In the summer of 1967, the Newport Folk Festival was still the closest thing folk music had to church. Onstage that July weekend, two relatively unknown Canadians crossed paths and quietly rewired each other’s lives.
Leonard Cohen was a 32-year-old poet trying to become a songwriter. Joni Mitchell was a 23-year-old newcomer whose songs were already haunting other people’s records. Within a year their affair would be over, but its fallout would echo through some of the most celebrated songs of the era – and, indirectly, straight into the Chelsea Hotel with Janis Joplin.
Newport Folk Festival 1967: when the air crackled
Newport in July 1967 was stacked with talent: Joan Baez, Judy Collins, Tim Hardin, Fred Neil, Odetta, Phil Ochs and Tom Paxton all shared the bill. Into that mix walked a young Joni Mitchell, introduced by Collins and given a short set of her own.
Mitchell stepped up and played “Michael From Mountains,” “Chelsea Morning” and “The Circle Game.” According to eyewitness Lachlan MacLearn, the performance stunned the crowd and drew a long, roaring standing ovation – the kind of instant coronation that told everyone a major writer had arrived.
Leonard Cohen was still wrestling his debut album into shape in New York, a process producer Bob Johnston later described as painful. Biographer Sherill Tippins notes that sneaking away to perform “Suzanne” at Newport felt to Cohen like being “released from jail,” and it was there that he met the 24-year-old Mitchell. When the festival was over, he took her back with him to the Chelsea Hotel. For a few months, Canada’s most promising young folk singer and Canada’s most promising gloomy poet were an item.
Leonard and Joni: a brief affair that became a song cycle

Mitchell and Cohen’s romance has often been described as brief but intense. A MOJO feature on Mitchell’s early years describes how the affair bled directly into her writing: “The Gallery” sketches a weary lover who collects women like paintings, while “Rainy Night House” revisits a night in Cohen’s family home in Montreal.
That same piece recalls a friend asking Cohen, half-jokingly, “How do you like living with Beethoven?” Cohen later admitted he did not enjoy it, quipping, “Who would? She’s prodigiously gifted. Great painter too.” It is one of the rare times a male songwriter of the era publicly acknowledged being slightly terrified by a woman’s genius rather than treating her as a muse and a footnote.
Genius, ego and the plagiarism fight
Sylvie Simmons’s biography of Cohen adds more grain to the story. Mitchell initially cast herself as the student, asking Cohen for a reading list; he handed over Camus, García Lorca and the I Ching. She later said that when she first heard his songs she felt “young and naive” beside his worldly imagery.
Decades on, though, she reversed the judgment. In a 2005 remark quoted by Simmons, Mitchell said she had “briefly liked Leonard Cohen” until she realized he had “taken a lot of lines” from those very authors, which she found disappointing. She later called him “in many ways a boudoir poet,” admiring but also cutting, and suggested he stole too freely from books while she preferred to steal from life.
The gender politics are stark. Cohen turned lovers into elegant ghosts in songs like “Suzanne” and “So Long, Marianne.” With Joni, the tables flipped: he became the subject of “Rainy Night House,” “The Gallery,” “That Song About the Midway” and at least part of “A Case of You,” where she literally draws his face onto a map of Canada. For once, the mythic ladies’ man was the one pinned to the canvas.
From Newport to Los Angeles: living with Beethoven
After Newport and those early Chelsea nights, Cohen and Mitchell orbited each other across Montreal, New York and Los Angeles. Simmons reports that Cohen took her home to his mother’s house in Montreal, the setting Joni later reimagined in “Rainy Night House,” where a “holy man” sits up all night watching her sleep. In Los Angeles they were part of the same Laurel Canyon swirl as David Crosby, Graham Nash and others.
Asked years later by journalist Mark Ellen about that period, Cohen remembered a friend’s jibe about “living with Beethoven” and admitted, with a dry laugh, that he had not liked it because no one would. The line is funny, but it also concedes a hard truth: sharing a bed and a notebook with a genius who is writing the great breakup records of the age is not for the faint-hearted.
Crosby, who also had a brief affair with Mitchell, put it more brutally, comparing loving her to “falling into a cement mixer.” That image sums up the dynamic: she was easy to love and impossible to contain. For Cohen, who prided himself on control, that kind of emotional velocity must have been both intoxicating and threatening.
Songs as emotional shrapnel
Out of that less-than-a-year affair came a small universe of music. Mitchell’s songs do most of the talking. “The Gallery” dismantles the charming collector of female faces; “That Song About the Midway” shrugs off a lover who treats relationships like sideshow games. “A Case of You” turns him into a fixed point on her psychic map, only to admit that even a “constant” northern star can slide out of orbit.
Cohen’s side of the conversation is more oblique. He wrote his own “Winter Lady” and carried traces of Mitchell’s tunings and painterly detail into songs like “Joan of Arc” and “Famous Blue Raincoat.” The fascinating, slightly vicious twist is that while he rarely named names, Joni did – not in the lyrics, but in decades of interviews where she coolly unpacked his flaws. In an era when women were expected to be muses, not critics, that was almost as radical as any protest song.
| Song | Artist | Likely inspired by | What it captures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rainy Night House | Joni Mitchell | Leonard Cohen | A nocturnal visit to his Montreal home, part romance, part character study. |
| The Gallery | Joni Mitchell | Composite, with Cohen in the mix | A lover who “collects” women, then protests when she calls him heartless. |
| A Case of You | Joni Mitchell | Cohen and others | A portrait of an overwhelming, unreliable love written at almost biblical intensity. |
| Chelsea Hotel No. 2 | Leonard Cohen | Janis Joplin | A one-night stand turned into a confession he later regretted making so explicit. |
Janis Joplin and the Chelsea Hotel confession

While his relationship with Mitchell gradually shifted into a long, wary friendship, Cohen’s night with Janis Joplin at the Chelsea was much more abrupt. Most accounts place their encounter in 1968, when both were staying at the hotel between tours. In one oft-retold story, Cohen steps into the elevator, sees Joplin and asks if she is “looking for someone.”
She says she is looking for Kris Kristofferson. Cohen, fully aware he is several inches shorter, replies, “Little lady, you’re in luck, I am Kris Kristofferson.” They go upstairs together. The fling is brief, a single night and a few later meetings, but it stays with him. For Joplin it is one slam in the face among many; she later lumped Cohen and Jim Morrison together as prominent men she had chased because of who they were, only to feel that “they both gave me nothing.”
Cohen, by contrast, brooded on the encounter. He eventually wrote “Chelsea Hotel No. 2,” recorded for his 1974 album New Skin for the Old Ceremony, with its notorious opening line about remembering her in the hotel and a sexual act on an unmade bed. Far Out’s reconstruction of the earlier, abandoned version “Chelsea Hotel No. 1” shows an even rawer lyric, written closer to Joplin’s death, full of grief and anger at the music industry that only truly embraced her once she was gone.
Over time, the song became one of Cohen’s signatures, but also his biggest moral hang-up. In a BBC interview he later called revealing that the song was about Joplin “the sole indiscretion in my professional life” and said he hated “the locker-room approach” of attaching her name to such a graphic line. He went so far as to apologize “to the ghost” for having ever connected her publicly to the lyrics.
The irony is ruthless. Cohen routinely turned his love life into literature. Yet the only time he clearly identified a woman in a sexual lyric, he spent the rest of his career trying to claw the words back. Joplin, who prided herself on being nobody’s victim, might well have laughed it off. The fact that he could not tells you as much about his Catholic-Jewish guilt as any of his sacred imagery.
Three ghosts in one hotel room
Put side by side, these stories read like a darkly funny morality play about the 1960s bohemian scene. Cohen meets Joni Mitchell at Newport and becomes, briefly, the worldly tutor to a younger songwriter who will surpass him in emotional X-ray vision. He sleeps with Janis Joplin at the Chelsea and tries, decades later, to un-write the song that immortalized the moment.
Mitchell and Joplin refuse to stay trapped in his mythology. Joni answers Cohen not only in songs but in sharp public comments about his borrowing from Camus and Lorca. Janis dismisses their tryst as one more dead end in a string of powerful but disappointing men. Both women resist becoming just another notch in the troubadour’s notebook.
Yet the triangle also produced some of the most enduring recordings of the era. Mitchell’s later classic “River” and Cohen’s “By the Rivers Dark” show each artist still chasing spiritual and romantic escape through water, decades after Newport. Listeners who grew up with those songs may not care who slept with whom in the Chelsea, but the emotional charge behind them is inseparable from that tangle of beds, books and bad behavior in the late 1960s.
If there is a lesson here for music fans, it is not to clean up the story. Cohen, Mitchell and Joplin were flawed, hungry and sometimes cruel to each other, and that mess is in the grooves. When you hear the river songs, or the hotel songs, you are hearing three ghosts arguing forever about who got to tell the story first.



