Released in September 1980, Shadows And Light was Joni Mitchell’s second live album. Documenting just how far she was exploring the live – as well as the studio – arena, it concentrated on Mitchell’s 70s experiments and largely ignored anything from her earlier periods. It also framed Mitchell as a complete musical and lyrical powerhouse, accompanied by a team of intense musicians who pushed her to even greater heights than she had previously reached.
Listen to ‘Shadows And Light’ here.
The backstory: “I was just hearing echoes of myself”
When Joni Mitchell played live in 1979 – the tour which Shadows And Light documents – she might well have been anxious about it. The last time she had hit the road, for a planned six-week US tour to support her 1975 album, The Hissing Of Summer Lawns, the dates had collapsed. The stress had been building for a while, but it was on one night in Maryland, in February 1976, when the dam broke.
Ominously, Mitchell endured a miserable soundcheck. “I was just hearing echoes of myself,” she has said of that night. “It’s like when you’re talking on the phone and you get slap-back and you can’t really talk to that person.” Onstage, and a few bars into her opening number, Help Me, Mitchell walked off the stage. The rest of the tour was cancelled.
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But she didn’t return home. Mitchell remained at large, seeking the refuge of the roads; it was in this itinerant period that she wrote much of what was to become 1976’s Hejira (whose title means “running away with honour”). For the remainder of the 70s, next creating Don Juan’s Reckless Daughter (1977) and Mingus (1979), Mitchell’s music was ferocious and vital. It was also incredibly complicated, using the studio as an extra instrument. “I’m like a jeweller,” she said in 1979, when promoting Mingus. “I have a piece of metal and I’m setting stones into it.”
How could this precision ever be recreated in the less predictable atmosphere of a concert? Mitchell found her answers in her fellow musicians, her innovative use of imagery and film, and in her perfect choice of songs for the set.