Janis Joplin(1943-1970)
- Music Artist
- Music Department
- Actress
Janis Lyn Joplin was born at St. Mary's Hospital in the oil-refining
town of Port Arthur, Texas, near the border with Louisiana. Her father
was a cannery worker and her mother was a registrar for a business
college. As an overweight teenager, she was a folk-music devotee
(especially Odetta,
Leadbelly and
Bessie Smith). After graduating from Thomas
Jefferson High School, she attended Lamar State College and the
University of Texas, where she played auto-harp in Austin bars.She was nominated for the Ugliest Man on Campus in 1963, and she spent
two years traveling, performing and becoming drug-addicted. Back home
in 1966, her friend Chet Helms suggested she
become lead singer for
Big Brother and the Holding Company,
an established Haight-Ashbury band consisting of guitarists
James Gurley and
Sam Andrew, bassist
Peter Albin and drummer
Dave Getz). She got wide recognition through
the Monterey Pop Festival in 1967, highlights of which were released in
Monterey Pop (1968), and with the
band's landmark second album, "Cheap Thrills". She formed her "Kosmic
Blues Band" the following year and achieved still further recognition
as a solo performer at Woodstock in 1969, highlights released in
Woodstock (1970). In the spring of
1970, she sang with the "Full Tilt Boogie Band" and, on October 4 of
that year, she was found dead in Hollywood's Landmark Motor Hotel (now
known as Highland Gardens Hotel) from a heroin-alcohol overdose the
previous day. Her ashes were scattered off the coast of California. Her
biggest selling album was the posthumously released "Pearl", which
contained her quintessential song: "Me & Bobby McGee".