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Joni Mitchell - Park Theatre London, April 24th, 1974 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

Joni Mitchell - Park Theatre London, April 24th, 1974 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

BAND/ARTIST: Joni Mitchell

  • Title: Park Theatre London, April 24th, 1974 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting)
  • Year Of Release: 2025
  • Label: DMG
  • Genre: Folk, Pop, Rock
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 39:32
  • Total Size: 249 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Free Man in Paris (Live) (03:35)
2. You Turn Me On, I'm a Radio (Live) (04:30)
3. The Same Situation (Live) (03:54)
4. Just Like This Train (Live) (04:13)
5. Rainy Night House (Live) (04:56)
6. Big Yellow Taxi (Live) (03:45)
7. People's Parties (Live) (03:02)
8. Blue (Live) (03:21)
9. Help Me (Live) (04:03)
10. The Last Time I Saw Richard (Live) (03:45)
11. 11 Twisted (23 sec snippet) (Live) (00:23)

A folk singer with a poet's spirit, Joni Mitchell is among music history's most poignant and influential songwriters. A veteran of the '60s folk circuit, Mitchell first came to prominence as a songwriter, composing oft-covered tunes of the era "Chelsea Morning," "The Circle Game," and "Both Sides Now." By the time Judy Collins brought the latter into the charts in 1968, Mitchell had released her David Crosby-produced solo debut, Song to a Seagull. Mitchell became part of Los Angeles' folk-rock scene, but worked from a different compositional aesthetic, utilizing alternate guitar tunings and writing from a stark personal perspective. These qualities shone on Clouds, a self-produced 1969 LP that won the Grammy for Best Folk Performance, setting the stage for her 1971 masterpiece Blue, an album that has served as the cornerstone of introspective singer/songwriter music since the '70s. Mitchell expanded her horizons quickly, working with a collective of L.A. studio musicians on the smooth and pop-minded Court and Spark, the 1974 album that turned into her commercial breakthrough thanks to the Top Ten single "Help Me" and its sequel "Free Man in Paris." From there, she embraced jazz fusion and worldbeat, collaborating with players like Joe Sample and Weather Report's Jaco Pastorius on such revered albums as The Hissing of Summer Lawns and Hejira. Mitchell moved to Geffen in the early '80s where she reckoned with new wave before returning to her impressionistic folk-pop roots for 1994's Turbulent Indigo, which earned her a Grammy Award for Pop Album of the Year. Almost ten years separated 1998's Taming the Tiger and 2007's Shine, her last two studio albums of original material -- but her legacy not only loomed large, it grew as listeners and artists caught up to the innovations she pioneered throughout her career.



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