|
|
 |
Tickets
CONCERTS
|
Janis Ian Tickets
|
|
For Janis Ian Schedule or Janis Ian tickets availability click above link
|
 |
Tickets--Tickets.Com is one stop online shop to buy Janis Ian Tickets. Find detailed information to Buy Janis Ian tickets or to Buy Janis Ian CONCERTS tickets at our online store.
If you need Sports , Concert , Theater , Broadway Tickets ,SuperBowl, NBA, NFL, NHL, WNBA , Order online or call us today at 281-447-8833. You can see all your favorite events upclose and personal.
Use our search facility specially customized for you to get details of special hard to find events schedule infromation easily from comfort of your home. And once you are ready, order them with a click of a mouse or talk to us at 281-447-8833.
Do not have much time? No problem!! We will be happy to ship your tickets overnite right at your door.
Note : On-Line orders placed on the day of the show may not be filled. Please call us directly for 'same day' ordering and delivery options. We will be happy to help you. Thank you!
We appreciate your business and take great pride in serving you.
|
 |
| Janis Ian Schedule |
| Janis Ian Parking |
| Janis Ian Advance Ordering |
| Janis Ian Events |
| Janis Ian Refund Policy |
| Janis Ian |
|
Janis Ian (born on April 7, 1951) is a Grammy-winning American songwriter, singer and multi-instrumental musician.//Born Janis Eddy Fink in a Bronx hospital (she was raised in New Jersey), she changed her name while still a child. She had a successful singing career in the 1960s and 1970s, recording into the 21st century.At the age of 15, Ian legally emancipated herself from her parents and also wrote and sang her first hit single, the song "Society's Child (Baby I've Been Thinking)", which told the story of an interracial romance forbidden by the narrator's mother and frowned upon by her peers and teachers. Produced by melodrama specialist George "Shadow" Morton and released three times between 1965 and 1967, "Society's Child" finally became a national hit the third time it was released, after Leonard Bernstein featured it in a TV special titled Inside the Rock Revolution. The song's lyrical content was too taboo for some radio stations, and they withdrew or banned it from their playlists accordingly. Allegedly at least one radio station that played it was burned to the ground in protest. But that didn't stop "Society's Child" from becoming a hit. In the summer of 1967 the single reached #14 on the Billboard Hot 100, though in fact it was #1 or top 10 in several key cities across America.Apparently "Society's Child" was too hot for Atlantic Records as well at the time. Ian relates on her website that although the song was originally intended for Atlantic and the label paid for her recording session, the label subsequently returned the master to her and quietly refused to release it. Years later, Ian says, Atlantic's president at the time, Jerry Wexler, publicly apologized to her for this. The single and Ian's 1967 self-titled debut album were finally released on Verve/Forecast; her album was also a hit, reaching #12. In 2001, "Society's Child" was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame, which honors recordings considered timeless and important to music history
|
|