The last recordings Joplin completed were "Mercedes Benz" and a birthday greeting for John Lennon on October 1, 1970; Lennon, whose birthday was October 9, later told Dick Cavett that her taped greeting arrived at his home after her death. Joplin made an unlikely choice for the song she transformed into the birthday greeting for the ex - Beatle: Happy Trails composed by Dale Evans. On Saturday, October 3, Joplin visited the Sunset Sound Studios in Los Angeles to listen to the instrumental track for Nick Gravenites' song "Buried Alive In The Blues" so she could lay down vocals the next day. When she failed to show up at the studio by Sunday afternoon, producer Paul Rothchild became concerned. Full Tilt Boogie's road manager John Cooke drove to the Landmark Motor Hotel (since renamed the Highland Gardens Hotel) where Joplin had been a guest since August 24. He saw Joplin's psychedelically painted Porsche still in the parking lot. Upon entering her room, he found her dead on the floor. Interview_ http://youtube.com/watch?v=gKoIkfK18fo
She overdosed on heroin at the age of 27 while drunk on cocktails she had finished approximately an hour earlier at Barney's Beanery in West Hollywood. It is said that she purchased the heroin on Saturday afternoon in an effort to console herself when her boyfriend Seth failed to arrive for a scheduled date. Joplin bought the drug from "George," a man who made deliveries to her and other guests at the Landmark. The hotel attracted many drug users despite the fact that it was next door to the Magic Castle, which drew a very different crowd. George depended on a "taster" to cut the pure heroin with another substance, but the regular taster was out of town, and a substitute made the batch too pure. The same batch that killed Joplin also led to other deaths in Los Angeles. Unlike Gabriel Mekler, who had insisted that Joplin live with his family during the recording sessions for her previous album, Paul Rothchild seemed unaware of Joplin's need to stay away from drug-using people. To Love Somebody_ a montage http://youtube.com/watch?v=6vBTwx5gV-4 Summertime http://youtube.com/watch?v=mzNEgcqWDG4
During a conversation with the desk clerk of the Landmark Motor Hotel sometime that Saturday, Joplin told him not to put any phone calls through to her room phone. Her "friend" Peggy Caserta claims in her 1973 book Going Down With Janis that she tried to telephone Joplin that night but the desk clerk refused to transfer her call to the singer's room, citing "strict instructions from Miss Joplin" that no calls be put through. Caserta herself was a guest at the Landmark at the time, but she was partying elsewhere in Hollywood after having missed a meeting with Joplin just as Seth had. Seth was in Joplin's house in Marin County, California that night playing strip poker with a waitress he had just met. http://youtube.com/watch?v=lXBfIRmEeWI MOVE OVER.
Bobby Womack, Paul Rothchild, members of Full Tilt Boogie and others present at Sunset Sound Studios that night heard Joplin yelling angrily into the studio's telephone during a long-distance conversation with Seth, probably aware that he had cheating on his mind. Before and after the call she seemed to be in great spirits. Joplin even ate at a nearby Chinese restaurant with the group during a meal break. Peace of my Heart with a twist_ http://youtube.com/watch?v=tU771z8nGzs
Upon publication of Peggy Caserta's book three years later, someone connected with "George" knocked on her door and inflicted multiple knife wounds on the woman who answered. Though the book omitted George's last name, it described his looks and speech patterns, identified places where he made deliveries by car and explained that his customers telephoned him, as had Joplin. (This option was uncommon for drug-oriented hippies in the vicinity of the Landmark Motor Hotel at the time.) Unbeknownst to the assailant, his victim was not Peggy Caserta but rather a friend of hers who had never used heroin and had never met George. The friend made a full recovery. Down on Me_ http://youtube.com/watch?v=-RMg0anuc04
As Janis Joplin tried persistently to contact George on October 3, 1970 (she got no answer twice and reached him on her third try ) a color photograph of her smiling and wearing feathers in her hair graced the cover of Circus. Inside pages featured color images of her looking delighted with the musicians in Full Tilt Boogie. Unlike Jann Wenner, whom Joplin despised, Circus publisher Gerald Rothberg was not a hippie, preferred listening to classical music and ignored for many years lucrative offers to reprint the Joplin photographs or text. Little Girl Blue http://youtube.com/watch?v=827MulMwt2g
Joplin was cremated in the Pierce Brothers Westwood Village Mortuary in Los Angeles, and her ashes were scattered from a plane into the Pacific Ocean and along Stinson Beach. Her parents traveled from Texas to Los Angeles to make arrangements at Pierce Brothers; Mrs. Joplin had a sister, Mimi, who lived in Los Angeles and who had attended Janis' 1969 Hollywood Bowl concert. Mr. and Mrs. Joplin told a Los Angeles reporter they had "no comment for the press." The only funeral service they would allow was held at Pierce Brothers and attended by themselves and Mimi. Janis' younger siblings remained in Texas. Several weeks later the parents gave long interviews to Rolling Stone, the NBC news magazine First Tuesday and Janis' publicist-turned-biographer Myra Friedman. WORK ME LORD_ great song! http://youtube.com/watch?v=PkmmBa7wDG4