THE DAY HIS SONG WENT TO NUMBER ONE — IT DIDN’T FEEL LIKE A VICTORY. In October 1970, the world lost Janis Joplin. No farewell. No warning. Just silence where that wildfire voice used to be. A few months later, something almost unreal happened. A song she had recorded shortly before her death climbed all the way to No. 1. “Me and Bobby McGee” became her only chart-topping single. But for Kris Kristofferson, the man whose name would always be tied to that song, it did not feel like celebration. He first heard Janis’ version after she was gone. He once said he walked all over Los Angeles in tears, then later played it again and again in Nashville just so he could get used to hearing it without breaking down. That is the part people forget. Sometimes a hit record is not just a hit record. Sometimes it becomes the sound of someone who is no longer here. And when your words survive inside a voice that death has already taken, success stops feeling simple. It starts feeling like a memorial. Did this song ever make you emotional — even before you knew why?
The Day His Song Went to Number One — It Didn’t Feel Like a Victory In October 1970, the music…