HEJIRA (ALBUM)


'''Hejira''' is a 1976 folk/rock/jazz album by Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell. It features the single "Coyote". The album title refers to a journey, specifically as a transliteration of the Arabic word hijra referring to the prophet Muhammad's and his followers' escape to Medina in 622. The songs on the album were largely written by Mitchell on a trip by car from Maine back to Los Angeles, California. Prominent imagery includes highways, small towns and snow.
Many people consider this to be the third of Mitchell's three great albums, after ''Blue'' and ''Court and Spark''. Dominated by Mitchell's guitar and Jaco Pastorius's distinctive fretless bass, it drew on a range of influences but was more cohesive and accessible than some of her later more jazz-oriented work. "Coyote", "Amelia" and "Hejira" all became concert staples shortly after ''Hejira's release, especially after being featured on the live album ''Shadows and Light'' alongside "Furry Sings the Blues" and "Black Crow".
Though "Coyote" and "Black Crow" are fast-strummed folksy numbers, the rest of ''Hejira'' is slow and often languid, notably the epic "Song for Sharon", which deals with the conflict between freedom and marriage faced by a woman and is interspered with images of New York City. "Amelia" is about the famous aviator Amelia Earhart who died during a flight over the Pacific Ocean.
Commercially, the album did not do as well as its two predecessors, only reaching #13 on the ''Billboard'' Top 200 and failing to get significant airplay on commercial radio. Critically, the album was at the time not well received but has since been generally recognised as one of the high-water marks in Mitchell's career. In 2000 German ''Spex'' magazine critics voted it the 55th greatest album of the 20th century, calling it "a self-confident, coolly elegant design".

Contents
Inspiration
Track listing
Miscellanea
See also
External link

Inspiration


Joni Mitchell said of the album: "the whole 'Hejira' album was really inspired. ... I wrote the album while traveling cross-country by myself and there is this restless feeling throughout it. ... The sweet loneliness of solitary travel. ... In ["Amelia"], I was thinking of Amelia Earhart and addressing it from one solo pilot to another, ... sort of reflecting on the cost of being a woman and having something you must do." [1]

Track listing


#"Coyote" – 5:01
#" Amelia" – 6:01
#"Furry Sings the Blues" – 5:07
#"A Strange Boy" – 4:15
#"Hejira" – 6:42
#"Song for Sharon" [2] – 8:40
#"Black Crow" – 4:22
#"Blue Motel Room" – 5:04
#"Refuge of the Roads" – 6:42

Miscellanea



Neil Young plays harmonica on "Furry Sings the Blues." The song is inspired by a meeting that occurred between Mitchell and the blues guitarist and singer Furry Lewis in New Orleans in 1975. After the release of the song, Lewis complained that Mitchell had exploited the circumstances of the meeting; but the song has contributed to awareness of Lewis.

David Sedaris named one of his stories in his collection "Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim" after this record. In the story, Mr. Sedaris is thrown out of the house for supposedly subversive behaviour, including over-indulgence in listening to Joni Mitchell.

See also



Hijra (''Hejira'').

External link


Discussion of Sharon's Song by Joni Mitchell

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