Janis Joplin 1/19/43 - 10/4/70
The
Cosmic Giggle must have been in full-tilt hysterics on January 19, 1943 when the
oil refinery seaport of Port Arthur, Texas, won the heavenly crapshoot as the
birthplace of rock & roll's first female superstar, Janis Joplin. In
retrospect, Port Arthur's most famous daughter both defied and defined the Texas
town that raised, rejected, reviled, then ultimately rejoiced in her brief, mad
existence. In a way that she never would have admitted then (but might now),
Port Arthur made Janis Joplin what she was -- a more tolerant, nurturing
atmosphere might have diluted the fire that burned within her.
And that fire is what everyone
knows about Joplin: her incendiary stage performances, her masochistic tango
with the bottle, her tumultuous love life, and her fatal dalliance with drugs.
Joplin's musical legacy is also a part of Austin's history -- how the disheveled
folkie/UT student playing at west campus hootenannies and Kenneth Threadgill's
bar on North Lamar took off for San Francisco with some other Texans in the
Sixties and changed the history of rock & roll.
On the surface, she seemed the
perfect icon for stardom in the late Sixties: She fit no standard of beauty yet
exuded a raw sensuality that mirrored a movement which rejected societal
standards by creating its own. When Joplin arrived in San Francisco, in 1966,
the year before the Summer of Love, its music scene was already in a nascent,
post-Beat hippie whirl. Young people flocked to the Bay area as if to Mecca by
the thousands, searching for identity, reason, justification, maybe just
something as simple as acceptance. This is the irony of all the great Sixties
icons -- Joplin included: that their desire for acceptance was at the heart of
their rebellion, and that their ultimate embrace by the masses came about
because of this rebellion. The sad part about rebellion, however, is that it
usually follows rejection, and that was something Janis Joplin knew deep down in
her soul.
The Janis Joplin of legend set
the standard for the blues mama image of white female singers. Blues mamas have
to be hard-livin', hard-lovin' and, of course, hard drinking. But life in the
Gulf Coast town was not exactly hard; like much of the town's population, Janis'
father, Seth, worked at the Texaco refinery and the Joplins resided comfortably.
By all accounts, Janis had a
happy childhood, but her entrée into womanhood was less than graceful. As a
teenager, she tended to gain weight, her soft child-blond hair turned brown and
unruly, and she developed acne that would scar as well as shape her looks and
personality. She became an unwilling member of an elite club of misfits, a woman
who avoided mirrors because of pitted reflections, knowing that the scars
underneath caused by the ones on the surface are the most painfully inflicted.
Rejected and made fun of by most of her peers, she sought and found solace in
the works of other outcasts -- writers, musicians, artists. When your society
rejects you, you do the obvious: You reject it.
Joplin felt like an ugly
duckling because she didn't fit anyone's notion of beauty. Port Arthur was a
one-high-school town, and to be rejected by the school was to be rejected by the
town. A culture that puts a premium on marketable feminine beauty has no use for
the Janis Joplins of the world, and why should it? Her kind of beauty can only
be captured in its natural state -- candidly or in performance. Look at the
posed shots of Joplin and you'd swear her eyes plead with you to like her,
really like her. Now, look at the performance photos, where she's recklessly
lost in song, or examine the candid shots of her, where Joplin's face is soft
and vulnerable in repose. In front of the photographer's camera in a studio she
was naked to the world, but in front of an audience, she came alive,
transforming into a vibrant and seductive entertainer who channeled every honker
and shouter she ever heard on the Texas radio in the thick, black night.
For kids in East Texas'
"Golden Triangle" -- Beaumont, Port Arthur, and Orange -- the promised
land of booze and blues lay just across the Louisiana border. While the big-city
sound of Bobby Bland and gritty rhythm of Lightnin' Hopkins filtered in from
Houston, 90 miles away, Slim Harpo, Clifton Chenier, and swamp pop royalty like
Tommy McLain, Rod Bernard, and Dale & Grace reigned in the roadhouses and
dance halls of Cajun and swamp country that ran off Highway 90 between Lafayette
and the Lone Star border. From the moment it crossed the Sabine River, that
highway was lined with clubs and juke joints with names like the Big Oaks,
Buster's, the Stateline -- joints that attracted the locals as well as nearby
Texans.
Clandestine forays over the
border -- called going "on the line" -- were a rite of passage, in
those days, and one that Joplin was exposed to early on because she ran with the
boys in high school. On weekends, they would load up and drive across the state
line where the brass-heavy bands were tearing up the clubs. Gulf Coast bands
like the Boogie Kings and Jerry LaCroix & the Counts specialized in the hits
of the day and infused their sets with raucous dirty dancing and hip-grinding
ballads. These bands might be dismissed as cover bands today but back then they
functioned not only as living jukeboxes, but also as keepers of the flame. At
this strip of clubs across the border, American rock & roll resonated
endlessly in the night, its bluesy beats and frantic rhythms greased by the
free-flowing booze; Texas drinking age was 21, Louisiana's 18.
The rowdy blues Joplin saw
live in Louisiana were a marked contrast to the classical music she was raised
on in Port Arthur and the omnipresent country music found in Texas. Jazzmeisters
like Dave Brubeck and folksingers like Odetta were cultivated by her circle of
friends, who likewise found the question-authority philosophy of the Beats
palatable. Her knowledge and quest for understanding inspired her to not just
appreciate but to learn the music, taking up guitar as well as singing. By the
time she graduated Thomas Jefferson High School in 1960, she was imbued with an
unusually well-rounded knowledge of music as well as a desire to explore its
core.
What happened to Joplin after
she graduated high school is well known: College courses at Lamar Tech; a
lifestyle-expanding trip to Venice, California; more college courses back in
Port Arthur where she played coffeehouses; a mid-summer 1962 trip to Austin
resulting in her move here. From Austin, her life is even better documented. She
played the folk circuit for a while locally but left Austin for San Francisco
and, briefly, New York. Burnt out and drug-weary, she returned to Port Arthur
briefly in the summer of 1965 and tried unsuccessfully to conform to the
straight life. Her rebellious nature reared its head during a trip to Austin
that fall; she stayed and never returned home to Port Arthur. Seven months
later, she left for San Francisco. It was June 1966. Janis Joplin had finally
gotten out.
On October 4, 1970, four years
and four months after she bolted from Austin, Janis Joplin overdosed in her room
at the Landmark Hotel in Los Angeles, having scored a particularly pure batch of
heroin. Her career had been virtually meteoric, but her ascent as the first
goddess of rock was doused by her sad, lonely death, which followed that of Jimi
Hendrix, who'd died two weeks earlier. Jim Morrison would die within a year, and
whatever glow the Sixties had was finally dimmed for good.
What would Janis have been
like today, Undoubtably mellower; likely dried out and cleaned up, because if
she wasn't alcoholic at the time, she surely would have been soon. The toll
would not have shown well on her face, but blues mamas are supposed to look the
part, anyway. By dying young, she is frozen at the pinnacle of her success --
brilliant and shimmering in the easy grace of audience acceptance and approval.
She is, forever, raw iron soul.