Cape Breton Post

Humanizing Joni Mitchell

Biographer David Yaffe on the turbulent path to ‘Reckless Daughter’a

- BY DAVID FRIEND

Author David Yaffe first encountere­d Joni Mitchell about a decade ago and it wasn’t long before he fell on her bad side.

Notoriousl­y prickly, the singer-songwriter called him to criticize his word choice in a New York Times interview with her. In particular, she hated that after spending time at her Los Angeles home he described it as “middle class.’’

“I don’t know what you think of as middle class, but I live in a mansion,’’ Yaffe recalls her saying. “You were in the earthy section of my property.’’

It’s a scene that opens the unauthoriz­ed biography “Reckless Daughter: A Portrait of Joni Mitchell,’’ a thoughtful espousal of the legendary musician’s complexity and taste for speaking her mind.

The book, which recently arrived in stores, is based on extensive interviews with the singer and more than 60 people closest to her, including the late Leonard Cohen, Buffy Sainte Marie and Judy Collins, whose 1967 cover of “Both Sides Now’’ helped vault Mitchell into the mainstream, much to her dismay.

Yaffe, a professor of humanities at Syracuse University, holds the many sides of the Saskatchew­an native’s personalit­y up for examinatio­n, but avoids the trap of deifying his subject.

“I’ve seen her at her most charming and I’ve seen her at her most vicious,’’ he said in an interview at a Toronto hotel.

“The truth is that when you’re Joni Mitchell nothing is really enough. There’s a bottomless hole that can’t be filled. There is a wound that can’t ever be healed.’’

Yaffe said he faced a number of verbal confrontat­ions with Mitchell after his first interview with her in 2007 and a rift in their relationsh­ip lasted several years.

“Reckless Daughter’’ uses those unwavering­ly human moments to deepen the understand­ing of her music and expound on why she’s adopted a combative personalit­y in her private life. He explores the isolation that followed her polio diagnosis at nine years old, a soured marriage to folk singer Chuck Mitchell (“my first major exploiter’’) and the music industry’s rampant misogyny, which forced her to keep an emotional shield at hand.

The book also carefully recounts the young Mitchell’s decision to give up her daughter for adoption as she pursued a folk singing career. It’s a story she kept private until a former art-school roommate sold it to a tabloid magazine.

“I understood why she had to be the way she was,’’ Yaffe said. “There were certain things that were so awful that I couldn’t say they were forgivable, but I could just say, ‘Wow, she lived it.’

“It’s like when you’re looking at somebody like Nina Simone and you’re seeing how far gone she was. It’s pretty unsettling, but she was for real. You can hear it in everything she did. You can hear it in everything Joni did.’’

Yaffe’s biography goes where most other books on Mitchell couldn’t — it includes access to the singer in the years before she suffered a brain aneurysm in early 2015 and began living mostly in seclusion. His final inperson interview happened two months before she was hospitaliz­ed.

They engaged in hours of conversati­on over glasses of purified water at Mitchell’s home, but Yaffe felt even the slightest verbal misstep could once again fracture their relationsh­ip. It didn’t that time.

As the meeting came to a close, he hailed an Uber while Mitchell hovered over his smartphone with curiosity. When the car arrived, she pecked him on the lips goodbye.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Folk singer Joni Mitchell plays to a sold-out crowd at General Motors Place in Vancouver in 1998. Author David Yaffe first encountere­d Joni Mitchell about a decade ago and wrote the unauthoriz­ed biography “Reckless Daughter: A Portrait of Joni...
CP PHOTO Folk singer Joni Mitchell plays to a sold-out crowd at General Motors Place in Vancouver in 1998. Author David Yaffe first encountere­d Joni Mitchell about a decade ago and wrote the unauthoriz­ed biography “Reckless Daughter: A Portrait of Joni...

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