Gripsweat is shutting down. Starting on February 1st, 2025 the site will no longer be doing daily updates, adding any new items, or accepting new memberships. The site will continue to run in this "historical" mode until January 1st, 2026, when the site will go offline. More information is available here.
Sold Date:
May 27, 2018
Start Date:
May 17, 2018
Final Price:
$20.50
(USD)
Bid Count:
6
Seller Feedback:
3943
Buyer Feedback:
17
This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.
Joni Mitchell-Song To A Seagull (Reprise Records RS 6293) Vinyl is VG+. Cover is VG+ with average ring and spine wear, and has 3” top and 5” bottom seam splits. Inside gatefold is a strong VG++. Comes with the original Reprise 2-sided printed inner sleeve.
FIRST PRESSING from 1968 with tri-colored Steamboat label and comes with the original LP cover that was released in a gatefold sleeve.
Song to a Seagull is Joni Mitchell's 1968 debut album. Mitchell would later note that the album is more a result of her love of classical music than of folk, and this is evident through the thick, rich, and often unusual harmonies, and the densely poetic lyrics of the album. This album was originally released as an untitled or self-titled LP because of an error at Reprise Records' publishing department.
Song to a Seagull is a concept album divided into two halves: "I Came to the City" and "Out of the City and Down to the Seaside". (The two halves correspond to the two sides of the LP, which are identified as "Part 1" and "Part 2" rather than the conventional "Side 1" and "Side 2"). The first track refers to her failed marriage to Chuck Mitchell in Detroit, and a similar theme is explored with "Michael from Mountains", which questions whether one can truly love someone without knowing him. "Night in the City" is a celebration of nightlife; "Marcie" is a profile of a lonely woman, presumably a friend of Mitchell's; and "Nathan La Franeer" ends side one with the account of a bitter city-dwelling taxi driver Mitchell once encountered.
Side two takes on more natural, organic themes: "Sisotowbell Lane" describes domestic bliss (Joni has said that "Sisotowbell" stands for "Somehow, in spite of trouble, ours will be ever lasting love"), and "The Dawntreader" and "Pirate of Penance" concern sea themes - first of a mystical sea captain calling her away, and then to a murderous pirate with whom a dancer is infatuated. Though some speculate that "The Dawntreader" is written for David Crosby, Mitchell has denied this. The final two tracks concern freedom: "Song to a Seagull" and "Cactus Tree". "Song to a Seagull" is especially noteworthy for its uninhibited treatment of the desire for freedom.
Mitchell had written songs that were hits for other artists (e.g., "Both Sides Now" and "Chelsea Morning" by Judy Collins, "Eastern Rain" by Fairport Convention, "Urge for Going," and "The Circle Game" by Tom Rush), but chose to record none of these for her debut. The album is dedicated to her grade 7 English teacher, "Mr. Kratzmann, who taught me to love words."
Tracklist
Side One: Side One (I Came To The City): I Had A King 2:26 Michael From Mountains 3:38 Night In The City 3:35 Marcie 4:35 Nathan La Franeer 3:13
Side Two (Out Of The City And Down To The Seaside): Sisotowbell Lane 4:00 The Dawntreader4:50 The Pirate Of Penance 2:40 Song To A Seagull 3:50 Cactus Tree 4:35
Check out my other LPs and 45s currently running on eBay.