Authors: Janis Ian
ISBN-13: 9781585427499, ISBN-10: 1585427497
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date Published: September 2009
Edition: Reprint
Janis Ian is a Grammy Award-winning songwriter and singer, and an author of science fiction.
Janis Ian was catapulted into the spotlight in 1966 at the age of fifteen, when her soul-wrenching song "Society's Child" became a hit. An intimate portrait of an interracial relationship, "Society's Child" climbed the charts despite the fact that many radio stations across the country refused to play it because of its controversial subject matter. But this was only the beginning of a long and illustrious career. In this fascinating memoir of her more than forty years in the music business, Ian chronicles how she did drugs with Jimi Hendrix, went shopping for Grammy clothes with Janis Joplin, and sang with Mel Tormé-all the while never ceasing to create unforgettable music.
In 1975, Ian's legendary "At Seventeen" earned two Grammy awards and five nominations. Her next two albums brought her worldwide platinum hits. But after seven albums in as many years, she made a conscious decision to walk away from the often grueling music business. During this period, she struggled through a difficult marriage that ended with her then husband's attempt to destroy her, and a sudden illness that very nearly cost her her life. The hiatus from music lasted for close to a decade until, in 1993, Ian returned with the release of the Grammy-nominated Breaking Silence. Now, as she moves gracefully into her fifth decade as a recording artist and writer, Ian continues to draw large audiences around the globe.
In Society's Child, Janis Ian provides a relentlessly honest account of the successes and failures-and the hopes and dreams-of an extraordinary life.
"I was born into the crack that split America," Ian writes, and her early immersion in the folk music scene of the 1960s helped shape her prodigious songwriting talents while she was still in her teens. The autobiography shares a title with her first hit, a song about a doomed interracial romance that was considered too controversial for many record labels and radio stations. The pressures of the music industry and her troubled family life drove Ian to a nervous breakdown at the age of 19. It was in the following long period of recovery that she wrote her most famous song, "At Seventeen." ("I'd never sing it in public," she says of her initial feelings about the song. "It was just too humiliating.") Soon after reaching that recording peak, her life was derailed by a series of troubles ranging from an abusive marriage (to a man she first met because she was in love with his girlfriend) to massive tax liabilities to bouts with septicemia and chronic fatigue syndrome. The roller-coaster ride may be typical stuff for celebrity autobiography, but fans will appreciate the candor with which Ian discusses these hardships and her gradual path to happiness as an independent singer-songwriter in Nashville. (July)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.Introduction
Prologue
1 Hair of Spun Gold 1
2 God & the FBI 20
3 Silly Habits 36
4 Society's Child 52
5 Haven's I Got Eyes 82
6 Jesse 108
7 Stars 118
8 This Train Still Runs 141
9 At Seventeen 159
10 Love Is Blind 173
11 Fly Too High 189
12 Arms Around My Life 203
13 His Hands 224
14 When Angels Cry 236
15 My Tennessee Hills 249
16 Stolen Fire 263
17 Days Like These 283
18 Through the Years 305
19 I Hear You Sing Again 318
20 Joy 333
"My Autobiography" 347
Index 351