Avg rating:
Your rating:
Total ratings: 2628
Length: 4:26
Plays (last 30 days): 0
When I's feeling nearly faded as my jeans
Bobby thumbed a diesel down, just before it rained
And rode us all the way to New Orleans
I pulled my harpoon out of my dirty red bandana
I's playing soft while Bobby sung the blues, n-yeah
Windshield wipers slapping time I's, holding Bobby's hand in mine and
We sang every song that driver knew
Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose,
Nothing, I mean nothing honey if it ain't free, no no
Yeah feeling good was easy Lord when he sang the blues,
You know feeling good was good enough for me
Good enough for me and my Bobby McGee.
From the Kentucky coal mines to the California sun
Yeah Bobby shared the secrets of my soul
Through all kinds of weather, through everything we done
Yeah Bobby baby kept me from the cold world
One day near Salinas Lord, I let him slip away
He's lookin' for that home, and I hope he finds it
But I'd trade all of my tomorrows for one single yesterday
To be holdin' Bobby's body next to mine
Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose
Nothing, and that's all that Bobby left me, yeah
But feeling good was easy Lord when he sang the blues
Hey feeling good was good enough for me, hmm-mm
Good enough for me and my Bobby McGee.
La da la la la, la da la la la da la
La da da la la la Bobby McGee yeah
La da la la la, la da la la la da la
La da da la la la Bobby McGee yeah
La da la la la, la da la la la da la
La da da la la la Bobby McGee yeah
Lord I called him my lover, I called him my man
I said I called him my lover just the best I can c'mon, c'mon
Bobby now, c'mon Bobby McGee
La da la la la, la da la la la la la
Hey hey hey Bobby McGee yeah.
Sing it Pearl! You're the best! Were then, still are!
Totally. But what do you think of "Rihanna's most emotional performance of love on the brain" (youtube)?
rihanna‘s most emotional performance of love on the brain
Goosebumps! 10
Time machine: I'm here in Beijing on this glorious sunny Christmas day, remembering this summer 76, when I was fifteen and heard this for the first time, thinking it was unfair that I was born in Europe, ten years too late to have been a part of the huge movements in the US. "Movement" was a magical word which included music, rock and roll (yes Lazarus and sex and drugs) an adventurous life and freedom, "on the road". All of this in a melting pot, mixing the very delusional perception we had about reality and our own desires of escaping the limited life of a small Alsatian Village in the middle of nowhere (that we used to call the "trou du cul du monde")
We had our own dissents and awareness coming up, demonstrating against nuclear power plants (my first and unique sitting!), ecological catastrophes...
We were aware though that we were lucky enough to live in a very beautiful, protected area: we could walk, and cycle, and go swimming in the lakes around, wandering in the beautiful forest; we used to camp outside at all time listening to this music around fire camps, with the very new portable tape-recorder (radio-cassette), smoking pot and drinking schnapps, one of us playing the guitar not yet dreaming about leaving, rather, to imagine other kind of jobs which would allow us to stay and make the place even better.
It was a wonderful period of time.
Me and Bobby McGee by Janis Joplin acts like a "Madeleine de Proust" : the whole summer comes back, in all its details, to the point that I can almost smell the dryness of the land and see the shimmering colours of the landscape, the steam emanating from the tared road which goes along the river Rhine.
Memories, memories.
Wonderful! Thank you!
I still remember a 1980s radio comedy bit about "What If Janis Joplin Was An Avon Salesman". They had a doorbell ringing, the door opening, and about 10 seconds of the vocal scatting from this song with "avon" "avon" mixed in, followed by the door slamming shut.
Saw this comment earlier today (when "Me and Bobby McGee" was playing) and had to look this up. Found it! What if Janis Joplin Were an Avon Lady
This song was written by Kris Kristofferson who was a pretty decent country-folk singer-songwriter in his own right.
1982. Moscow, Soviet Union, apartment of a political dissident. I am 11 years old and sitting in front of a cassette tape recorder, alternating between playing bootlegs of both Janis's and Kris's versions of the song. My first attempts at learning English. Looking back, not bad lessons at all!
I still love both takes, for different reasons.
As you said: you just don't get it.
I figure there's a lot of things you don't get - not my problem.
Don't be mean. We're all friends here.
I just can't take her. Never could. I don't get why she even "made" it, nor why she is still adored by so many.
As you said: you just don't get it.
I figure there's a lot of things you don't get - not my problem.
This song was written by Kris Kristofferson who was a pretty decent country-folk singer-songwriter in his own right.
Yes, he certainly was, BUT Janis was the singer who brought this song to life.
Ask 1000 people the name of the singer they would match to "Me and Bobby McGee", and I'd be willing to bet my next paycheque that 999 of them would say, "Janis Joplin." I know Kristofferson wrote it, but I would still be one of the 999.
And I would not be surprised if Kris would be, too.
Goosebumps! 10
Time machine: I'm here in Beijing on this glorious sunny Christmas day, remembering this summer 76, when I was fifteen and heard this for the first time, thinking it was unfair that I was born in Europe, ten years too late to have been a part of the huge movements in the US. "Movement" was a magical word which included music, rock and roll (yes Lazarus and sex and drugs) an adventurous life and freedom, "on the road". All of this in a melting pot, mixing the very delusional perception we had about reality and our own desires of escaping the limited life of a small Alsatian Village in the middle of nowhere (that we used to call the "trou du cul du monde")
We had our own dissents and awareness coming up, demonstrating against nuclear power plants (my first and unique sitting!), ecological catastrophes...
We were aware though that we were lucky enough to live in a very beautiful, protected area: we could walk, and cycle, and go swimming in the lakes around, wandering in the beautiful forest; we used to camp outside at all time listening to this music around fire camps, with the very new portable tape-recorder (radio-cassette), smoking pot and drinking schnapps, one of us playing the guitar not yet dreaming about leaving, rather, to imagine other kind of jobs which would allow us to stay and make the place even better.
It was a wonderful period of time.
Me and Bobby McGee by Janis Joplin acts like a "Madeleine de Proust" : the whole summer comes back, in all its details, to the point that I can almost smell the dryness of the land and see the shimmering colours of the landscape, the steam emanating from the tared road which goes along the river Rhine.
Memories, memories.
I love this comment! It reminds me to be thankful for everything I have. I live in Germany, not too far from the beautiful Alsatian villages, and often (maybe not often enough) realize how great it is to walk, cycle, swim in the lakes, wander in the beautiful forests, etc. I´m (physically) not a kid anymore, but we (with our mostly-grown kids) still hang out around the campfire, playing guitar, a-smokin and a-drinkin, singing our hearts out... Life can be so good, when look at it right!
Time machine: I'm here in Beijing on this glorious sunny Christmas day, remembering this summer 76, when I was fifteen and heard this for the first time, thinking it was unfair that I was born in Europe, ten years too late to have been a part of the huge movements in the US. "Movement" was a magical word which included music, rock and roll (yes Lazarus and sex and drugs) an adventurous life and freedom, "on the road". All of this in a melting pot, mixing the very delusional perception we had about reality and our own desires of escaping the limited life of a small Alsatian Village in the middle of nowhere (that we used to call the "trou du cul du monde")
We had our own dissents and awareness coming up, demonstrating against nuclear power plants (my first and unique sitting!), ecological catastrophes...
We were aware though that we were lucky enough to live in a very beautiful, protected area: we could walk, and cycle, and go swimming in the lakes around, wandering in the beautiful forest; we used to camp outside at all time listening to this music around fire camps, with the very new portable tape-recorder (radio-cassette), smoking pot and drinking schnapps, one of us playing the guitar not yet dreaming about leaving, rather, to imagine other kind of jobs which would allow us to stay and make the place even better.
It was a wonderful period of time.
Me and Bobby McGee by Janis Joplin acts like a "Madeleine de Proust" : the whole summer comes back, in all its details, to the point that I can almost smell the dryness of the land and see the shimmering colours of the landscape, the steam emanating from the tared road which goes along the river Rhine.
Memories, memories.
Thank you for sharing that recollection. The environment you grew up in was what many of us city kids were longing for. Wonderful! I was a sophomore in H.S. when this was released - sadly - posthumously.
Time machine: I'm here in Beijing on this glorious sunny Christmas day, remembering this summer 76, when I was fifteen and heard this for the first time, thinking it was unfair that I was born in Europe, ten years too late to have been a part of the huge movements in the US. "Movement" was a magical word which included music, rock and roll (yes Lazarus and sex and drugs) an adventurous life and freedom, "on the road". All of this in a melting pot, mixing the very delusional perception we had about reality and our own desires of escaping the limited life of a small Alsatian Village in the middle of nowhere (that we used to call the "trou du cul du monde")
We had our own dissents and awareness coming up, demonstrating against nuclear power plants (my first and unique sitting!), ecological catastrophes...
We were aware though that we were lucky enough to live in a very beautiful, protected area: we could walk, and cycle, and go swimming in the lakes around, wandering in the beautiful forest; we used to camp outside at all time listening to this music around fire camps, with the very new portable tape-recorder (radio-cassette), smoking pot and drinking schnapps, one of us playing the guitar not yet dreaming about leaving, rather, to imagine other kind of jobs which would allow us to stay and make the place even better.
It was a wonderful period of time.
Me and Bobby McGee by Janis Joplin acts like a "Madeleine de Proust" : the whole summer comes back, in all its details, to the point that I can almost smell the dryness of the land and see the shimmering colours of the landscape, the steam emanating from the tared road which goes along the river Rhine.
Memories, memories.
Beautiful!
Funny, this is the only time I can listen to her without instant PSD.
well might be way overplayed (how about the orignial from kris, bill?) but its a treasure of song anyway.
but like i said, you get and got to hear it too much on too many occasion...
Time machine: I'm here in Beijing on this glorious sunny Christmas day, remembering this summer 76, when I was fifteen and heard this for the first time, thinking it was unfair that I was born in Europe, ten years too late to have been a part of the huge movements in the US. "Movement" was a magical word which included music, rock and roll (yes Lazarus and sex and drugs) an adventurous life and freedom, "on the road". All of this in a melting pot, mixing the very delusional perception we had about reality and our own desires of escaping the limited life of a small Alsatian Village in the middle of nowhere (that we used to call the "trou du cul du monde")
We had our own dissents and awareness coming up, demonstrating against nuclear power plants (my first and unique sitting!), ecological catastrophes...
We were aware though that we were lucky enough to live in a very beautiful, protected area: we could walk, and cycle, and go swimming in the lakes around, wandering in the beautiful forest; we used to camp outside at all time listening to this music around fire camps, with the very new portable tape-recorder (radio-cassette), smoking pot and drinking schnapps, one of us playing the guitar not yet dreaming about leaving, rather, to imagine other kind of jobs which would allow us to stay and make the place even better.
It was a wonderful period of time.
Me and Bobby McGee by Janis Joplin acts like a "Madeleine de Proust" : the whole summer comes back, in all its details, to the point that I can almost smell the dryness of the land and see the shimmering colours of the landscape, the steam emanating from the tared road which goes along the river Rhine.
Memories, memories.
Gorgeous. A find tribute. Thank you.
from the TX/LA state lines.
But for some dingleberries, men screaming rock is ok.
women,
not so much.
Well, we know who is getting action, . . . and the miserable sods who aren't.
I agree unlimitedly about the genius, legend, authenticity, charisma, influence, etc. but just like for Bob, I have a problem with the voice, although I'm trying my best to get accustomed.
Sing it Pearl! You're the best! Were then, still are!
YES, YES, YES! Love Janis, love this song. Her best.
Time machine: I'm here in Beijing on this glorious sunny Christmas day, remembering this summer 76, when I was fifteen and heard this for the first time, thinking it was unfair that I was born in Europe, ten years too late to have been a part of the huge movements in the US. "Movement" was a magical word which included music, rock and roll (yes Lazarus and sex and drugs) an adventurous life and freedom, "on the road". All of this in a melting pot, mixing the very delusional perception we had about reality and our own desires of escaping the limited life of a small Alsatian Village in the middle of nowhere (that we used to call the "trou du cul du monde")
We had our own dissents and awareness coming up, demonstrating against nuclear power plants (my first and unique sitting!), ecological catastrophes...
We were aware though that we were lucky enough to live in a very beautiful, protected area: we could walk, and cycle, and go swimming in the lakes around, wandering in the beautiful forest; we used to camp outside at all time listening to this music around fire camps, with the very new portable tape-recorder (radio-cassette), smoking pot and drinking schnapps, one of us playing the guitar not yet dreaming about leaving, rather, to imagine other kind of jobs which would allow us to stay and make the place even better.
It was a wonderful period of time.
Me and Bobby McGee by Janis Joplin acts like a "Madeleine de Proust" : the whole summer comes back, in all its details, to the point that I can almost smell the dryness of the land and see the shimmering colours of the landscape, the steam emanating from the tared road which goes along the river Rhine.
Memories, memories.
What he said.
La da da la la la Bobby McGee yeah"
or
"I was gonna write more words,
but then I got high."
Dont be over-sophisticated, this is great performance full of pure true soul. It will survive much after we will.
So take it easy and enjoy it.
" In the moments of silence
I hear again
Janis Joplin singing
an old blues on Bob Mcgee"
Sing it Pearl! You're the best! Were then, still are!
This Otis Reddingized version ain't bad either.
This cover is one of the best examples of how the singer's diction is a perfect match for the lyrics of the song— Janis Joplin's voice sounds exactly like the character you would expect to express the lyrics of this song as a true experience...
this really is a great song, and a brilliant cover...
precisely : ) fucka' rocks
Yea, I feel the same way. She did have some great support musicians though. Her vocals, just tired with way to much booze and cigarettes.
I keep thinking "one of these days, I'm going to get sick of this song. I was never a big Janis fan anyway, and I've heard it a million times." But it never seems to happen. It is a classic story telling song that I don't seem to mind hearing on a regular basis. Can't say that for a lot of other songs.
Good way to put it. I usually leave the rating blank but then I get them on PSD. I am so tired of Led Zep, Pink Floyd & Dire Straits but I don't want to rate them low because I don't dislike them and I don't want to rate them a"6" so I won't hear them on PSD. So I'm stuck hitting PSD over and over...
Interesting way of looking at things.. I take a different slant - I happen to have this on a CD at home, but I rarely listen to the CD - not because I don't like the song, more because I like listening to RP so much. And like others have noted here many times, I reckon that's because of the way Bill sequences the songs, with some familiar ones and some I've never heard before (some of which have become part of my CD collection at home). Sure, Bill puts the odd one in now and then that makes me think 'why?'. But then I just remember all the great music that he's introduced me to - and some where my initial reaction was something close to 'why?' that I've come to love. Thanks Bill.
What Bill does is an art form. Even if I don't like this song or that, there's usually a reason for it to be in the specific mix. Brilliant!
Interesting way of looking at things.. I take a different slant - I happen to have this on a CD at home, but I rarely listen to the CD - not because I don't like the song, more because I like listening to RP so much. And like others have noted here many times, I reckon that's because of the way Bill sequences the songs, with some familiar ones and some I've never heard before (some of which have become part of my CD collection at home). Sure, Bill puts the odd one in now and then that makes me think 'why?'. But then I just remember all the great music that he's introduced me to - and some where my initial reaction was something close to 'why?' that I've come to love. Thanks Bill.
Name one. I cannot. RP has access to seemingly limitless interesting and entertaining music. I don't think there's much room for this anymore. Anyone who enjoys this sort of music, likely already has it on cd or lp at home.
What's about Move Over?
Name one. I cannot. RP has access to seemingly limitless interesting and entertaining music. I don't think there's much room for this anymore. Anyone who enjoys this sort of music, likely already has it on cd or lp at home.
>>we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender.<<
Everybody in my mushrooming multitude of churches be dancing buck ass naked all across the world like bowlegged gypsy muleskinners... we love this cover song... it tweaks our nipples... love sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll...
Thin reference to the music. No thanks. Always a solid nine for me (the music).
Janis Joplin's diction is perfect for this cover... I gave this cover one of my rare 10's... love it... thank you for sharing your opinion with me...
"Freedom's just another word for nothing left to lose..." love this cover...
these two dudes are even starting to look alike—
NSA collected US email records in bulk for more than two years under Obama
The Obama administration for more than two years permitted the National Security Agency to continue collecting vast amounts of records detailing the email and internet usage of Americans, according to secret documents obtained by the Guardian.
The documents indicate that under the program, launched in 2001, a federal judge sitting on the secret surveillance panel called the Fisa court would approve a bulk collection order for internet metadata "every 90 days". A senior administration official confirmed the program, stating that it ended in 2011.
The collection of these records began under the Bush administration's wide-ranging warrantless surveillance program, collectively known by the NSA codename Stellar Wind...
Thin reference to the music. No thanks. Always a solid nine for me (the music).
What an awesome album . . .
Kris K's life offers strong lessons as well, I loved some his appearances in Peckinpah's films (Bring me the head of Alfredo Garcia! Convoy!)
for me, Kris is one Super Cool Dude and Janis's is a Life History worth checking out
Sunday Morning Coming Down (IIRC) is another one of them songs of his that goes right to it as well.
We be dancing like bowlegged gypsy muleskinners... love this cover...
I'm with you on this one. I think she casually slaughters a decent song.
This cover is one of the best examples of how the singer's diction is a perfect match for the lyrics of the song— Janis Joplin's voice sounds exactly like the character you would expect to express the lyrics of this song as a true experience...
this really is a great song, and a brilliant cover...
Same goes for Elvis. Or Garth Brooks. Or <insert pop group here>.
Everybody in my church loves this cover... best song Kristofferson ever wrote...
Kris K's life offers strong lessons as well, I loved some his appearances in Peckinpah's films (Bring me the head of Alfredo Garcia! Convoy!)
for me, Kris is one Super Cool Dude and Janis's is a Life History worth checking out
Great record Janis
I agree!
10
It's such a great classic. I guess there's not much we can say about it.
Great record Janis
in a box...
Roger Miller, actually. KK did a cover as well... According to Wikipedia, that is, FWIW.
I'm not sure if it's really a cover if you wrote the tune, but Roger did record it first.
Open your mind and enjoy life!
Elvis Costello presents Spectacle: Kris Kristofferson, Roseanne Cash, John Mellencamp, Norah Jones, Me and Bobby McGee
....." 'd trade all my tomorrows for one single yesterday".... goose bumps all over.
"Who dares to say that Johnny Mellencamp has lost his great voice... From the coal mines of kentaky to the califormia sun, Bobby shared the secrets of my soul... the secrets of my soul... sounds really good... good enough for me. "
Roger Miller, actually. KK did a cover as well... According to Wikipedia, that is, FWIW.
That's pretty funny!
Goosebumps! 10
Time machine: I'm here in Beijing on this glorious sunny Christmas day, remembering this summer 76, when I was fifteen and heard this for the first time, thinking it was unfair that I was born in Europe, ten years too late to have been a part of the huge movements in the US. "Movement" was a magical word which included music, rock and roll (yes Lazarus and sex and drugs) an adventurous life and freedom, "on the road". All of this in a melting pot, mixing the very delusional perception we had about reality and our own desires of escaping the limited life of a small Alsatian Village in the middle of nowhere (that we used to call the "trou du cul du monde")
We had our own dissents and awareness coming up, demonstrating against nuclear power plants (my first and unique sitting!), ecological catastrophes...
We were aware though that we were lucky enough to live in a very beautiful, protected area: we could walk, and cycle, and go swimming in the lakes around, wandering in the beautiful forest; we used to camp outside at all time listening to this music around fire camps, with the very new portable tape-recorder (radio-cassette), smoking pot and drinking schnapps, one of us playing the guitar not yet dreaming about leaving, rather, to imagine other kind of jobs which would allow us to stay and make the place even better.
It was a wonderful period of time.
Me and Bobby McGee by Janis Joplin acts like a "Madeleine de Proust" : the whole summer comes back, in all its details, to the point that I can almost smell the dryness of the land and see the shimmering colours of the landscape, the steam emanating from the tared road which goes along the river Rhine.
Memories, memories.
Wow! Wonderful!