Hailed as the most important and influential female
recording artist of the late 20th century, inspired folk artist and pioneer
Joni Mitchell will receive the prestigious Les Paul Innovation Award at the
35th Annual NAMM Technical Excellence & Creativity Awards (NAMM TEC
Awards), being held Saturday, January 18, 2020 in Anaheim, California. The
award is given on behalf of the Les Paul Foundation to honor individuals that
have set the highest standards of excellence in creative application of
artistry in the spirit of the famed audio pioneer, inventor and musician, Les
Paul.
"We are excited that Joni will be the recipient of the
prestigious Les Paul Innovation Award," says Michael Braunstein, Executive
Director of The Les Paul Foundation. "Like Les, she has been a trailblazer
and a true renaissance woman – a songwriter, musician, producer and influencer
who made her mark with very influential songs in the 60s. She has pushed the
boundaries of what it means to be a female singer-songwriter over the course of
her four decade career, and like Les Paul, she's never been scared to take
creative risks. We are thrilled that Joni Mitchell will join the list of
extraordinary recipients that represent the spirit of the legendary Les
Paul."
"Thank you for this honor," said Mitchell.
"I'm grateful for being appreciated."
A consummate artist, Roberta Joan Anderson is an
accomplished musician, songwriter, poet and painter. An only child, Joni's artistic
talents blossomed early as she began drawing as a young child. Always a lover
of music, it wasn't until high school in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan that Joni
began performing. She bought a ukulele and soon began playing in the local
club, The Louis Riel, in 1962.
Heading to art school in Calgary after graduation, Joni
auditioned at a coffeehouse called The Depression and immediately landed a
regular gig there. Weighing two viable career options - art or music - she
decided to focus on the latter. In 1964, Joni moved to Toronto and immersed
herself in the fledgling Yorkville folk scene - performing in coffeehouses
along with other fellow unknowns Neil Young and Gordon Lightfoot. It was during
this time that Joni's songwriting skills began to emerge.
Moving stateside in 1965, Joni worked the coffeehouse
circuit for the next three years - playing as many as twenty sets a week. David
Crosby caught her performance in a Florida club in 1967, was 'stunned' by her
talent, and invited her to Los Angeles.
Soon thereafter Joni signed with Reprise Records. Her first
record, Song to a Seagull, was released in 1968. A wholly original masterpiece
buoyed by her unique songwriting and guitar style, this album still sounds
fresh and timeless 50 years on.
Joni Mitchell went on to serve as producer for most of her
subsequent albums. She produced and
recorded Blue (1971), a unique collection of songs, performed with an emotional
honesty that resonated with a wide audience.
Blue is considered by many critics to be one of the best LPs of pop
music ever created.
Joni's most commercially successful LP, Court and Spark
(1974) was created with the jazz-fusion group The LA Express. The Hissing of
Summer Lawns (1975) steered her away from traditional pop forms into formats of complex lyrics and
melodies, accompanied by a variety of jazz musicians. Her album Hejira (1976)
shed much of the instrumentation creating a minimalist recording with an
expansive ambience achieved with the help of her sound engineer, Henry Lewy, by
overdubbing Joni's electric rhythm guitar.
In 1978 one of jazz's great geniuses, Charles Mingus approached Joni to
propose a collaboration. The result was Mingus (1979), released shortly after
Mingus's untimely death from ALS.
Dog Eat Dog (1985) featured Joni's exploration of
sociopolitical themes set to complex synthesizer arrangements. In the 1990s her
acoustic guitar playing came back to the forefront and produced the Grammy
winning Turbulent Indigo (1994). She has also recorded an orchestral
retrospective, Travelogue (2002), two live recordings, Miles of Aisles (1974)
and Shadows and Light (1980), and an orchestrated collection of popular music
standards, Both Sides Now (2000). In 2007 the Alberta Ballet Company staged the
ballet "The Fiddle and the Drum," choreographed to a collection of
Joni Mitchell's recordings. Her last recording of new material was 2007's
Shine.
Although Joni's sophisticated music rarely topped the pop
charts ("Help Me" reached #7 in 1974), many of her songs have become
classics. "River," "Big Yellow Taxi," and "A Case of
You" are instantly recognizable. "Woodstock" has become the
anthem of the 60's counter-culture movement and "Both Sides Now" has
been recorded more than 1,250 times by other artists.
Three Junos, nine GRAMMYS® (plus their Lifetime Achievement
Award), the Governor General's Award for Lifetime Artistic Achievement, the
Canadian Music Hall of Fame and Songwriter's Hall of Fame, the Rock and Roll
Hall of Fame, and a Polar Music Prize are but a few of Joni's awards and
accolades. With this award, Mitchell will join the likes of Peter Frampton,
Jackson Browne, Joe Perry (Aerosmith), Don Was, Slash, Todd Rundgren, Pete
Townshend, Steve Vai and others, as a Les Paul Innovation Award honoree.
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