Goldmine

THE MAKING OF PEARL

On July 10, 1970, Janis Joplin was back in Austin, Texas. She’d taken advantage of a tour break to fly in for the birthday party of one of her earliest supporters, Ken Threadgill, owner of the legendary club Threadgill’s, where Janis had got her start as a performer before leaving for San Francisco and rock stardom. Her appearance at Ken’s party was meant to be a surprise, so she spent most of the day at her hotel. While passing the time in the hotel bar with her road manager, John Cooke, and some friends, the lounge’s guitarist began to play “Me and Bobby McGee.”

Janis was familiar with the song, which was written by Kris Kristofferson; her friend Bobby Neuwirth had introduced it to her the previous year, and she’d first performed it at a concert on December 16, 1969, in Nashville.

At the time, the song was best known from Roger Miller’s version. But Janis was anxious to put her own stamp on it. “That guy can’t do that song worth a damn,” she declared after the lounge guitarist finished the number. “Wait until you hear me. I can do that song.”

She performed the song that night, along with Kristofferson’s “Sunday Mornin’ Comin’, and eventually became her signature song.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Goldmine

Goldmine6 min read
Top Street Survivors
Texas twisters ZZ Top recently completed tour dates with southern rock icons Lynyrd Skynyrd, in a double bill strafed with hot guitar licks and at the lyric end, steeped in hard rock Americana. As for La Futura, who knows? Possibly a fresh new ZZ Top
Goldmine12 min read
Getting The Beatles Back One Last Time
Get back indeed. On November 2, 2023, more than 25 years after the release of two new Beatles songs for the group’s multipart Anthology documentary series (“Free As a Bird” and “Real Love,” which featured surviving members Paul McCartney, George Harr
Goldmine6 min read
Grooves
Amidst all the kerfuffle surrounding the 50th anniversary of that Pink Floyd album (and just two years to go before we do it all again for Wish You Were Here), it’s refreshing to know that not everybody has fallen beneath its spell. There is, for exa

Related Books & Audiobooks