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Seriously...

My Muse: Lynne Truss on Joni Mitchell

Seriously...

BBC

Documentary, Society & Culture

4.1885 Ratings

🗓️ 29 September 2017

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Not everyone appreciates the tonalities, lyrics or even the shrieky voice of Canadian artist and musician Joni Mitchell but in a dusty class room in 1971 Lynne Truss decided she loved the writer of Woodstock, Big Yellow Taxi and Both Sides Now. It was a bond forged in the face of the frosty indifference of fellow pupils in Miss Cheverton's music class at the Tiffin Girls School in Kingston Upon Thames.

Even Lynne is slightly mystified when she was asked who was her muse that, as a person mostly famous for writing a book on punctuation, she replied; Joni Mitchell. Lynne explores why a series of albums from Ladies of the Canyon to Heijra taking in Blue, Court and Spark and The Hissing of Summer lawns' has wrought such influence over so many.

For her aficionados Joni Mitchell is more than a song writer. Lynne observes that for some the attachment goes beyond the personal; its a complete identification with the struggles of dealing with high emotion and how to cope.

In the programme she speaks to the poet and playwright Liz Lochhead, the author Linda Grant, Elbow's front man Guy Garvey, her latest biographer the Syracuse University academic David Yaffe and Gina Foster the singer with the UK act Joni's Soul, which she insists is not a tribute but a celebration act.

Lynne contends that despite at the time being overshadowed in favour of Bob Dylan, Leonard Cohen, Paul Simon and others Joni Mitchell will come to be regarded as the greatest exponent of the art of singer-song writer from that era and concludes that what makes her a muse can be found less in the brilliant lyrical summations of eternal questions like love, loss and freedom but more in her absolute commitment never to compromise her art - to remain true, above all else, to her own muse.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This was an impregnable fortress. The only way you get out was in a wooden box.

0:05.0

The controversial maximum security prison impossible to escape from.

0:09.0

And one of the duties of a political prisoner is the escape.

0:12.0

The IRA inmates who found a way. of a political prisoner is the escape.

0:12.5

The IRA inmates who found a way.

0:14.5

I'm Carlo Gableer and I'll be navigating a path

0:19.5

through the disturbing inside story of the biggest jailbreak in British and Irish history.

0:25.0

The narrative that they want is that this is a big achievement by them.

0:28.5

Escape from the Maze, listen first on BBC Sounds.

0:34.0

This is the BBC.

0:39.0

Who do you look up to?

0:46.0

Who's your biggest inspiration?

0:49.0

Right from the start I genuinely thought she was me except I couldn't sing a note and I came from

0:58.8

Mother Will Not California. That's Poet and playwright Liz Lockhead.

1:08.0

And this is Guy Garvey from Elbow.

1:10.0

She's my favorite lyricist and I think the best lyricist of a generation by far.

1:15.0

They're both talking about Joanie Mitchell, the star of today's seriously interesting story.

1:22.0

The Canadian musician may... seriously interesting story.

1:23.5

The Canadian musician may not be to everyone's taste, but for each person in this documentary,

1:29.2

she's played a part in their lives. I'm Riana Dylan and this is my muse. Now let's let

1:38.6

author and journalist Lynn Truss explain where her love for Joanie began.

1:47.0

The place is Tiffin Girls School, Kingston-upon-Tems.

...

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