Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1976


Coyote (song)

Buy Coyote (song) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article


{{Infobox song

| name = Coyote

| cover = Coyote.JPEG

| alt =

| type = single

| B-side = Blue Motel Room

| artist = Joni Mitchell

| album = Hejira

| released =

| recorded =

| studio =

| genre = Folk jazz

| length = 5:01

| label = Asylum

| writer = Joni Mitchell

| producer =

| prev_title = In France They Kiss on Main Street

| prev_year = 1976

| next_title = Off Night Backstreet

| next_year = 1978

| misc =

}}

"'Coyote'" is the opening song from Joni Mitchell's 1976 album 'Hejira' and also the album's first single.AllMusic review: [ 'Hejira'].

Background



"Coyote was inspired by Sam Shepard, with whom Mitchell was briefly linked during Bob Dylan's 197576 Rolling Thunder Revue tour. Martin Scorseses 2019 documentary film about the tour includes footage of Mitchell performing the song at Gordon Lightfoot's house, with Dylan and Roger McGuinn accompanying her on acoustic guitar. Prior to the performance McGuinn states Joni wrote this song about this tour and on this tour and for this tour. In biographer David Yaffes 2017 book 'Reckless Daughter', Mitchell describes how she "had a flirtation with Sam Shepard.

In her 2019 book 'Joni Mitchell: New Critical Readings', Ruth Charnock described the song as "either the most flirtatious song about fucking or the most graphic song about flirting ever written". In Chris O'Dell's 2009 autobiography 'Miss O'Dell' she details an affair she had with married playwright Sam Shepard and states that Shepard then cheated on her with Joni Mitchell. O'Dell claims that "Coyote" is written about Sam Shepard. The song describes Coyote as being "too far from the Bay of Fundy". In the summers of 1972 and 1973, Shepard resided in a waterside cottage in West Advocate, Nova Scotia, located on a strip of land which extends into the Bay of Fundy. The narrator also mentions looking an actual coyote in the face while "on the road to Baljennie near my old home town", a reference to the former hamlet of Baljennie, Saskatchewan. Mitchell was raised in Maidstone, North Battleford, and Saskatoon in Saskatchewan.

Reception and legacy



'Rolling Stone' included the song on an unranked list of Mitchell's essential 50 songs in 2021. In an article accompanying the list, critic Douglas Wolk noted that it possesses "long, tricky, rattling verses that chronicle a romance with a womanizing man whose life is very different from the narrators" and that it had been a "highlight" of her live repertoire for several years before she recorded it for 'Hejira'.

Bob Dylan played Mitchell's original studio-album version on the "Noah's Ark part 2" episode of the third season of his 'Theme Time Radio Hour' show in 2009, introducing it as a song by a "strong-willed woman, and I mean that in the best possible way".

Later versions



A live version of "Coyote" was performed by Mitchell with the Band for the concert movie 'The Last Waltz', and is included on the film's soundtrack album. Another live version appears on Joni Mitchell's live album 'Shadows and Light'. Like the original, it featured Jaco Pastorius on bass, but features Pat Metheny as a second guitarist and Don Alias replacing Bobbye Hall on percussion.

"Coyote" appeared on the 1992 Mitchell tribute album 'Back to the Garden', with Canadian band Spirit of the West covering the song.

Personnel



*Joni Mitchell acoustic and electric guitars, vocals

*Jaco Pastorius bass guitar

*Bobbye Hall percussion

Charts



References




Buy Coyote (song) now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1976



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1100666320.