100% this song saved lives. Janis spoke for so many young girls, and speaking her truth was so courageous and valuable. Super song today’s young men and women need to hear!
This song was so impactful at the time of release. The liberation of women was now in full swing and Janis opened the door for young women to feel and admit their feelings. Generational song!
I was 17 when this song won her a grammy. Her music comforted me thru adolescence. I have other albums of hers. WHEN ANGELS CRY she wrote during the AIDS crisis and is just haunting.
Janis Ian broke the hearts of a generation with her simple, deep, and stark truth. This came out during my high school years. And it affected us all, boys and girls alike. How stunned I was to see her for the first time. This gorgeous woman describing herself as an "ugly duckling", who had hair I dreamed of running my fingers through. I had a mad crush on her back then. But for anyone to experience the painful rejections she describes, is such a tragic reality of youth. Thank you for reacting to this wonderful song!
You might want to check out her song that she wrote and recorded around the age of seventeen called "Society's Child " about interracial relationship...got banned on many radio stations.
I just read her autobiography which is also titled Society’s Child. She was 13 years old when she started writing the song, 14 when she finished writing it and 15 when she recorded. As well as getting death threats she also was spat at in the street and was sent letters with razor blades inside.
I listened to this song non stop in high school. Somedays it made me feel strong and not alone, others I would cry like a baby. Really touched a spot deep in my soul.
Great reaction Britt. Janis is one of the best story telling artist from the 60's and 70's. She wrote about relatable stuff, some good writing I may add, and as you witnessed her vocal sound is soothing and lay back. Her song, " At Seventeen " hit #1 from the album "Between the Lines" in the Billboard Album chart 1975 landing her a Grammy. She was 24 yrs old at the time.
It kind of struck me here, that Janis Ian's "At Seventeen" is to young women as Radiohead's "Creep" is to young men. Also, for those who didn't realize it, the goth girl in Mean Girls is named Janis Ian, after this singer.
I loved this so much when I was young. I despised high school. I bloomed in college once all the oppressivenes of comfomity was stripped away. Hang in there young people. It gets better.
The real thing from it's first release - it had schoolmates talking those first couple of weeks as it played and everyone heard it 'for their first time'. There was also a sentiment among young women: "FINALLY! Someone speaks for US!"
Janis Ian is iconic. This song is one I will always remember. Society's Child is the other I saw a lot in comments. That one came out just after my interracial nephew was born. I was almost 10 at the time. My sister loved Janis Ian for speaking the truth.
This is when songwriting really was at a zenith. Check out the lyrics of songs from Don McLean (American Pie and Vincent), and even the Eagles (Desperado and Hotel California.) The lyrics are incredibly deep.
Janis is one of the best songwriters of our time. Very underrated and under appreciated. She has soooooo many beautiful songs. All her albums are magnificent. I saw her in concert twice, she an amazing guitar player and a very nice person. I would recommend the song “ society’s child” , wich is about an interracial relationship. She wrote it when she was 15.
"Society's Child" is a must listen song from Janis Ian, dealing with a taboo issue back then ( late 60's, early 70's) of interracial relationships. Another song worth listening to from her is "The other side of the sun" (IMHO)..
Britt - Janis' lyrics tap into the painful experience many young people (both girls & boys) feel when navigating the transition to adulthood (and often beyond). Another incredible song I think pairs really well with 'At Seventeen' is Carly Simon's "That's The Way I Always Heard it Should Be" that just as poignantly addresses other emotional challenges of life. Both Janis Ian & Carl Simon are absolute treasures.
THANK you for saying that, because I thought the same thing. In my comment above I told Britt that I was surprised that she related to this song because she is so gorgeous. I was also that girl at 17 back in the '60s that Janis sings about, and it still hurts today.
The most beautiful people I've ever known were as insecure as the rest of us, especially in adolescence... It was strangely comforting to learn that almost all of us felt like the awkward, unattractive kid in the room in some way. I'm not trying to say it's equally hard for everyone, not by a long shot. Just that at this point when stunningly beautiful people talk about themselves this way, I'm not surprised and I don't doubt that they mean it 💜 However she felt at 17, Britt has grown into her beauty, that's for sure 👑
You would appreciate the movie "Hope Floats". She was the Homecoming Queen and how that impacted her view of the world. It shows her progression to finally finding herself, her place in the world and of course, love
I was in junior high when this song came out, and it became a huge hit. As an early teens white kid, I thought the lyrics were good and interesting, but years later I realized how absolutely powerful and relatable they are to so many people. What I did realize right away was her incredibly gentle yet soulful voice, and her other musical skills. Just an incredible, genuine, classic song. Great reaction Britt!
Poignant. Always a favorite song when it came on the radio, despite the painful truths, and still a beautiful song so many years after it first hit the top 40. So glad you've got so much going for your in addition to beauty, because the song wasn't long enough to mention the end of that beauty spectrum, when it fades with age. Thanks for sharing your reactions and for keeping great music alive!
I had the great pleasure of seeing her in concert in London in 1991. This song was certainly a stand out moment, but there were others. 'Passion Play' and 'Jesse' are two that stick in the mind.
One of my favorite artists. Great song and I think your thoughts on it are spot on. I'd suggest checking out Society's Child, Jesse, From Me to You, Watercolors, This Train Still Runs, and Breaking Silence.
Janis wrote some very deep story songs. I first heard her in 1967 and bought her album Society's Child. I think she was 14 when she wrote the song about interracial dating in the 60's. Powerful! I'm an old white guy who was 16 when the song came out and it still gets me emotional.
This song was very popular in the 70s. I know how much you love the 70s because I follow your page. You are really enjoyable to watch regardless what you’re reviewing keep up the great work your fantastic.
Janis Ian is a great singer-songwriter from the 60's-70's who dealt with serious issues. At the age of 14 Ian wrote & recorded her first hit single "Society's Child" 66/67 about an interracial romance that was looked down on by parents & others. Another big hit was "At Seventeen" in 1975 which talks about adolescent cruelty & the illusion of popularity.
One of the greatest joys the age of social media brought me was the chance to tell Janis Ian how much this song meant to me when I was 16, 17, to be able to think "I am not the only one, someone understands" was a lifeline to me. I was 12 when this came out in 1975.
I know this song already, but it makes me think of other female folk singers from back in the day. Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell and Judy Collins. Try out Honest Lullaby or Diamonds and Rust from Joan Baez or Send in the Clowns by Judy Collins or The Circle Game, Both Sides Now and Big Yellow Taxi from Joni Mitchell. I also really like Counting Crows cover of Big Yellow Taxi and love Emilia Jones cover of Both Sides Now at the BAFTAs. I like it even more than the original and was playing that video on repeat for quite a while after seeing it. She also sung it in CODA a number of times (my favorite movie of 2021) Also, the singer Aled Jones is Emilia Jones' dad.
Absolutely love this song, Beautifully sad 😔 but healing at the same time because the song says we have all been there but there is more to life, beyond high school, "there is lots of world out there" (song " Put on Your Sunday Clothes") 🔥🔥
Young Women were not alone with the feeling of emptiness at the awkward stage of life, when approval was desperately needed & never attained. I was a virtual nonentity in High School, much of my own doing, due to a lack of self-confidence. After a tour of duty in the US Navy, ironically begun at age 17, I emerged a changed Man, full of the knowledge that I was a person of value. When I attended my 20 year class reunion, finally a Man of some stature & accomplishment, the same Ladies who had ignored my existence, were suddenly flocking to my side to renew the acquaintance, that ironically, we had never had. I had flourished into Manhood, but more importantly, had allowed my self esteem to be seen by those who cared to look.
Good call about the tone. She’s not shedding tears about it; she’s just telling you what the real story is. You know it’s meaningful, but she’s also not going to give you the satisfaction of feeling sorry for her.
Janis has an extensive catalog of beautiful, touching, and brilliant lyrics and melodies. Keep immersing yourself in her music. I've met her, and she is every bit as kind and sweet as her music is.
You might want to check out a song she wrote in 1965, "Society's Child," which she recorded when she was 14 years old. The song charted as high as number 14 on the Billboard 100 in 1967.
I was a Freshman in High School when this was released and it has always been one of my favorite songs. It captured the angst that every teenager felt...
wow..often hear my mom sing that song...i also know the song since i grew up hearing 60's 70's..thank you 4 this reaction video..love it..❤from the philippines..
I was just starting high school when this song came out and oh my, did it completely describe how I felt at the time. It helped to know that someone else felt the same. I think the song is timeless. I guarantee that this song would be as relatable today as it was then.
This song came out the year I graduated high school and I swear, it was like she was singing about me. It wasn't until after I graduated college and got out into the "real" world that I realized I had something to offer the world. Listening to it all these years later, I can see how high school is a mere blip in the arc of one's life but but this song can still make my eyes well up.
Love you as always, Britt. I saw her live at the Gaslight Cafe, in Coconut Grove, Miami in 1967 and I was very impressed. I was already a fan, and still am. She was so small, she almost couldn't reach over the Big Martin D-45 guitar she was playing and her picking style, was flawless, and mesmerizing, and her lyrics were piercing. Janis Ian is sorely missed.
I was 16 when this song was released. First it made me cry. Second do much to look forward to in another year. We had so much great diverse music! That’s what I’m so proud of from that period.
My mother sang this with us at home when i was a child. I never new who it was that sang it until now. If i thought about this particular song i would have asked her however as my childhood was filled with music i haven't thought of most of the music i sang and danced to with her in the 70's and 80's. Not when the house was never without music. Thank you for helping bringing back a few nemories.
I have always loved this song - and Janis Ian. Frankly, it's difficult to imagine that you can really relate to the song - you are so incredibly gorgeous. I wonder if she's going to write 'At Seventy' for a different persective. Love your reactions.
Thank you so much for reacting to this amazing artist! If you enjoy this, I really think that you might enjoy listening to Joni Mitchell “Both Sides Now” however my absolute favorite from her (as well as my kids and their cousins in high school) is “Twisted”. (This is a fun, shocking and probably politically incorrect a bit now, but definitely worth listening to). She had so many great songs. I have no idea of how many awards she’s received for her work but it’s a whole lot. I do hope that you can enjoy whenever you can. Much love and appreciation from California. Btw Fyi, late bloomers are usually born in the fall and winter. Early bloomers are usually born in the spring and summer. I’ve tracked this for decades now and found it’s mostly true. Also Valentine’s cards used to be done for everyone when I was a kid, until I got to high school. My kids had to do this for a few years until the teachers realized that it was hurting some of the kids who didn’t get one. They thankfully stopped this “tradition”. Although I think it’s a good way to show kindness, it’s also a way to let someone know that they aren’t “in the group”, so to speak. Idk ? Great reaction and thoughts for this one. Still waiting for Fleetwood Mac and Stevie Nicks “On the Edge of 17”. You will love her hair and her costume was rather daring but beautiful back then. Enjoy!❤️🌈🍀🙏🏻😇❣️
It is such a wonderful song. The pain of being seventeen is so real. Still a child, but not quite an adult, the fear of the future to come. For me that was 60 years ago & I still remember the uncertainty.
Great reaction to this wonderful live performance from the Old Grey Whistle Test in 1976. OGWT was a much loved programme on the BBC. I really recommend "Breaking Silence" and "Society's Child" - really important songs.
A good honest song and another great reaction. For me this song reflects and foreshadows - things to come for Janis Ian in her search for love. That's all I'll say on this, as it's is not the time or place for more. She is very talented and great songwriter.
100% this song saved lives. Janis spoke for so many young girls, and speaking her truth was so courageous and valuable. Super song today’s young men and women need to hear!
Agreed that it saved lives.
that is amazing! music is so powerful!
I was 17 when this came out, And I was so shocked that someone got me!! I felt like she was singing to me and telling my story. Bless her!
I was also 17 and yep, it was great to have someone relate to you.
So was I
This song was so impactful at the time of release. The liberation of women was now in full swing and Janis opened the door for young women to feel and admit their feelings. Generational song!
I was 17 when this song won her a grammy. Her music comforted me thru adolescence. I have other albums of hers. WHEN ANGELS CRY she wrote during the AIDS crisis and is just haunting.
I will keep it in mind, thanks!
I was 16 when this song came out. It WAS OUR SONG!!!
Janis Ian broke the hearts of a generation with her simple, deep, and stark truth. This came out during my high school years. And it affected us all, boys and girls alike. How stunned I was to see her for the first time. This gorgeous woman describing herself as an "ugly duckling", who had hair I dreamed of running my fingers through. I had a mad crush on her back then. But for anyone to experience the painful rejections she describes, is such a tragic reality of youth. Thank you for reacting to this wonderful song!
You might want to check out her song that she wrote and recorded around the age of seventeen called "Society's Child " about interracial relationship...got banned on many radio stations.
She also received a lot of death threats after
I just read her autobiography which is also titled Society’s Child. She was 13 years old when she started writing the song, 14 when she finished writing it and 15 when she recorded. As well as getting death threats she also was spat at in the street and was sent letters with razor blades inside.
I was going to recommend this song also!
I listened to this song non stop in high school. Somedays it made me feel strong and not alone, others I would cry like a baby. Really touched a spot deep in my soul.
i think a lot of people relate to it that way !
Indeed. Not all are women.
@@tonydelapa1911 Well said Tony.
Same here.
Great reaction Britt. Janis is one of the best story telling artist from the 60's and 70's. She wrote about relatable stuff, some good writing I may add, and as you witnessed her vocal sound is soothing and lay back. Her song, " At Seventeen " hit #1 from the album "Between the Lines" in the Billboard Album chart 1975 landing her a Grammy. She was 24 yrs old at the time.
It kind of struck me here, that Janis Ian's "At Seventeen" is to young women as Radiohead's "Creep" is to young men.
Also, for those who didn't realize it, the goth girl in Mean Girls is named Janis Ian, after this singer.
This song hits you straight in your soul.
truly!
I loved this so much when I was young. I despised high school. I bloomed in college once all the oppressivenes of comfomity was stripped away. Hang in there young people. It gets better.
The real thing from it's first release - it had schoolmates talking those first couple of weeks as it played and everyone heard it 'for their first time'. There was also a sentiment among young women: "FINALLY! Someone speaks for US!"
This song was huge back in the day. It's just so relatable. Great reaction, Britt!
And this is live!
What a voice!
This was a hit song at the time. Very popular.
Janis Ian is iconic. This song is one I will always remember. Society's Child is the other I saw a lot in comments. That one came out just after my interracial nephew was born. I was almost 10 at the time. My sister loved Janis Ian for speaking the truth.
Janis is great!
One of the greatest writers that ever graced the page
I still tear up to this day when I listen to this song.
it is an amazing song!
So do I Kimberely cos that was definitely ME in high school in the '60s
The studio version is brilliant!
This is when songwriting really was at a zenith. Check out the lyrics of songs from Don McLean (American Pie and Vincent), and even the Eagles (Desperado and Hotel California.) The lyrics are incredibly deep.
The Eagles' lyrics to "New kid in town" are timeless, also.
Janis Ian and Billy Preston were the 1st music guests on Saturday Night Live in 1975.
that is so cool!
I was about to comment that ,,, and I remember that
Janis is one of the best songwriters of our time. Very underrated and under appreciated. She has soooooo many beautiful songs. All her albums are magnificent. I saw her in concert twice, she an amazing guitar player and a very nice person. I would recommend the song “ society’s child” , wich is about an interracial relationship. She wrote it when she was 15.
that is amazing! thanks for the info!
"Society's Child" is a must listen song from Janis Ian, dealing with a taboo issue back then ( late 60's, early 70's) of interracial relationships. Another song worth listening to from her is "The other side of the sun" (IMHO)..
Britt - Janis' lyrics tap into the painful experience many young people (both girls & boys) feel when navigating the transition to adulthood (and often beyond). Another incredible song I think pairs really well with 'At Seventeen' is Carly Simon's "That's The Way I Always Heard it Should Be" that just as poignantly addresses other emotional challenges of life. Both Janis Ian & Carl Simon are absolute treasures.
She performed this song on the very first episode of "Saturday Night Live" on October 11, 1975.
I can't imagine that you were not always a true beauty queen
THANK you for saying that, because I thought the same thing. In my comment above I told Britt that I was surprised that she related to this song because she is so gorgeous. I was also that girl at 17 back in the '60s that Janis sings about, and it still hurts today.
The most beautiful people I've ever known were as insecure as the rest of us, especially in adolescence... It was strangely comforting to learn that almost all of us felt like the awkward, unattractive kid in the room in some way.
I'm not trying to say it's equally hard for everyone, not by a long shot. Just that at this point when stunningly beautiful people talk about themselves this way, I'm not surprised and I don't doubt that they mean it 💜
However she felt at 17, Britt has grown into her beauty, that's for sure 👑
You would appreciate the movie "Hope Floats". She was the Homecoming Queen and how that impacted her view of the world. It shows her progression to finally finding herself, her place in the world and of course, love
I was in junior high when this song came out, and it became a huge hit. As an early teens white kid, I thought the lyrics were good and interesting, but years later I realized how absolutely powerful and relatable they are to so many people. What I did realize right away was her incredibly gentle yet soulful voice, and her other musical skills. Just an incredible, genuine, classic song. Great reaction Britt!
Poignant. Always a favorite song when it came on the radio, despite the painful truths, and still a beautiful song so many years after it first hit the top 40. So glad you've got so much going for your in addition to beauty, because the song wasn't long enough to mention the end of that beauty spectrum, when it fades with age. Thanks for sharing your reactions and for keeping great music alive!
This entire album is gold. Between the Lines has some of my favorite lyrics.
I will keep that in mind, thanks!
TRUST ME On This MUST HEAR Classic My Music Lovin' Sister,, Minnie Riperton "Lovin' You"...R.I.P. Minnie 🙏❤️
I love listening to Janice, have done for years, She is beautiful always has been and what a voice get that sound/voice out my head.
What a beautiful rich voice Janis has. A real song about the pains of youth that most of us felt
I had the great pleasure of seeing her in concert in London in 1991. This song was certainly a stand out moment, but there were others. 'Passion Play' and 'Jesse' are two that stick in the mind.
One of my favorite artists. Great song and I think your thoughts on it are spot on. I'd suggest checking out Society's Child, Jesse, From Me to You, Watercolors, This Train Still Runs, and Breaking Silence.
Watercolors was always my favorite of hers. It hardly ever is mentioned, glad you did.
Thank you for Reacting to this Britt.
I am 60. I remember hearing this when I was very young.
She has such a rememberable voice.
Steve From NZ
One of the most heartbreakingly beautiful songs ever written ♥️. It still gets to me at 55 years old.
You totally get it. I’m 71 and dying and it still makes me cry. Keep moving forward in your journey and you will continue to become the best you
I remember her singing this on tv. She has a beautiful voice. Always loved her!
Janis wrote some very deep story songs. I first heard her in 1967 and bought her album Society's Child. I think she was 14 when she wrote the song about interracial dating in the 60's. Powerful! I'm an old white guy who was 16 when the song came out and it still gets me emotional.
This song was very popular in the 70s. I know how much you love the 70s because I follow your page. You are really enjoyable to watch regardless what you’re reviewing keep up the great work your fantastic.
She turned into a beautiful woman as you have yourself. This was an anthem in the 70's for all us "not popular" girls.
and also for us unpopular and ugly duckling girls (including me) back in the '60s.
Janis Ian is a great singer-songwriter from the 60's-70's who dealt with serious issues. At the age of 14 Ian wrote & recorded her first hit single "Society's Child" 66/67 about an interracial romance that was looked down on by parents & others. Another big hit was "At Seventeen" in 1975 which talks about adolescent cruelty & the illusion of popularity.
Happy when saw you reacted to this. Knew u were gonna love it, course hard to believe you can relate 🙂 Tnx- like suggested below. Society's Child...
Oh I was hoping you’d do this❤️👏🏻
One of the greatest joys the age of social media brought me was the chance to tell Janis Ian how much this song meant to me when I was 16, 17, to be able to think "I am not the only one, someone understands" was a lifeline to me. I was 12 when this came out in 1975.
I know this song already, but it makes me think of other female folk singers from back in the day. Joan Baez, Joni Mitchell and Judy Collins. Try out Honest Lullaby or Diamonds and Rust from Joan Baez or Send in the Clowns by Judy Collins or The Circle Game, Both Sides Now and Big Yellow Taxi from Joni Mitchell. I also really like Counting Crows cover of Big Yellow Taxi and love Emilia Jones cover of Both Sides Now at the BAFTAs. I like it even more than the original and was playing that video on repeat for quite a while after seeing it. She also sung it in CODA a number of times (my favorite movie of 2021) Also, the singer Aled Jones is Emilia Jones' dad.
Absolutely love this song, Beautifully sad 😔 but healing at the same time because the song says we have all been there but there is more to life, beyond high school, "there is lots of world out there" (song " Put on Your Sunday Clothes") 🔥🔥
Glad you enjoyed it!
One of the most profound songs ever.....melodically, lyrically, emotionally, and every other feeling a person can muster.
Young Women were not alone with the feeling of emptiness at the awkward stage of life, when approval was desperately needed & never attained. I was a virtual nonentity in High School, much of my own doing, due to a lack of self-confidence. After a tour of duty in the US Navy, ironically begun at age 17, I emerged a changed Man, full of the knowledge that I was a person of value. When I attended my 20 year class reunion, finally a Man of some stature & accomplishment, the same Ladies who had ignored my existence, were suddenly flocking to my side to renew the acquaintance, that ironically, we had never had. I had flourished into Manhood, but more importantly, had allowed my self esteem to be seen by those who cared to look.
Such a great composer of so many songs with meaning! ❤
Good call about the tone. She’s not shedding tears about it; she’s just telling you what the real story is. You know it’s meaningful, but she’s also not going to give you the satisfaction of feeling sorry for her.
love that.
Janis has an extensive catalog of beautiful, touching, and brilliant lyrics and melodies. Keep immersing yourself in her music. I've met her, and she is every bit as kind and sweet as her music is.
This is a beautiful song…remember listening long long ago..❤
Society's Child, I was 14 years old when I saw here on TV in 1967, Loved her ever since, she was so brave, elegant and open.
I remember not liking this song when it came out, but over the years I’ve come to love it!
You might want to check out a song she wrote in 1965, "Society's Child," which she recorded when she was 14 years old. The song charted as high as number 14 on the Billboard 100 in 1967.
I was a Freshman in High School when this was released and it has always been one of my favorite songs. It captured the angst that every teenager felt...
wow..often hear my mom sing that song...i also know the song since i grew up hearing 60's 70's..thank you 4 this reaction video..love it..❤from the philippines..
This song is one of the best ever sung about that age and those insecurities. Also sang so well. An all time classic
Thanks for a wonderful reaction to an important message song, so relevant and timeless!
I knew the pain of being a self conscious acne plagued teenager, the song had always spoken to me.
Amazing woman with brutal insight and honesty.
I was just starting high school when this song came out and oh my, did it completely describe how I felt at the time. It helped to know that someone else felt the same. I think the song is timeless. I guarantee that this song would be as relatable today as it was then.
I love this song. My sister loves this song. I’m so glad you got to hear it.
Lovely reaction to a wonderfully touching song.💓 Janis Ian, still going strong five decades on...💓💓
glad you enjoyed it!
@@brittreacts Great Reaction and Thank You for not interrupting the guitar solo..
You are certainly a deep thinking and strongly compassionate individual.I admire you for honesty and realness.
Janis is an excellent songwriter, listening to more of her songs will make you smile big.
A unique artist broke much needed ground🎶🎶🎶🎶
truly!
Great reaction. It is a wonderful song - and her voice…
I was in high school when this record came out. So relatable. I follow her on Facebook now. She manages it herself. She’s fantastic.
Janis is epic. Incredible performer, incredible talent.
Beautiful song. Sooo relatable!
This song came out the year I graduated high school and I swear, it was like she was singing about me. It wasn't until after I graduated college and got out into the "real" world that I realized I had something to offer the world. Listening to it all these years later, I can see how high school is a mere blip in the arc of one's life but but this song can still make my eyes well up.
I have loved this song since first hearing it. We don't hear enough from Janis Ian. She was fabulous.
Love you as always, Britt. I saw her live at the Gaslight Cafe, in Coconut Grove, Miami in 1967 and I was very impressed. I was already a fan, and still am. She was so small, she almost couldn't reach over the Big Martin D-45 guitar she was playing and her picking style, was flawless, and mesmerizing, and her lyrics were piercing. Janis Ian is sorely missed.
I was 16 when this song was released. First it made me cry. Second do much to look forward to in another year. We had so much great diverse music! That’s what I’m so proud of from that period.
A beauty like you can understand this song. You are also beautiful on the inside.
I add my vote to society's child and any other suggestions. So many great songs. All from the heart
My mother sang this with us at home when i was a child. I never new who it was that sang it until now. If i thought about this particular song i would have asked her however as my childhood was filled with music i haven't thought of most of the music i sang and danced to with her in the 70's and 80's. Not when the house was never without music.
Thank you for helping bringing back a few nemories.
that is such a sweet memory! glad you enjoyed the video!
I learned this one on guitar. One of my favourites from back then.... and I was teenageTeenage male.
This song came out when I was a teenager. As a pudgy, nerdy "smart, goody two shoes", it really resonated.
I have always loved this song - and Janis Ian. Frankly, it's difficult to imagine that you can really relate to the song - you are so incredibly gorgeous. I wonder if she's going to write 'At Seventy' for a different persective. Love your reactions.
Loved your genuine reaction. :)
I cry ever time I hear this song. It is beautiful. 😪
it is beautiful!!
This song breaks me in two , my beautiful deceased sister loved and related to this song, never knowing how truly beautiful she was!!
'In the Winter' is another beautiful song of Janis.
'Fly to high' was a massive hit when I was a kid. Janis Ian is a great artist. Thanks for your reaction.
This song has a Bossa Nova sound. So beautiful and somber.
The rhythm she's playing is called Bossa Nova, it was a very popular soft Latin jazz style in the 1960's.
A classic, a kind of evisceration of the high school hierarchy that seemed so important...then.
I love this song ; the truth!
glad you enjoyed it!
She started writing songs at 13 and finished Society's Child when she was 14. It was about having a black boyfriend in the 1960s.
writing songs that young is insane she is so talented!
I was a teenager when this came out. I still remember the line “cheat ourselves at solitaire “.
Thank you so much for reacting to this amazing artist! If you enjoy this, I really think that you might enjoy listening to Joni Mitchell “Both Sides Now” however my absolute favorite from her (as well as my kids and their cousins in high school) is “Twisted”. (This is a fun, shocking and probably politically incorrect a bit now, but definitely worth listening to). She had so many great songs. I have no idea of how many awards she’s received for her work but it’s a whole lot. I do hope that you can enjoy whenever you can. Much love and appreciation from California. Btw Fyi, late bloomers are usually born in the fall and winter. Early bloomers are usually born in the spring and summer. I’ve tracked this for decades now and found it’s mostly true. Also Valentine’s cards used to be done for everyone when I was a kid, until I got to high school. My kids had to do this for a few years until the teachers realized that it was hurting some of the kids who didn’t get one. They thankfully stopped this “tradition”. Although I think it’s a good way to show kindness, it’s also a way to let someone know that they aren’t “in the group”, so to speak. Idk ? Great reaction and thoughts for this one. Still waiting for Fleetwood Mac and Stevie Nicks “On the Edge of 17”. You will love her hair and her costume was rather daring but beautiful back then. Enjoy!❤️🌈🍀🙏🏻😇❣️
Celine Dion covered this song about 10 years ago with a very emotional introduction and her very powerful voice.
It is such a wonderful song. The pain of being seventeen is so real. Still a child, but not quite an adult, the fear of the future to come. For me that was 60 years ago & I still remember the uncertainty.
Since you like Janis, you will also like Phoebe Snow who has an extensive song catalog. Start with her song Poetry Man.
I wore out that album! So beautiful.
Great reaction to this wonderful live performance from the Old Grey Whistle Test in 1976. OGWT was a much loved programme on the BBC. I really recommend "Breaking Silence" and "Society's Child" - really important songs.
I will keep those in mind, thanks!
A good honest song and another great reaction. For me this song reflects and foreshadows - things to come for Janis Ian in her search for love. That's all I'll say on this, as it's is not the time or place for more. She is very talented and great songwriter.
It’s shocking to the ear to hear such subtlety, draws you in. Everything now is so over sung. Refreshing indeed