Hasn't Joni said that before?  Wasn't a performance in New Orleans (or
somewhere in that vicinity) to be her swan song?  I think Joni will always
have the bug ... or itch ... to create music.  She will always continue to
create on her own terms.

I get so perplexed when she bashes the music industry.  She has valid points
but enough already.  She creates works of art.  It stands alone.  She
doesn't need all the glitz she mentions below.  I really wish she would get
over this and relish in the beautiful artist that she is.

Heather


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:owner-joni@;jmdl.com]On Behalf Of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, November 12, 2002 10:23 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Article says Joni's calling it quits


This was on the news wires today
Bryan
(praying it's not true)


Joni Mitchell says new album will be her last

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Veteran singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell, disgusted
with the music business, has said her latest album will also be her last.

"These are my last two records," the influential Canadian songstress said of
her forthcoming double album "Travelogue".

"I'm quitting after this because the business has made itself so repugnant
to
me," Mitchell, 59, was quoted as telling the December edition of W magazine
in an interview.

Mitchell, whose eclectic career spans 35 years across the genres of folk,
rock and jazz, has been hinting for weeks that she might end the recording
career that made her one of the most respected and outspoken artists of her
generation.

In an interview with Rolling Stone, published in October, Mitchell described
the music business as a "cesspool," saying she would never take another deal
in the record business,  "which means I may not record again".

In the W magazine interview, she blasted the recording industry as "the most
corrupt one of all. They try not to pay you whenever possible."

Venting her scorn on contemporary artists -- including Madonna -- Mitchell
said of music industry executives;

"They're not looking for talent. They're looking for a look and a
willingness
to cooperate. And a woman my age, no matter how well preserved, no longer
has
the look. And I've never had a willingness to cooperate."

As for Madonna, who was once quoted as saying that as a teenager she had
adored Mitchell: "She has knocked the importance of talent out of the arena.
She's manufactured. She's made a lot of money and become the biggest star in
the world by hiring the right people," Mitchell said.

Canadian-born Mitchell, whose syncopated rhythms and introspective lyrics
brought a breath of fresh air to the early 1970s music scene, inspired
musicians ranging from Sting to David Bowie and Madonna herself. Yet her own
records, even those like "Both Sides Now," "Big Yellow Taxi" and
"Woodstock",
never sold in huge numbers.

She has refused to do anything to make her music more salable. "What would I
do?", she asked in the W magazine interview.

"Show my tits? Grab my crotch? Get hair extensions and a choreographer? It's
not my world," she said.

"Travelogue," a two-disc collection, features some but not all of Mitchell's
greatest hits. It was recorded with the London Symphony Orchestra and a
backing band that includes Herbie Hancock, Billy Preston and Wayne Shorter
and will be released on November 18.

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