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   Biography Channel Janis Joplin x264 AC3

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[#141495] Written by: DocFreak08 [16/09/10, 05:36]
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The undisputed queen sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll, Janis Joplin broke into the boys club and out of
the stifling good-girl feminity of post-war America. With her incredible wall-of-sound vocals, Janis
Joplin was the voice of a generation.
There is Janis the lesbian, the misfit, the rebel, the conformer, the junky, the drinker, the genius
and the lonely woman. This moving documentary shows that she constructed many of these images
herself as coats of armour to help her cope and protect a vulnerable self. The wild clothes and
living, even her 'cackling' laugh were but tools to divert the truth. The real Janis remained unseen
by most, glimpsed by only a few. Video footage recorded by John Cooke, road manager of the band Big
Brother And The Holding Company, gives a rare glimpse of Janis away from the stage and the media.

Janis Joplin was one of the most influential musical artists of the 20th century, and an important
figure of the 1960s rock 'n' roll era. Emerging from the conservative and racially divided world of
the 1950s, Joplin arrived on the counter-culture scene of the 1960s as a rebellious soul with an
unconventional attitude towards sex, drugs, and music.

Joplin achieved her initial fame as the lead singer of Big Brother and the Holding Company.
Borrowing from African-American blues music, Joplin performed with an unbridled passion that had
never been seen from a white, female artist. She defied society's stringent expectations of women's
dress and behavior, and her wild-child style redefined the image of the female artist.

Within a year of her initial success, Joplin moved on to form the Kozmic Blues Band, taking on a
more bluesy, funky sound. Joplin and her new band made history for their performance at the 1969
Woodstock Music & Art Fair in upstate New York—a festival that is now considered to be one of the
most pivotal moments in contemporary music history.

Two years later, Joplin moved on again, this time forming the Full-Tilt Boogie band. It was during
this time that Joplin produced her last record, Pearl. The album included the track "Mercedes Benz,"
a social commentary on materialism that would become a popular single. It would also be the last
song that Joplin ever recorded. Shortly before the album was released, on October 4, 1970, Joplin
died of a heroin overdose at the Landmark Motor Hotel in Los Angeles, California. She was only 27
years old at the time of her death.

Pearl hit record stores in February of 1971. The posthumous work became the best-selling album of
Joplin's career, and featured her biggest hit single, "Me and Bobby McGee." But the album would
hardly be the end of Joplin's musical legacy. Her innovative style continues to influence thousands
of musicians as well as inspire films, plays and songs about her life.

A BBC / A&E Network Co-Production ( 2000 )

- Note - This documentary has aired in the UK BBC "Reputations" - series under title "Southern
Discomfort - Janis Joplin".
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