Tried-and-true Southerner and country music icon Dolly Parton has always been one to speak her mind with a quick wit and kind spirit, and her hilarious reaction to listening to an album by Joni Mitchell is certainly no exception. Although the exact record varies depending on the account, Partonโs response remains the same.
Interestingly, Parton wasnโt the only Southern songwriter who seemed to offer Mitchell an impressed, albeit uncomfortable, โbless your heartโ response to her music, particularly her 1970s work.
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Dolly Partonโs Reaction To A Joni Mitchell Album
Memories are nothing if not fickle, which is likely why the story of Dolly Parton listening to a Joni Mitchell album alongside the Canadian singer-songwriter varies on the exact details.
According to an interview Mitchell did with Capital Radio in 1988, the album in question was Hissing of Summer Lawns. But in the liner notes for Archives, Vol. 4: The Asylum Years (1976-1980), Mitchell had played Hejira for Parton. Mitchell released the albums within a year of each other. So, itโs likely that fading memory and creative crossover both play some part in changing accounts.
However, in either case, Partonโs reaction is consistent. In each story, Mitchell played Parton her album front-to-back. (Per the Archives retelling, Bonnie Raitt was also there.) Mitchell told Capital Radio, โ[Dolly] said to me quite shyly after the record was played back, โMy God, if I thought that deep, Iโd scare myself to death.โโ
Whatever the exact album was, itโs clear Mitchell harbored no ill will for Partonโs honest reaction. As she told the radio station in the late 1980s, โIn order to write poetry, itโs an introspective process. Some of the process is indeed a little bit scary, you know.โ
Another Southern Songwriter Had A Similar Reaction to โBlueโ
As anyone who has grown up or lived in the South can attest, Southerners have a keen sense of how to tell a blunt truth without being disrespectful. Dolly Parton turned her commentary on Joni Mitchellโs music back on herself. She offered a somewhat self-deprecating deflection that she would never โthink that deeply.โ Fellow Southerner and songwriter Kris Kristofferson did the same thing.
In a 1996 interview with Acoustic Guitar magazine, Joni Mitchell revealed that after she played Kristofferson her 1971 album Blue, he replied, โGod, Joan, save something of yourself.โ Mitchell continued, โHe was embarrassed by it. I think, generally, at first, that people were embarrassed by it. In a certain way, it was shocking, especially in the pop arena.โ
โPeople [usually sing], โIโm bad, Iโm bad, Iโm great, Iโm the greatest,โโ Mitchell said. โItโs a phony business, and people accept the phoniness of it. Itโs fluff, this weekโs flavor. And it isnโt supposed to be anything really more than that.โ
Of course, for Mitchell, her songwriting has always been more than thatโan unwavering testament to her poetry that has challenged both her fans and her contemporaries for decades.
Photo by Tom Hill/WireImage
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English rock group the Beatles hold a press conference at the Capitol Records Tower in Los Angeles before their live performance at the Dodger Stadium, California, 28th August 1966. From left to right, George Harrison, John Lennon, Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr. (Photo by Archive Photos/Getty Images)







