Song of the Day 5/28: Joni Mitchell, “Both Sides, Now”

Filed in Arts and Entertainment, Coons by on May 28, 2021

I’m going to guess this is Chris Coons’ favorite song. He’s looked at the issues from both sides now, and still somehow he really doesn’t know Republicans at all.

Before Judy Collins recorded it in 1967 — actually, before it was released as a single in 1968 and reached No. 8 — Joni Mitchell was known mainly as a songwriting folkie; she hadn’t released any recorded music yet. Collins’ version jump-started Mitchell’s career, but Mitchell, ever the grump, didn’t like it. She recorded her own take for 1969’s “Clouds” LP, but she had been playing it in concert since 1966.

This performance was recorded at the Second Fret in Philadelphia in 1967 by a student from Temple radio station WRTI, Ed Sciaky, who went on to a long career as a groundbreaking Philadlephia DJ on FM radio. He actually recorded her singing it a year earlier, but I couldn’t find that bootleg on YouTube.

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  1. Joe Connor says:

    I loved the Second Fret! That is all!

  2. El Somnambulo says:

    Love the song, hate the comma.

  3. jason330 says:

    Did you know that is isn’t “Hall and Oates” but “Daryl Hall and John Oates” ?

    I just leaned that.