Big Brother & The Holding Company, Janis Joplin - Big Brother And The Holding Company
Facts
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Big Brother And The Holding Company
Music Price: You save 10%! As of Jul 1 8:05 EDT (details)
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| Artist(s) | Big Brother & The Holding Company and Janis Joplin |
| Studio | Sony |
| Release Date | August 31, 1999 |
| UPC Code | 074646642528 |
| Buy this item | $8.98 at Amazon.com As of Jul 1 8:05 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Extra tracks, Original recording reissued, Original recording remastered |
Tracks
- Bye, Bye Baby
- Easy Rider
- Intruder
- Light Is Faster Than Sound
- Call On Me
- Women Is Losers
- Blindman
- Down On Me
- Caterpillar
- All Is Loneliness
- Coo Coo
- The Last Time
- Call On Me (Alternate Take)
- Bye, Bye Baby (Alternate Take)
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Sad and superb |
| Unbelievable!!! |
| Raw, explosive - Best of the San Francisco sound |
| Elements of Greatness |
With those caveats in mind, this album is nevertheless a jewel, expecially when one considers how precious little material exists from Janis's greatest period, the mere two-and-a-half years she spent with Big Brother. Janis's voice here is higher, clearer, and more piercing than the raspiness of her Cheap Thrills period; it and the music have not yet found their way to the hugeness of drama, dissonance and pain that mark that second album.
But the voice and the sound on this album have their own special appeal. Songs like "Women is Losers," "Intruder," "Bye, Bye, Baby," "Down on Me" display a startlingly original talent, a voice with a phrasing and tone and force of conviction that leaps out at the listener with an urgency that is unlike any other.
Finally, a note to those who may already own the original vinyl edition of this album and therefore question whether they need another copy: The original issue and many of the subsequent re-issues did not contain the song "The Last Time," which was the B-side of a single. This song, written entirely (music and lyrics) by Janis, is astonishing. For me, hearing it for the first time only a few years ago, it was as though I had traveled back in time or Janis had traveled forward into the present and I was hearing Janis's incendiary being in all its searingly defiant nakedness and immediacy. It's at moments like these that I can't help but recall the words Janis sings in "Flower in the Sun":
"I see you looking up at the sky
(Oh, how high it is) --
You wonder if there is another me --
Oh, how can there be? How can there be?" March 24, 2007
| I WAS SURPRISED BY HOW MUCH I REALLY DUG THIS |
