Woke up it was a Chelsea morning
And the first thing that I saw
Was the sun through yellow curtains
And a rainbow on the wall
Blue, red, green and gold to welcome you
Crimson crystal beads to beckon
Joni Mitchell
In Chelsea, on New Year’s Day morning of 1966, I woke up with a throbbing head and a general, self-inflicted unwellness. I was lying on a carpet in a sitting room, fully clothed. Beside me was a man whom I dimly recognised from celebrations of the night before; he still slept, clasping unto himself an opened tin of Ind Coope 5-pint Pipkin.
What January light there was from a large window threw itself onto a wall, illuminating, bizarrely, pieces of a Beetle: a wheel-guard, door, an outside mirror, that sort of thing. Between the wall and window was a grand piano, its key lid open. A young woman entered, barely glanced at us, sat at the piano and began to play, vigorously. The light played on her hair, on the varnish of the piano and I was transfixed; noteworthy also was that she was clad only in her undergarments. I never remembered what she was playing. My carpet-companion woke, we looked at each other, at the pianist, then back at each other in dumb incomprehension.
After a while she stopped, looked down at us, said her name was Phoebe and that it was time we left. We arose, stumbled a little out into the street, mumbled goodbyes and trudged off to rejoin our lives, mine in a shared flat in Fulham Road. I never saw Pipkin man again. Or Phoebe.
It was a year before Joni Mitchell wrote the song. When later I discovered Joni Mitchell’s seraphic voice and especially ‘Chelsea Morning’, I immediately associated my morning’s episode with it, and assumed that her morning and mine took place in the same city. A few days ago, I looked the song up and was a little deflated to read that it referred, not to my Chelsea, but to the one in New York City; that Joni’s yellow light was of an East Coast summer and her rainbow was formed by the prisms of mobiles, handmade from cast-off stained glass.
It doesn’t matter that our Chelseas are not the same. What I have is another wistful connection cast by song, a sweet, cameo memory of my London life, sore head or not.
Lovely connection and her words and yours make it very visible.
Lovely connection. Her words and your make it very visible .