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Ameliaby Joni Mitchell![]() I was driving across the burning desert When I spotted six jet planes Leaving six white vapor trails across the bleak terrain It was the hexagram of the heavens it was the strings of my guitar Amelia * it was just a false alarm The drone of flying engines Is a song so wild and blue It scrambles time and seasons if it gets thru to you Then your life becomes a travelogue Of picture post card charms Amelia it was just a false alarm People will tell you where they've gone They'll tell you where to go But till you get there yourself you never really know Where some have found their paradise Other's just come to harm Oh, Amelia it was just a false alarm I wish that he was here tonight It's so hard to obey His sad request of me to kindly stay away So this is how I hide the hurt As the road leads cursed and charmed I tell Amelia it was just a false alarm A ghost of aviation She was swallowed by the sky Or by the sea like me she had a dream to fly Like Icarus * ascending On beautiful foolish arms Amelia it was just a false alarm Maybe I've never really loved I guess that is the truth I've spent my whole life in clouds at icy altitude And looking down on everything I crashed into his arms Amelia it was just a false alarm I pulled into the Cactus Tree Motel To shower off the dust And I slept on the strange pillows of my wanderlust I dreamed of 747s Over geometric farms Dreams Amelia - dreams and false alarms © 1976; Crazy Crow Music |
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Additional information:*Footnotes
Amelia Earhart (1897-1937) Amelia Earhart was an American aviator, one of the world's most celebrated, who was the first woman to fly alone over the Atlantic Ocean. Earhart moved often with her family and completed high school in Chicago in 1916. She worked as a military nurse in Canada during World War I and as a social worker in Denison House, Boston, after the war. She learned to fly (against her family's wishes) in 1920-21 and in 1922 bought her first plane, a Kinner Canary. On June 17-18, 1928, she became the first woman to fly across the Atlantic, although she was only a passenger. The same year, her reflections on that flight were published as 20 Hrs., 40 Min. She married the publisher George Palmer Putnam in 1931 but continued her career under her maiden name. Determined to justify the renown that her 1928 crossing had brought her, Earhart crossed the Atlantic alone on May 20-21, 1932. Her flight in her Lockheed Vega from Newfoundland to Ireland was completed in the record time of 14 hours 56 minutes. After that flight, she wrote The Fun of It (1932). This soon led to a series of flights across the United States and drew her into the movement that encouraged the development of commercial aviation. She also took an active part in efforts to open aviation to women and end male domination in the new field. In January 1935 she made a solo flight from Hawaii to California, a longer distance than that from the United States to Europe. Earhart was the first person to fly that hazardous route successfully; all previous attempts had ended in disaster. She set out in 1937 to fly around the world, with Fred Noonan as her navigator, in a twin-engine Lockheed Electra. After completing more than two-thirds of the distance, her plane vanished in the central Pacific near the International Date Line. Although her mysterious disappearance has since raised many questions and much speculation about the events surrounding it, the facts remain largely unknown.
Icarus was the son of the inventor Daedalus and a slave named Naucrate. King Minos of Crete imprisoned Daedalus and Icarus in the Labyrinth to punish Daedalus for helping the hero Theseus to kill the monster called the Minotaur and to escape with Minos' daughter, Ariadne. Daedalus knew that Minos controlled any escape routes by land or sea, but Minos could not prevent an escape by flight. So Daedalus used his skills to build wings for himself and Icarus. He used wax and string to fasten feathers to reeds of varying lengths to imitate the curves of birds' wings (These are the "beautiful foolish arms' in 'Amelia'). When their wings were ready, Daedalus warned Icarus to fly at medium altitude. If he flew too high, the sun could melt the wax of his wings, and the sea could dampen the feathers if he flew too low. Once they had escaped Crete, Icarus became exhilarated by flight. Ignoring his father's warning, he flew higher and higher. The sun melted the wax holding his wings together, and the boy fell into the water and drowned. Daedalus looked down to see feathers floating in the waves, and realized what had happened. He buried his son on an island which would be called Icaria, and the sea into which Icarus had fallen would ever after be called the Icarian Sea (between the Cyclades and Asia Minor).
Guitar Transcriptions of Amelia
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Piano Transcriptions of AmeliaAmelia has been recorded by 25 others
Amed, Roxana (from "Limbo" - 2004)
Buckley, Betty (from "unreleased live recording" - 2003) Buckley, Betty (from "Quintessence (Rhapsody Exclusive)" - 2008) Collister, Christine (from "Love..." - 2005) Colored Wolf (from "blue.sing" - 2006) Colvin, Shawn & Mary Chapin-Carpenter (from "An All-Star Tribute to Joni Mitchell (TV Broadcast)" - 2000) Faithfull, Marianne (from "(Live Performance)" - 1983) Hancock, Herbie (from "River - The Joni Letters" - 2007) James, Etta (from "A Case Of Joni" - 2000) Maria Pia De Vito, Danilo Rea,Enzo Pietropaoli, Aldo Romano (from "So Right" - 2005) Martin, Claire (from "Live On The BBC" - 2003) Michael Paz Band (from "PazFest - The New Orleans Tribute to Joni Mitchell at the Howlin' Wolf" - 2002) Milne, Andy (from "Dreams and False Alarms" - 2007) Naked Blue (from "Strathmore Presents - A Tribute To Joni Mitchell" - 2009) Nixon, Damian (- 2007) Pavolka, Akiko (from "House of Illusion" - 1998) Powell, Elena (- 2005) Robin Adler & Mutts of the Planet (from "Safaris to the Heart - The Songs of Joni Mitchell" - 2010) Roxana Amed & Pedro Aznar (- 2007) Salas, Stevie (from "Back From The Living" - 1995) Sam Stephens and Anne Lennox-Martin (from "Turn The Music On" - 1983) Stewart, Dave & Barbara Gaskin (from "Spin" - 1991) Tatyana Balakirsky & Alex Nadjarov (from "Live at MuzEnergo-4" - 2008) Then There Were Two (from "Then There Were Two" - 2007) Yoghill (from "Jonisongs" - 2003) » [more information on recordings by other artists]
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