The Essential Janis Joplin

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The Essential Janis Joplin album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Janis Joplin (See All Albums by Janis Joplin)
  • Date Released: Jan 14, 2003

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Rock

  • Label: Columbia/Legacy

Total Tracks: 30   Total Length: 122:02

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The Essential Janis Joplin

EMUSIC-02A580EE

Have always loved Janis' music. Sad to say was too young to see her live, but have owned "the essential janis" for years and love it. Drove my girls crazy on long trips in the country where the radio couldn't get a signal. Now that they're older they appreciate those "boring trips when mom tortured us with her music" haha. Janis is part of their MP3 playlists now.

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rocks

MOMMAFLO

janis rocks no other words are needed!!!!!!

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AWESOME MUSIC

RickyRicardo

This is the best rock-blues money can buy. I remember seeing Janis Joplin (with Big Brother and the Holding Company) back around 1970, in Seattle just before she overdosed on booze and other stuff. This is classic 60's music that is MUST HAVE. Today (2010), I find Crsytal Bowersox (see American Idol) has the same kind of music vibe as Janis Joplin. "Take Another Piece of my Heart, Shawn if it makes you feel good," reveals the powerful blues/pain of Janis Joplin. Most of Janis Joplin's original works are about the abuse of women. Of course, women's power was diminished back in the 1960's. Think about R-E-S-P-E-C-T AND OF COURSE, Janis Joplin's iconic, "Ball and Chain." Janis we miss you...

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If Janis has been missing from your collection....

wayne.sputnik

...you'll find that this will certainly fill the gap.

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They Say All Music Guide

Columbia has managed to squeeze an impressive, perhaps excessive, number of compilations out of Janis Joplin’s relatively slim body of recordings. With this two-CD set, The Essential Janis Joplin, the label’s at it again, though it’s a good one to get if you don’t want to collect all the Joplin releases, and certainly don’t want to get the expensive Joplin boxes, but want more than what fits onto a single disc. Including both solo recordings and highlights of her stint with Big Brother & the Holding Company, it has all the songs fans and critics would consider milestones in her career: “Ball and Chain” (a version recorded live in 1967 at the Monterey Pop Festival, not the more familiar one from Cheap Thrills), “Piece of My Heart,” “Down on Me,” “Summertime,” “Try (Just a Little Bit Harder),” “Tell Mama” (the live 1970 performance from the expanded edition of Pearl), “Get It While You Can,” “Mercedes Benz,” and “Me and Bobby McGee.” And there are also good tracks that aren’t as overly familiar, like “Coo Coo,” “Misery’n,” “Maybe,” “Work Me, Lord,” and “A Woman Left Lonely.” The substitution of the less familiar renditions of “Ball and Chain” and “Tell Mama” might rankle some consumers expecting to hear the more common ones, but that’s frankly unlikely. So what does the set offer to those Joplin fans who already have a lot of her material? Well, not much, but in the time-honored manner of attaching bonus tracks to oft-recycled material, this does have a couple of previously unissued live cuts (“Kozmic Blues” and the Bee Gees’ “To Love Somebody”) from her 1969 set at Woodstock. Those songs are actually reasonably good, but aren’t worth buying the whole set for. They would have been a better deal if served out as part of a legit collection of her Woodstock performances, or as a collection of previously unreleased live Joplin performances, if enough high-caliber stuff of the sort was available. – Richie Unterberger

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