
PINK ME AND BOBBY MCGEE ALBUM MOVIE
Later that year, his version of the song appeared in Monte Hellman's psychedelic road movie Two-Lane Blacktop. Kris Kristofferson recorded his own version of the song on his debut album Kristofferson in 1970. The song was included on the 1970 Statler Brothers album Bed of Rose's, but was not released as a single. On the Canadian charts, Gordon Lightfoot's version (recorded in November 1969) hit No.

Kenny Rogers and The First Edition recorded the song in May/June 1969, and released it on their album Ruby, Don't Take Your Love To Town in 1969. Hall at twitter.Roger Miller was the first artist to record the song (in May 1969), and it appeared at No. "I think I'm probably a better producer today than I have ever been."įollow Kristin M. "If I don't know more at 85 than I did at 75, I am not learning very fast, am I?" Foster said. When she got to the middle part of 'Me and Bobby McGee' and she brought it down to the sweet and tender, I thought, 'Man, what a loss.'"Īt 85 years old, Foster is still an active producer and just produced a Ray Price tribute album for Willie Nelson, called "For the Good Times," that was released in September. "And I was a Joplin fan, but I didn't know that she could do anything but rock hard. "He drops the needle, and when that voice comes in, 'Busted flat in Baton Rouge,' I nearly fell out of my chair," Foster recalls. Foster had no idea that Joplin had also cut the song for her posthumous 1971 album "Pearl," until he talked to legendary producer Clive Davis, then president of Columbia Records.

"Then I started hearing it on the radio and I would just go crazy every time I heard that song," Eden said.īut the real turning point for the song was Joplin's cover. Kristofferson released his own version in his debut album "Kristofferson" with Monument Records in 1970. Kristofferson played the song for Roger Miller, a country-pop singer who was the first artist to cut it in 1969, and made it a Top 12 country hit. But I just thought it was the most fantastic song I had ever heard." Kris said he couldn't sing very good, but he'll try. "Fred came in and said, 'I want you to meet the real Bobby McKee and here's Kris Kristofferson to sing your song for you,'" Eden said, laughing. In Joplin's version, she switched the genders and made Bobby a man.Įden remembers the day that Kristofferson and Foster came into the office to sing her the song. Kristofferson apparently took his own liberties, changing McKee to McGee, and invented a road song story about a pair of travelers who drifted apart. In 1969, Foster called up Kristofferson with the song title idea with the hook that Bobby was a woman. "He was so intelligent, so gifted, so talented and he didn't sound like anybody I had ever heard," Foster said. After hearing some of his songs, Foster said he would only hire Kristofferson as a songwriter if he also signed a record deal. He had been trying to break through as a songwriter, even working as a janitor in a Music Row recording studio. Kristofferson was one of Foster's newest hires, a Texas-born athlete and Army veteran who loved William Blake. "It seemed like he liked to tease me a little bit and one day he said, 'I am going to write a song about me and Bobbie McKee," Eden said. Eden's last name was McKee when she worked as a secretary in the same office building with Foster when he and Kris Kristofferson wrote �Me and Bobby McGee.� Her name was the inspiration for the song. 22, 2016 photo, songwriter Fred Foster poses with Barbara �Bobbie" Eden, right, at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Nashville, Tenn. I think you're coming to see Bobbie,'" Foster said. "So I ran down about the fourth or fifth time this particular day and Boudleaux says, 'I don't think you're coming to see me at all. McKee, whose last name is now Eden, was a 29-year-old working as Bryant's secretary and went by the nickname Bobbie. In the 1960s, Foster moved his record label Monument Records from Washington, D.C., to Tennessee in a building owned by his friend and songwriter Boudleaux Bryant. singles chart in 1971.īut the real inspiration for the song came from producer and co-writer Fred Foster, who will be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame on Sunday along with Charlie Daniels and Randy Travis, and a young secretary named Barbara McKee.įoster helped launch the careers of artists like Kristofferson, Roy Orbison, Willie Nelson and Dolly Parton.

She recorded the song right before her death in 1970 and it topped the U.S. It's often misinterpreted as Kristofferson's love song to Joplin, because her bluesy rendition has overshadowed all other versions. "Me and Bobby McGee" is one of Kris Kristofferson's most famous and widely covered songs, with everyone from Janis Joplin to Pink putting their own spin on it since 1969.
