MOTHER JONES BY E-MAIL

«--Previous Post | Blog Index | Next Post--»

Joan Baez: Two 20-Somethings on a 60s Icon

joan-baez-250x200.jpgIn 1959 Joan Baez was a pint-sized college dropout with a hell of a lot of hair playing her folk tunes in pretty much any Boston club that would have her. Once the sixties came—well, we know the rest—Baez met Bob Dylan, and she quickly became the darling of the nascent protest folk-rock scene. Her soprano reworkings of classic spirituals and folk songs became the soundtrack by which a generation remembers their youth.

Today, the 67 year-old Baez refuses to become a relic. To celebrate the 50th anniversary of her recording career, Baez has released The Day After Tomorrow, a new album of covers drawn from sources such as Elvis Costello and Thea Gilmore. (In true Baez style, the title track is a cover of Tom Waits' classic wartime ode to a disheartened soldier.)

Two of us MoJo staffers caught Baez during the last leg of her recent national tour. Later, we discussed via gchat how the rebel-rousing folksinger translates from legend to the stage. Full disclosure: Neither of us was even in utero during the sixties.

Jesse: Well, first off, I really enjoyed the show. It was my first time seeing Joan Baez, and I left feeling warm and cuddly, ready to give a stranger a hug.

Alexis: I mean she's Joan freaking BAEZ.

Jesse: Word. I've been hearing about her my whole life. My mother was jealous.

Alexis: So was mine. She offered to fly out to come to the show.

Jesse: My mom didn't tell me Joan was so religious, or maybe spiritual is a better word.

Alexis: Is she?

Jesse: Well, I can't be sure, but she kept talking about Jesus and God, and then Gandhi.

Alexis: But I think a lot of that is sort of sixties spiritual jargon, that when coming out of the mouth of a 60-year-old women is completely different than a 17-year-old hippie.

Jesse: Yeah, now it just sounds new-agey.

Alexis: You still have to respect her for coming out with new stuff though.

Jesse: Right. And her voice is still remarkably sweet.

Alexis: It sounds exactly the same. It's crazy.

Jesse: But, let's be honest, she's not a virtuoso. I really think people came more for the culture, to reconnect with a meaningful time in their own lives. I mean, she kept offering little nuggets of insight into her world. She introduced her mom, after all.

Alexis: Bob Dylan, Johnny Cash… She can name drop.

Alexis: There was a women sitting next to us just beaming, singing along with every lyric. It's clear that seeing her is really about so much more than the music. It's almost like a baby-boomer reunion. There was this collective energy about age. Like the way she kept joking about the time lapse and changing her song lyrics to reflect that it was 40 years in the future. Those jokes got the most laughs. But hearing the same songs sung in a concert hall to adults who might as well be attending a Barry Manilow concert is just incredibly sad. The baby boomers grew up, the revolution never happened, and now Joan Baez sings covers for $50 a pop. And you can buy a Pellegrino in the lobby after you've signed your Amnesty International petition.

Jesse: I've just got to say that she's done a much better job of practicing what she's been preaching and publicizing her beliefs and taking a strong stand for justice than Bob Dylan.

Alexis: She was one of the first celebrities to come out for Obama actively, and she's still a regular face in the protest scene. Its funny, considering the Joan Didion piece on her where she's called "the Madonna of the disaffected" and "the pawn of the protest movement." I mean she still has those qualities, but it's definitely something she owns and controls and seeks. She's not 17 anymore.

Jesse: I don't know if I'd call her a pawn necessarily, but I bet that's where I'll get to see her next, at a protest rally. Would you see her again, I mean, outside of a protest rally?

Alexis: I think I would, but only if I brought my mom.


—Alexis Fitts and Jesse Finfrock.






Comments

Interesting article but your history is off. Joan Baez was a top-rank folk sensation well before she met Bob Dylan. She fell for him, musically & personally (see her two autobiographies) and gave him a leg up when he was virtually unknown outside Greenwich Village. He rode her coattails for a while before eclipsing her and everyone else.

Posted by: Ralph H [TypeKey Profile Page] on 11/28/08 at 8:40 PM  Respond

Ralph H -

Thanks for your comment. After speaking with my (and my partner's) parents at length this weekend, and flipping through a few Bios, I believe you are correct. It's interesting how Dylan continues to overshadow Baez all these years later.

Posted by: Jesse Finfrock [TypeKey Profile Page] on 12/01/08 at 11:53 AM  Respond

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)





 

RECENT COMMENTS

The Best Albums of 2008 (1)
SecretCode wrote: If you thought Kanye had something to bring to the SNL tab... [more]

Melissa Etheridge Meets with Rick Warren, Responds to Controversy (1)
a wrote: Etheridge is out of her mind. Obama is no real friend to ... [more]

Some Writerly Advice (2)
earledj wrote: the problem is that professional writers always need some... [more]

Why Tina Fey Had to Get All Tarted Up (1)
earledj wrote: Tina Fey didn't become popular from being a sex symbol. M... [more]

The Best Singles of 2008 (1)
Lea wrote: Well, well. I do adore LES Artistes - it's amazing, and it... [more]

CD Review: Lil Wayne - Tha Carter III (15)
reid allmaras wrote: well the carter album is seriously overrated and weezy doe... [more]

NPR Lays Off Staff, Cuts Shows (1)
Old Hand wrote: PBS and NPR are both ridiculously underfunded by the gover... [more]

Coldplay Deny Plagiarism Accusation, Get Dissed By Reuters (2)
Old Hand wrote: PS - Thanks for that. I've been sleeping on indie rock sin... [more]

Thoughts on Milk (1)
electriclady281 wrote: I'm not gay, but I fail to understand the callous way that... [more]

YouTube Wrapup: Kermit Sings LCD Soundsystem, Pole Dancing Robots, Mashup Mayhem, Walrus Saxophone Action (1)
Old Hand wrote: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gjTBH4_4pO0&feature=related... [more]

XML RSS Feed

Powered by
Movable Type 3.33

Jail.org - Inmate Search
Criminal records, instant public records & people search & current court records. www.jail.org

U.S. Public Records Search
Search County & State Court Records, Criminal records, Vital and Adoption Records www.PublicRecordsInfo.com

Records.com - People Search
Public Records and Background Checks. Instantly Search Criminal Records, Addresses and Court Records www.Records.com

Court Records & County Records
Find Instant Public Records, Criminal Records as Well as County Property Records Search. www.PublicRecordsIndex.com

Real Viagra, Cialis Levitra Deal
Dare to compare our competitive prices. Free overnight delivery to new patients in the US. No catch 22!

Subscribe Now!
Don't lose sight of the facts. Every issue of Mother Jones is loaded with hard-hitting reporting you can't afford to miss.

Big Bang, Little Bucks
Mother Jones Text Links is a great way to get on the site for an affordable price. For more information please click this the headline

End the genocide in Darfur
Every day, Darfuris face rape, murder, and starvation. Be a Voice for Darfur: tell Obama to end the suffering.


















Invade the Caymans!

The Housing Market

Attention Spans

Pipeline Politics


More MoJo voices...



bookIN PRINT

CLICK HERE
for more great reading

headphones IN TUNE
New music every issue

CLICK TO LISTEN

Advertise Liberally

This article has been made possible by the Foundation for National Progress, the Investigative Fund of Mother Jones, and gifts from generous readers like you.

© 2008 The Foundation for National Progress

About Us   Support Us   Advertise   Ad Policy   Privacy Policy   Contact Us   Subscribe   RSS