Janis CRASHED the Rolling Stones Concert. Then Danced With Mick. On His Stage.
Janis CRASHED the Rolling Stones Concert. Then Danced With Mick. On His Stage.
She sabotaged their helicopter. She crashed their concert. She danced on their stage. MC Jagger never [clears throat] saw her coming. Now, I want to be straight with you about where this story comes from. There are a few blurry photographs, some concert footage shot from a distance, a handful of eyewitness accounts from people who were actually in that room, and decades of Janice fans, people just like you and me, piecing this together from interviews, memoirs, and concert records. We gathered all of it and what we found
is one of the most Janice Joplain things Janice Joplain ever did. November 1969, the Rolling Stones, a helicopter, a handful of chocolate bars, and 20,000 people at Madison Square Garden who had absolutely no idea what was about to happen. If you loved her, you are going to love this. To understand what Janice Joplain did to the Rolling Stones in November 1969, you have to understand what 1964 felt like in America. The British invasion arrived like a weather event. The Beatles, the Stones, the Kinks, the Who. Wave after wave of
young British men picking up American blues and rock and roll. Music born in Mississippi and Chicago and Memphis and selling it back to America in accents that made teenagers scream. For most Americans, it felt like a revolution. For some Americans, the ones who had grown up inside that music, it felt like something else entirely. The music the British bands were playing had not been born in London. It had been born in the Delta, in the juke joints of Mississippi, in the rent parties of Chicago, in the voices of
Bessie Smith and Big Mama Thornton and Muddy Waters and Howland Wolf. black American artists who had built something extraordinary and watched it travel across an ocean and come back famous in someone else’s name. The Rolling Stones had named themselves after a Muddy Waters song. Muddy Waters was still alive, still playing clubs, still being paid a fraction of what the men who named themselves after his music were being paid. Janice Joplain grew up in Port Arthur, Texas. She grew up listening to the same
records that the Rolling Stones grew up listening to. Bessie Smith, Lead Belly, Odetta, the raw, honest, unpolished music of people who had nothing to lose and everything to say. She had been told her whole life that she was too much, too loud, too strange, too everything. And she had taken all of that too muchness and pointed it directly at the music, the real music, the American music that nobody in Port Arthur, Texas wanted to hear a girl like her singing. She had earned every note the hard way.
So when the British invasion arrived and the world went crazy for bands singing in American English with British accents, Janice Joplain had opinions. By 1969, the Rolling Stones were the biggest rock band on earth. They had not toured America in 3 years. drug charges, legal complications, the specific chaos of being the Rolling Stones in the 1960s. When they announced the 1969 American tour, rock critic Robert Kriskow called it history’s first mythic rock and roll tour. They opened every night with Jump and

Jack Flash, closed every night with Street Fighting Man. McJagger pranced and strutdded and leared in ways that made 18,000 people forget their own names. He was extraordinary. He was also, in Janice Joplain’s opinion, singing in American English because he had borrowed everything from people who never got the credit. And Janice Joplain was not the kind of woman who kept that opinion to herself. Mark Farnner was the co-founder of Grand Funk Railroad. He and Janice moved in the same world in 1969.
Same tours, same circuits, same conversations backstage and in dressing rooms and on buses and in whatever vehicle happened to be available. He remembered one conversation in particular. They were talking about the British invasion. the way musicians talked about it honestly, directly without the careful language people use when they think someone is recording them. And Janice said what she thought. She said, and these are her words, “British invasion my ass, those guys sing in American English because we are
the only ones free. Those guys are born subject to the crown.” Farnner remembered laughing. He also remembered what she was doing while she said it. She was spreading chocolate across the seats of a helicopter. By November 1969, Janice was between configurations. She had left Big Brother in the Holding Company the previous December. She had spent 1969 touring with the Cosmic Blues Band, a tighter, more professional outfit that she had never fully made her own. The reviews were mixed. The crowds were
enormous. The drinking was constant. She was 26 years old and she was one of the most famous female rock singers in the world and she was trying to figure out what came next. The Rolling Stones 1969 American tour began on November 7th in Colorado. Janice Joplain was in Florida. Their paths were about to cross and Janice had already made her preparations. Florida, November 1969. The details of exactly how Janice Joplain came to be sitting in the Rolling Stones helicopter are lost to the particular informality with which
1969 kept its records. What is not lost is what she did when she got there. The helicopter had been fitted out like a motor home inside. Plush seats, comfortable, the kind of luxury that rock tours were just beginning to expect in 1969. Janice looked at those seats. She looked at the Florida sun beating through the windows. She looked at the chocolate bars she happened to have with her. And she made a decision. Here is what you need to understand about MC Jagger. In November 1969, he had a signature look. White satin
pants. Not white pants in the general sense. White satin pants. The kind of pants that announce themselves before the man wearing them enters the room. The kind of pants that require a specific and total commitment to the image they represent. MC Jagger in white satin pants was MC Jagger at maximum. MC Jagger. Janice Joplain knew this. Mark Farnner knew this. The Florida heat was approximately 95°. Chocolate melts at approximately 86°. Janice was good at math. She spread that chocolate across every plush seat in
that helicopter. Every single one. methodically, thoroughly, with the focused attention of a woman who had thought this through. Farnner watched her do it. He said she was talking the whole time, going on about British invasion, about American music, about who built what and who got the credit for it. Her hands were full of chocolate. Her argument was airtight. both simultaneously. That is who Janice Joplain was. She did not separate the political from the personal from the physical. She was all
of it at once, all the time. The Rolling Stones boarded their helicopter sometime after Janice had finished her work. There is no confirmed account of exactly what happened next. No photograph of MC Jagger discovering what the Florida heat had done to those plush seats. But Mark Farnner, who told this story decades later, still laughing, said that the chocolate had fully melted into the fabric. There was no way, no possible way, anyone sitting in those seats was going to escape it, unless, as Farner put it,
they put something down first. The image of MC Jagger in white satin pants in a Florida helicopter in 95 degree heat has lived in the minds of Janice Joplain fans for 50 years. Janice never took public credit for this. She did not call a press conference. She did not tell Rolling Stone magazine. She did not tweet about it obviously. But the point stands. She told Mark Farnner. She told the people she trusted. And she laughed about it the way you laugh about something that is both petty and completely justified.
Because for Janice, this was not really about MC Jagger’s pants. It was about muddy waters still playing clubs while the band named after his song rode in luxury helicopters. It was about Port Arthur, Texas, and everything she had been told she could not be. It was about the music. It was always about the music. 3 weeks after the helicopter. The Rolling Stones tour moved east across America, Colorado, Los Angeles, Baltimore. Every night, the same ritual. jumping jack flash, white satin pants, 20,000
people on their feet. The tour was on its way to becoming exactly what the critics said it was, history’s first mythic rock and roll tour. November 27th, 1969, Thanksgiving Day, New York City, Madison Square Garden. Janice Joplain was in the audience. She had a bottle of Southern Comfort. She had a front row position. And she had absolutely no plan to stay in her seat. Madison Square Garden on [clears throat] Thanksgiving night in 1969 was something to see. 20,000 people. The biggest rock tour in
American history. a city that had spent the year watching Vietnam and Nixon and everything else, ready for one night of pure noise. The Rolling Stones had brought Ike and Tina Turner as their opening act. This was not a minor decision. Tina Turner in 1969 was one of the most explosive live performers on the planet. The I Can Tina Turner review did not warm up a crowd. They detonated it. And on November 27th, 1969, they reportedly upstaged the Rolling Stones. The headliner of history’s greatest rock
tour upstaged by their opening act, an American act. Janice Joplain sitting in that audience would have appreciated the irony. Before we go any further, there is one more person you need to know was in that building. Jimmy Hendris, 27 years old, the greatest electric guitarist who had ever lived. Or so the argument goes, and it is not a weak argument. He had come backstage to visit the Rolling Stones before their set. He watched the show from behind Keith Richard’s speaker stack. November 27th,
1969 was also Jimmy Hendricks’s 27th birthday. He had less than a year left. Janice Joplain had less than a year left. Neither of them knew this. They were both in the same building on Thanksgiving night 1969. Both 26 and 27 years old. Both at the absolute peak of what they were. Tina Turner took the stage and did what Tina Turner did. She was 30 years old. She had been performing with Ike since she was a teenager. She had built one of the most physically demanding live acts in music history night after night after
night through sheer force of will and talent. When she sang, the room changed. Janice Joplain was watching from the audience. She had a drink in her hand. She had been drinking before she arrived. and she was watching Tina Turner, a black American woman, doing what black American women had always done, giving everything to a room and getting back a fraction of what they deserved. Something was building in Janice. It was building the way things build in Janice Joplain. Fast, loud, unstoppable. The IT Tina Turner set was coming to its
end. 20,000 people were on their feet. The IT Tina Turner set was coming to its end. 20,000 people were on their feet. The band was in its final minutes. Tina was doing what Tina did at the end, pushing harder, not pulling back, giving the last notes everything that had not already been given. and Janice Choplain stood up, not to applaud, not to cheer, to move toward the stage. Myra Freriedman, Janice’s publicist, was in the audience that night. She watched it happen. She described Janice as, and
these are her words, so drunk, so stoned, so out of control. Janice Joplain climbed onto the stage of the Rolling Stones concert at Madison Square Garden, uninvited, unannounced, in front of 20,000 people, and Tina Turner let her in just like that. No hesitation, no signal to security, no look of confusion or irritation from a woman whose stage had just been invaded. Tina Turner opened the setup and Janice Joplain was inside it. They sang Land of a Thousand Dances together. Disc and Music Echo, a British
music paper that was there that night, reported it the next day. They said it was incredibly exciting, even if Janice’s key wasn’t the same one the band was playing in. offkey, uninvited, drunk, and the audience loved every second of it. The Iicantina Turner set ended. The stage was cleared. The Rolling Stones prepared to take over. This was the moment the 20,000 people had paid for. The greatest rock and roll band in the world, as their tour manager had announced at every single show, MC
Jagger walked out. white pants, silk scarf, the specific electricity of a man who knows exactly the effect he produces and produces it deliberately. The crowd erupted, and somewhere in the chaos of that transition between the end of Tina’s set and the beginning of the Stones set, Janice Joplain did not leave the stage. The accounts of what happened next come from several directions. eyewitnesses in the audience, people backstage, the concert documentation that the Masel’s brothers were filming for what
would become Gimme Shelter. What they all agree on is that Janice got onto the Rolling Stones stage, and she danced with MC Jagger. Not for long, not with Mick’s full enthusiastic cooperation, but she was there on his stage in his show. The woman who 3 weeks earlier had spread chocolate across his helicopter seats was now dancing on his stage in front of 20,000 people. If you are a Janice Joplain fan, and I know you are, you are not surprised by this. The Rolling Stones were not pleased. They told Janice through whatever
channel was available in the chaos of backstage at a Madison Square Garden concert in 1969 that she was not to do that again. If she came back on stage, they would leave. Now I want you to sit with that for a moment. The Rolling Stones at their absolute commercial and artistic peak on the stage of Madison Square Garden threatened to walk off because of Janice Joplain. That is not the story of someone who disrupted a concert. That is the story of someone who had so much presence, so much uncontainable
force that the greatest rock band in the world felt genuinely threatened by her standing on the same stage. The Gimme Shelter documentary cameras were rolling that night. The Masel’s brothers, Albert and David, were filming the tour for what would become one of the most important rock documentaries ever made. Their footage shows the backstage world of the Rolling Stones 1969 tour. The chaos, the energy, the specific atmosphere of a machine running at maximum velocity. And somewhere in that footage, in the
blurry documentary grain of a 1969 camera, there are glimpses. Janice Joplain and Jimmy Hendris, both there that night. The New York Times called those shows the major rock event of the year. They did not know the most interesting thing that happened was not the Rolling Stones. It was the woman from Port Arthur, Texas, who refused to stay in her seat. After the stage incident, Janice did not leave the building. Of course, she didn’t. She positioned herself at the side of the stage, stage left, the
wings, the dark corridor between the performance and the backstage, and she watched MC Jagger perform. The man who had just told her not to come back on his stage, the man whose helicopter seat she had redecorated 3 weeks earlier. She watched him and she screamed at him, [clears throat] not in anger exactly, in the specific way that Janice Joplain expressed everything fully, loudly, without management, as if the feeling was too large for the container her body provided. The man who produced Gimme
Shelter remembered this specifically. He was backstage that night dealing with the film deal, managing the logistics of documenting a tour that had taken on a life of its own. And his memory of Janice Joplain at Madison Square Garden, the detail that stayed with him was not the stage invasion. It was Janice at the edge of the stage screaming up at Mick, drunk out of her mind. He said it was kind of sad. I want to push back on that. Not because it wasn’t messy. It was messy. But sad assumes that Janice Joplain
screaming at MC Jagger from the side of the stage was a failure of some kind. I think it was the opposite. Janice Joplain was 26 years old. She was from a small town in Texas that had never wanted her. She had taken the music she loved, the real American music, and she had given it everything she had every single night for 5 years. And here was the Rolling Stones, the band that had named themselves after a Muddy Waters song, selling out Madison Square Garden while Muddy Waters played clubs. Screaming at MC Jagger from the side of
the stage was not sadness. It was the most honest response available to her in that moment. Janice Joplain did not do dishonest responses. That was the whole point of her. That was always the whole point. Two performers, same stage, same night, same building. MC Jagger. Calculated, controlled, deliberate. Every move chosen, every moment managed. Janice Joplain. Uncontained, honest, present. Every feeling expressed, every moment lived. Neither approach was wrong. Both produced extraordinary music.
But they were not the same philosophy, and they were never going to be the same philosophy. One of them is still touring. One of them had 11 months left. On that Thanksgiving night in 1969, neither of them knew which was which. 6 days after Madison Square Garden, the Rolling Stones played Altimont. It ended in chaos and death. a free concert that was supposed to be Woodstock West that became something no one who was there ever forgot for the wrong reasons. The tour manager said later that Alultimont changed MC Jagger that it
changed his relationship to touring to the audience to the West Coast counterculture he had never fully understood. He described Mick as becoming more of a professional after that, more controlled, more business, less of the wild thing and more of the machine. Janice Joplain never became a machine. That was her gift. That was also her cost. After November 1969, Janice [clears throat] took a break. She went home to San Francisco. She stopped touring for 3 months. She tried to find the quiet she had
always had trouble finding. In February 1970, she went to Brazil. She stopped drinking, she fell in love with a traveler named David Kne House. She looked happy in the photographs. More settled than she had looked in years. She came home. She built a new band, the Full Tilt Boogie Band. She started recording Pearl. Pearl was the best work of her life. Everyone in the studio could feel it. Paul Rothschild, the producer, said the sessions were unlike anything he had experienced, not because of chaos,
because of clarity. She finished recording in early October 1970. She died on October 4th. The Rolling Stones are still touring. Mick Jaggers in his 80s. He still moves like the man who owned that stage at Madison Square Garden on Thanksgiving night 1969. He still sells out stadiums. Janice Joplain has been gone for more than 50 years. And yet, if you search for her tonight, if you put on piece of my heart or ball and chain or summertime, the room changes. That is not a small thing. That is the thing.
The music she made in 27 years is still doing what she built it to do. Reaching inside people, saying the true thing, refusing to be quieter than it needs to be. Muddy Waters died in 1983. He lived long enough to see his music recognized, the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, the recognition he deserved, but not long enough to see the full accounting of what he built and who it built. Bessie Smith, Big Mama Thornton, Lead Belly, the architects of the music that traveled across an ocean and came back
famous in someone else’s name. Janice Joplain knew their names. She said their names. She credited them when the industry did not always require that she credit them. The chocolate in the helicopter was small. The argument behind it was not small at all. November 27th, 1969, Thanksgiving Day, Madison Square Garden. A woman from Port Arthur, Texas, climbed onto the biggest stage in America that night, uninvited, offkey, completely and gloriously herself, and the greatest rock band in the world
threatened to walk off rather than share the stage with her. She had 11 months left. They had decades. But if you ask most people today, most people who love that era, most people who were there, most people who have spent their lives with this music, whose voice they still hear when they close their eyes, it is not the band that threatened to leave. It is the woman who refused to go. If this story meant something to you, subscribe, like, hype. We find these moments every single day, and we bring
them to you the way Janice would have wanted. Loud, honest, and completely unapologetic.
