ability to speak directly to their own troubles. Listeners are awed by the music's visceral impact and extraordinary beauty. Joni Mitchell's most beloved album Blue (1971) continues to inspire new generations of listeners well over 50 years after its release.
In this book, author Lloyd Whitesell situates Mitchell as a key figure in the singer-songwriter movement that emerged in the late 1960s and shows how the confessional mode of writing intensified the movement's core values of authenticity and vulnerability. In its extreme personal exposure, raw timbres, and emotional volatility, Blue represents a turning point in the confessional approach. Whitesell also paints a vivid portrait of Mitchell and her peers at the moment Blue was made. The songwriter captures snapshots of the counterculture and reflects the dilemmas of a young person living through cultural upheaval. In particular, she conveys the perspective of a woman struggling toward self-determination and exploring the new choices available to her in love and personal fulfilment. Against a backdrop of idealism, she gives voice to the doubts that shadow the collective desire for a better world. Though Blue embodies a flawed, spontaneous, disheveled persona, its songs are impeccably artful in their design. In detailed analyses of lyrics, melody, harmony, and vocal performance, Whitesell explores the qualities that set Mitchell's music apart for its shapeliness, symbolic resonance, and sophistication.
Table of Contents:
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