Singer,
songwriter, composer Janis Ian was born Janis Eddy Fink on April 7, 1951 in New York
City, New York. In 1964, she legally changed her name to Janis Ian, taking her
brother Eric's middle name as her new surname.
A
singer/songwriter she was both celebrated and decried for her pointed handling
of taboo topics, Janis Ian enjoyed one of the more remarkable second acts in
music history. After first finding success as a teen, her career slumped, only
to enter a commercial resurgence almost a decade later. She was the daughter of
a music teacher and studied piano as a child and, drew influence from Edith Piaf,
Billie Holiday, and Odetta. She wrote her first songs at the age of 12 and soon
entered Manhattan's High School of Music and Art, where she began performing at
school functions and graduated to the New York folk circuit.
When she was just
15, she recorded her self-titled debut; the LP contained "Society's Child
(Baby I've Been Thinking)," a meditation on interracial romance written by
Ian while waiting to meet with her school guidance counselor. While banned by a
few radio stations, the single failed to attract much notice until conductor
Leonard Bernstein invited its writer to perform the song on his television special
Inside Pop: The Rock Revolution. The ensuing publicity and furor over its
subject matter pushed "Society's Child" into the upper rungs of the
pop charts, and made Ian an overnight sensation.
Success did not
agree with her, however, and she soon dropped out of high school. In rapid
succession, Ian recorded three more LPs -- 1967's For All the Seasons of Your
Mind, 1968's The Secret Life of J. Eddy Fink, and 1969's Who Really Cares --
but gave away the money she earned to friends and charities. After meeting
photojournalist Peter Cunningham at a peace rally, the couple married, and at
age 20, she announced her retirement from the music business. The marriage
failed, however, and she returned in 1971 with the poorly received Present
Company. After moving to California to hone her writing skills in seclusion,
Ian resurfaced three years later with Stars, which featured the song
"Jesse," later a Top 30 hit for Roberta Flack.
With 1975's
Between the Lines, Ian eclipsed all of her previous success; not only did the
LP achieve platinum status, but the delicate single "At Seventeen"
reached the Top Three and won a Grammy. While subsequent releases like 1977's
Latin-influenced Miracle Row, 1979's Night Rains, and 1981's Restless Eyes
earned acclaim, they sold poorly. Ian was dropped by her label and spent 12
years without a contract before emerging in 1993 with Breaking Silence (the
title a reference to her recent admission of homosexuality), which pulled no
punches in tackling material like domestic violence, frank eroticism, and the
Holocaust. Similarly, 1995's Revenge explored prostitution and homelessness.
Two years later Ian returned with Hunger; God & the FBI followed in the
spring of 2000. A live set, Working Without a Net, appeared from Rude Girl
Records in 2003, and a DVD, Live at Club Cafe, saw release in 2005. Folk Is the
New Black appeared as a joint release from Rude Girl and Cooking Vinyl in 2006.
IAN, Janis (Janis Eddy Fink) [4/7/1951, New York City, New York, U.S.A. - ] – composer, singer, musician (guitar),
actress, married to photojournalist Peter Cunningham (1970-1971), Eric J
Sterling (1972-197?), married to producer, writer, Tino Mendes Sargo [1931- ] (1978-1985), married to Patricia Snyder
[1947- ] (2003- ).
Four Rode Out –
1968
Song: “The Last Time” sung by Janis Ian
(Janis Fink)
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