1968 Career-Defining Classic Album Released 58 Years Ago Today

It was this legendary musician’s debut record.

by Jacqueline Burt Cole
Parade
March 23, 2026

She's one of the most iconic musicians in the world today, but in the late '60s, Joni Mitchell was just starting out. While she'd already written songs that were hits for other people, including "The Circle Game" and "Urge for Going," she hadn't released an album of her own when David Crosby happened to wander into her show at Florida's Gaslight Cafe in the fall of 1967.

"I walked into a coffeehouse in Coconut Grove, and she was standing there singing those songs, and I just was gobsmacked," Crosby recalled later, per Mitchell's official website. "I fell for her, immediately. It's a little like falling into a cement mixer. She's kind of a turbulent girl."

Crosby helped Mitchell land her first major label record deal when he signed on to produce her debut album, Song to a Seagull, released on March 23, 1968. His stripped-down approach to making the record, however, has been criticized by some over the years (especially because of technical difficulties which ended up affecting the finished sound). When Song to a Seagull was remastered in 2021, Mitchell called the original mix "atrocious," adding, "it sounded like it was recorded under a Jello bowl, so I fixed it."

Still, at the time, Mitchell appreciated the artistic freedom she was given while making the album.

"If I'd recorded a year ago, l would have used lots of orchestration," she told Rolling Stone in May 1968. "No one would have let me put out an acoustic album. They would have said it's like having a whole paintbox and using only brown."

While Song to a Seagull wasn't Mitchell's most successful record, it established her as a musical force to contend with. Fittingly, the now-revered lyricist dedicated the album to the person who made her fall in love with words - her seventh-grade teacher.

"It was because of my Grade 7 teacher in Saskatoon, Mr. Kratzman, that I first started to write the way I do," she told the Toronto Daily Star in April 1968.

"He was an Australian, a great tall man with one gold tooth and I was in love with him," she continued. "I had written a poem about a stallion; he returned it all marked up and circled. 'What do you know about stallions?' he said. 'The other day you told me about going out after the rain and gathering tadpoles in an empty mayonnaise jar. Why don't you write about that?' I've dedicated my first album to him for teaching me to love words."

Decades later, countless fans have Mr. Kratzman to thank for some of the most amazing music of all time.


Printed from the official Joni Mitchell website. Permanent link: https://jonimitchell.com/library/view.cfm?id=6001

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