Hejira is the eighth studio album by Canadian singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell, released in 1976 on Asylum Records. Its material was written during a period of frequent travel in late 1975 and early 1976, and reflects Mitchell's experiences on the road during that time. It is characterized by lyrically dense, sprawling songs and musical backing by several jazz-oriented instrumentalists, most prominently fretless bass player Jaco Pastorius, guitarist Larry Carlton, and drummer John Guerin.

The album did not sell as well as its predecessors, peaking at No. 22 in Mitchell's native Canada. It reached No. 13 on the Billboard 200 pop album chart in the United States, where it was certified gold by the RIAA, and No. 11 in the UK, where it attained a silver certification. Critically, the album was generally well received, and in the years since its release, Hejira has been considered one of the high marks of her career. The lead track "Coyote" was released as a single.

Background

According to Mitchell, the album was written during or after three journeys she took in late 1975 and the first half of 1976. Despite the disguise, Mitchell was still sometimes recognized. She traveled without a driver's licence and stayed behind truckers, relying on their habit of signaling when the police were ahead of them; consequently, she only drove in daylight hours.

Recording

During the recording of her albums Court and Spark and The Hissing of Summer Lawns, Mitchell had grown increasingly frustrated by the rock session musicians who had been hired to perform her music. "There were grace notes and subtleties and things that I thought were getting kind of buried." The session musicians in turn recommended that Mitchell start looking for jazz instrumentalists to perform on her records. In addition, her relationship with the drummer John Guerin, which lasted through a significant portion of the mid-1970s, influenced her decision to move more towards experimental jazz music and further away from her folk and pop roots.

After recording the basic tracks that would become Hejira, Mitchell met the bassist Jaco Pastorius and they formed an immediate musical connection. Mitchell was dissatisfied with what she called the "dead, distant bass sound" of the 1960s and early 1970s, and was beginning to wonder why the bass always had to play the root of a chord. She overdubbed Pastorius's bass parts on four of the tracks on Hejira and released the album on November 21, 1976. She found the word "hejira" while reading the dictionary, and was drawn to the "dangling j, like in Aja ... it's leaving the dream, no blame". During a 1994 interview with Rolling Stone, Mitchell cited the cover of Hejira as one of which she was particularly proud: "A lot of work went into that."

Songs

Mitchell has described the album as "really inspired ... there is this restless feeling throughout it ... The sweet loneliness of solitary travel", and has said that "I suppose a lot of people could have written a lot of my other songs, but I feel the songs on Hejira could only have come from me." Mitchell would later perform the song with The Band at their 1976 farewell concert, the recording of which was eventually released under the title The Last Waltz (1978).

The second track on Hejira, "Amelia", was inspired by Mitchell's breakup with John Guerin, and described by her as almost an exact account of her experience in the desert.) with the famous aviator Amelia Earhart who mysteriously vanished during a flight over the Pacific Ocean. Mitchell has commented on the origins of the song: "I was thinking of Amelia Earhart and addressing it from one solo pilot to another ... sort of reflecting on the cost of being a woman and having something you must do."

"Furry Sings the Blues", with Neil Young on harmonica, is an account of Mitchell meeting the blues guitarist and singer Furry Lewis in Beale Street, Memphis, during a period when the surrounding area was being demolished. Lewis was displeased with Mitchell's use of his name. Mitchell would return to the song live in concert throughout the years. Like "Coyote", "Furry Sings the Blues" was sung by Mitchell at The Band's farewell concert. This version of the song was not included on the 1978 version of The Last Waltz, but was included on the 2002 re-release.

"A Strange Boy" recounts the affair Mitchell had with one of the men she was traveling with from Los Angeles to Maine, a flight attendant in his thirties who lived with his parents.

Side two of Hejira begins with the epic "Song for Sharon", which at eight minutes and 40 seconds is the longest track on the album. The lyrics deal with the conflict faced by a woman who is deciding between freedom and marriage. The song refers to places Mitchell went during her trip to New York City in Spring 1976, including scenes at the Mandolin Brothers guitar store in Staten Island and a visit to a fortune teller on Bleecker Street. The song was allegedly written while Mitchell was high on cocaine at the end of her visit to the city. The song also mentions the blowout fight and abandoned midwestern tour that marked the end of Mitchell's relationship with Guerin: "I left my man at a North Dakota junction, and I came out to the Big Apple here to face the dream's malfunction." According to Mitchell's biographer Sheila Weller, "Song For Sharon" also makes a coded reference to the March 1976 suicide of Jackson Browne's wife, the fashion model Phyllis Major. Browne and Mitchell had a brief, "high-strung" affair in 1972; on at least one occasion, Browne allegedly physically abused Mitchell. After their relationship dissolved, Browne quickly married Major. The lyrics express Mitchell's hopes of rekindling their relationship, and she tells her love interest to rebuff any other suitors: "Tell those girls that you've got German measles, honey tell 'em you've got germs." According to Mitchell, it was during this visit in early 1976 that Trungpa cured her of her cocaine addiction. Despite reaching number 13 on the Billboard 200 pop album chart and attaining a RIAA gold certification, it did not garner significant radio airplay.

Reception

Reviewing for Rolling Stone, Ariel Swartley observed that Mitchell had abandoned memorable tunes in favor of "new, seductive rhythms", "lush guitars", and "spare instrumentation", with the resulting sound "as sophisticated and arresting as anything she's done... as unceasing and hypnotic as the freeways Mitchell describes in her songs". Swartley also praised the lyrics as "some of her most incisive and humorous", and credited her voice with a "new warmth". British rock critic Nick Kent wrote in the New Musical Express that Hejira is Mitchell's "soul-to-soul statement circa 1976", and "her melodies are inevitably both utterly relaxing and stimulating, and the Pastorius/Carlton duo are just stunning in these spartan settings". He also noted that "this is no worthy successor to Summer Lawns ... because most of the sentiments here have been presented before".

In a 2022 review for Pitchfork, Jenn Pelly described the album as "restless music of road and sky [in which] narratives unfurl with driving forward motion", adding that "the fretless bass, spare percussion, and unusual harmonics depict [Mitchell's] wintry lucidity."

The record was voted number 776 in the third edition of Colin Larkin's All Time Top 1000 Albums (2000). In the 2020 edition of Rolling Stones 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, it was ranked No. 133.

Track listing

Personnel

Taken from liner notes of original US vinyl pressing

Musicians

  • Joni Mitchell – vocals , rhythm guitar , electric guitar
  • Larry Carlton – lead guitar , acoustic guitar
  • Bobbye Hall – percussion
  • Jaco Pastorius – fretless bass
  • Victor Feldman – vibes
  • Max Bennett – bass guitar
  • John Guerin – drums
  • Neil Young – harmonica
  • Abe Most – clarinet
  • Chuck Domanico – double bass
  • Chuck Findley, Tom Scott – horns

Technical

  • Henry Lewy – production, recording, mixing
  • Steve Katz – assistant production, mixing
  • Keith Williamson – art director
  • Joel Bernstein, Norman Seeff – photography

Charts

Weekly charts

{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center;"

|+ Weekly chart performance for Hejira

! scope="col"| Chart (1976–1977)

! scope="col"| Peak<br />position

|-

! scope="row"| Australian Albums (Kent Music Report)

| 38

|-

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"| US Cash Box Top 100 Albums

|align="center"| 12

|}

{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center;"

! scope="col"| Chart (2024)

! scope="col"| Peak<br />position

|-

! scope="row"| Hungarian Physical Albums (MAHASZ)

| 25

|}

Year-end charts

{| class="wikitable plainrowheaders"

|-

!Chart (1977)

!Position

|-

! scope="row"| Canada (RPM)

|align="center"|94

|}

Certifications

Notes

References

Further reading

  • Discussion of mandolin store mentioned in Song for Sharon by Joni Mitchell (Archived)