KRIS KRISTOFFERSON
In the spring of 1970, Kris Kristofferson
played at the Bitter End in
Kristofferson and Neuwirth
stayed with Janis in Larkspur for a couple of weeks. In that time, all of them
hopped through the Sausakito bars and consumed
unending amounts of alcohol. Janis often complained about people staying at her
place, feeling that she was used for the benefits she could provide. "I'd
a split there," Kris protested. "I dug her, but I had itchy feet. I'd
get up intending to get out, and in she comes with the early morning drinks and
pretty soon you're wasted enough and you don't care about leaving. She'd
definitely let ya know when she was being abused, and
she thought so a lot. She was always jangling around talking about how
everybody was living off of her, but she had people she'd bring into the house
and then she'd bitch because she was giving them bed and board."
"Kristofferson wanted her to cut 'Me
and Bobby McGee,'" said James Gurley. "He was beginning to make waves
with his own career. It's not like that would be his only motivation for
hanging around her, but the money from a Joplin record would have come in
handy." That spring Janis had a look at the song. "I remember when he
introduced 'Me and Bobby McGee' to her," said Dave Richards, who was remodeling
the house. "When I got there that day, she said, 'Listen
to this song. This is a great song.' She was playing the guitar and sang 'Me
and Bobby McGee' to me."
In the month preceding Janis' death, she
had a conversation with Kris where she made a threat. "If it doesn't get
any better," she'd warned, "I'm gonna go
back on junk," and along with that had often talked of suicide. Kris had
naturally become very upset, and Janis, in response, had retorted bitterly,
"You won't be around. None of 'em will be."
In a later conversation, the subject of dope came up. He said, "Man, you
got everything going for you. You got a man you love; you got a producer you
love. Chicks, artists, never have either one. Why blow it?" Janis said,
"What's it all worth?"
After Janis' death, Kris Kristofferson
broke down in the studio when he heard "Me and Bobby McGee." The song
went on to become her only number one single.