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Mavis Staples’ 85th Birthday Salute Brings Out Chris Stapleton, Hozier, Black Pumas, Bonnie Raitt and Other All-Star Acolytes

on April 21, 2024 No comments
By Chris Willman
Chris Stapleton and Mavis Staples perform onstage during the Mavis Staples’ 85th All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California. © Taylor Hill /Getty Images for Blackbird Presents and Live Nation

If we had the ability to assess who is the most beloved figure in music — not in overall numbers, but sheer adoration, per capita and per peer — it likely wouldn’t be Taylor or Beyoncé but Mavis Staples, who has been taking us there since the late ’60s. There being the smile that crosses anyone’s face when fortunate enough to be in the same room, or even in just giving a passing thought to that voice, that presence, and all the different ways in which Staples embodies righteousness. The term “national treasure” doesn’t even begin to get at it.

With flowers-giving being a natural state of affairs for Staples at this point in her stature, drawing up a solid list of willing performers for a salute to the legendary singer probably doesn’t count as the most daunting task ever. An assemblage of musical greats in their own right gathered at the YouTube Theater in the greater L.A. area Thursday night for “Mavis Staples 85th: All-Star Birthday Concert,” a three-and-a-half-hour affair that had a roster including Hozier, Chris Stapleton, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne and Black Pumas performing on their own or, eventually, with the birthday gal.

Also on the crowded poster for the Blackbird Presents/Live Nation-produced concert were Jeff Tweedy, Nathaniel Rateliff, Norah Jones, Grace Potter, the War and Treaty, Taj Mahal, Robert Randolph, Keb’ Mo, Trombone Shorty and Michael McDonald … fronting a band assembled by Don Was and including such name players as Benmont Tench and Greg Leisz (plus her longtime guitarist Rick Holmstrom, who led Staples’ own touring band onto the stage for the very last stretch). The words “You Are Not Alone” — the title of a Tweedy-penned comeback song — were fairly applicable by the time the full cast came out to share “The Weight” at show’s end.

Bonnie Raitt and Mavis Staples perform onstage during the Mavis Staples’ 85th: All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California.
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Mavis Staples and Bonnie Raitt perform onstage during the Mavis Staples' 85th: All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California.
Bonnie Raitt and Mavis Staples perform onstage during the Mavis Staples' 85th: All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California.

Mutual admiration societies have a funny way of expressing themselves when Staples is in quip mode. When she brought Raitt out near the end of the show to sing “I’m on My Way” with her near the close of the evening, there was some fervent hugging, and Staples joked, “She grab me every chance she get.” Raitt explained herself: “You’ve got a secret. I wanna learn what that is.” Staples is probably one of the few artists around who could get away with saying to the singer and slide guitarist “Come on, little girl.” After their shared number, the legend kept calling out Raitt’s name and added, “Pops [Mavis’ father] used to say, ‘There’s a little piece of leather, but she’s well put together.’”

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Mavis Staples & Bonnie Raitt – Turn Me Around

Staples and Raitt nearly had a mild flirtation going on, and that seemed contagious. When Raitt was separately dueting with Browne, she had a moment of spontaneously blurting: “God he’s so good looking, isn’t he?,” noting that after all these years, she was “still looking at him, going, he’s still got it.” (“Bonnie’s still got it, too,” he replied, taking the compliment.)

Bonnie Raitt and Mavis Staples greet each other backstage during the Mavis Staples’ 85th All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California. © Taylor Hill /Getty Images for Blackbird Presents and Live Nation

Stapleton provided more contemporary firepower, hiding his from the spotlight under the shadow of his ever-present cowboy hat but letting his voice ring loud and clear alongside Staples’ on a moving duet of “Friendship,” first recorded by her father, “Pops” Staples, near the end of his life.

Hozier was the artist on the bill with the most heat in the present moment, with a song (“Too Sweet”) currently in the top 5. He also has some of the best bona fides for appearing at a tribute, since he wrote a song that in part pays tribute to Staples and then got her to sing on it — “Nina Cried Power” (named after another great singer who is name-checked in the tune), a single from his second album. Staples did not come out and reprise her vocal on that song, a duty that was instead ably taken over by the night’s backup troupe, the McCrary Sisters. In the absence of the guest of honor, he paid tribute to Staples as he does every night on tour, offering a spoken testimony about her historical impact.

“Artists like Mavis, in the words of WB Yeats, can hold in their work, in the same thought, reality and justice,” Hozier said. “And these two very often opposing things can show us a picture of our world, but also show us our love and the small things — it could be love between people, our neighbors — the small solidarities that hold our world together. One such example of that, a critical mass, obviously, was the civil rights movement. I say this every show when we play this song: The civil rights movement here in America that Mavis was in the center of directly inspired the civil rights movement in Northern Ireland… And there’s an Irish revolutionary by the name of James Connolly who once wrote that ‘no revolution is ever complete without its poetical expression.’ I just want to say, Mavis has always represented to me the poetical expression of the ongoing revolution of love and kindness.”

Mavis Staples’ 85th All-Star Birthday Celebration – Videos

Hozier has an earthy side to go along with his high-mindedness, as anyone who has heard “Too Sweet” can attest. And so he paid tribute to Staples having these different sides, too — and showed off his own latent, classic R&B inclinations — by following “Nina Cried Power” with a cover of the sexiest song in Mavis’ career, “Let’s Do It Again,” a No. 1 pop and R&B hit for the Staple Singers in 1975.

Hozier is of course not the first younger artist to make a point of finding ways to put Staples back in the limelight. Wilco’s Tweedy did it by writing and producing an album for her a little more than 15 years ago that put her in front of a rock audience. The two of them performed the most memorable song from that recording with the touring band she brought along to accompany her on the night’s final stretch.

“Tweedy wrote this song for me. What year was that? — oh-eiight — and it’s the most beautiful song I had ever heard. So we went on and recorded it, and it got us a Grammy.” At another point in the show, Tweedy sang without Staples in reviving another song he wrote for her, “One True Vine,” the title track of their followup collaboration in 2013.

Performing on his own, Browne told the audience about his discovery of Staples at a key early point in his life. “I always tell Mavis that she’s been with me my whole life, but actually, it was (age) 15 when I first heard the Staple Singers in my sister’s apartment in Height Asbury and it changed everything.” That was when he started finding my own voice and singing my own songs,” and Browne said he was performing his song “These Days” for no other reason than “it’s from that period in my life.”

Jackson Browne performs onstage during the Mavis Staples’ 85th: All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California. © Taylor Hill /Getty Images for Blackbird Presents and Live Nation

But he had a more tangible reason for following that with another original song, “World in Motion,” for which Raitt came out to share vocals and play slide guitar. “I recorded it with my band,” he said, “but a good friend of mine had the idea getting it to Pops Staples and having him sing it, which he did in ’92. And the person who had that idea was my good friend, my sister Bonnie Raitt. I’m always revising songs, they change all the time… but this is definitely my favorite version of this song, Pops Staples’ ‘World in Motion.’”

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Jackson Browne with Bonnie Raitt – World In Motion (Jackson Browne and Craig Doerge)

The two key members of Black Pumas, backed by the house band, did their own career-making “Colors,” along with a cover and a cover — the George Clinton-co-penned 1971 Funkadelic song “Can You Get to That,” which Staples and Tweedy adapted in 2013 for the “One True Vine” album.

Black Pumas perform onstage during the Mavis Staples’ 85th: All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California. © Taylor Hill /Getty Images for Blackbird Presents and Live Nation

Closing out the first act, before a brief intermission, Grace Potter covered a song from Mavis’ solo debut album of 1969, called “You’re Driving Me (Into the Arms of a Stranger),” and then emerged from behind her keyboard to explain what Staples meant to her. “This woman, she changed my life,” Potter said. “She made me see my future self and plan ahead for the woman I would become. And I want to play you that song that I wrote after meeting Mavis.” But, she cautioned, before playing “Big White Gate” (a 2013 song written about a woman becoming penitent as she approaches death), “I want to be clear, this is not a song about Mavis, because it’s not very complimentary!”

Grace Potter performs onstage during the Mavis Staples’ 85th: All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California. © Taylor Hill /Getty Images for Blackbird Presents and Live Nation

The husband-wife duo the War and Treaty were the only artist of the night to only do one number, perhaps to the audience’s slight disappointment — but what they lacked in minutes on stage, they made up for by slaying on one of the Staple Singers songs that almost anyone would most want to cover, “Respect Yourself.”

The War and Treaty performs onstage during the Mavis Staples’ 85th: All-Star Birthday Celebration at YouTube Theater on April 18, 2024 in Inglewood, California. © Taylor Hill /Getty Images for Blackbird Presents and Live Nation

Hozier was not the only performer of the night who’d been driven to actually name-check “Mavis” in a song, although his was not a literal tribute to Staples. He performed that original number from 2020 before covering another of the night’s cover-of-a-cover — Buffalo Springfield’s “For What It’s Worth,” which not everyone remembers that the Staple Singers did a near-instantaneous version of on a 1967 album (reaching No. 66 at the time on the Hot 100, a few years before the family group really broke big).

Trombone Shorty, a high point of Staples’ 80th birthday concert, came back to reach similar peaks for her 85th, playing “When the Saints Go Marching In” in the first half as well as sitting in with Taj Mahal and Robert Randolph for a jammy moment in the second.

Other highlights included Randolph’s “Baptize Me,” Mahal’s “You’ll Need Somebody on Your Bond,” “Will the Circle Be Unbroken ” and “Keep Your Eyes on the Prize,” McDonald’s “People Get Ready” and “Freedom Highway,” Keb’ Mo’s “Clap Your Hands” and “Have a Little Faith,” and Jones’ “To Live” and “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall.”

To answer one FAQ, the YouTube Theater event was not filmed for a planned broadcast, even though most all-star concerts put together by Blackbird Presents are; it was a true you-had-to-be-there gala.

Celebrating Mavis seems to be a quinquennial event in L.A., as it doesn’t seem all that long ago that Staples was being feted with an 80th birthday party for the public at downtown’s Orpheum, so here is already looking forward to her 90th, exact local venue to come.

Although Bonnie’s name isn’t on the poster she was there to celebrate! – Mavis Staples 85th All Star Birthday Concert – Youtube Theater, Inglewood, CA 4-18-2024

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Source: © Copyright Variety

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Review: Goosebumps, hankies and a standing ovation for an emotional but tired Bonnie Raitt in Minneapolis
It was the first theater appearance in the Twin Cities in this century for the longtime Minnesota favorite.

on October 12, 2023 No comments
By Jon Bream

Bonnie Raitt is one of us. Well, almost. We sure treat her like she is. And she reciprocates.

“I get emotional when I’m here,” she said on Wednesday night at the sold-out State Theatre in Minneapolis.

Then the memories started flooding in.

“The Triangle Bar, the Joint, the Cabooze,” the Rock & Roll Hall of Famer said, naming some of her old West Bank haunts. “They’re in my Rolodex of the trouble I caused. I came to roll around in joy for the five decades I’ve been coming here.”

By now, you’ve probably heard the back story. Ever since recording her debut album on Lake Minnetonka in 1971 with producer Willie Murphy, the California singer/guitarist has been a regular visitor to the Gopher State. Especially when her late brother Steve, an engineer/producer, lived here for three decades. She would come here to water ski, hang out and listen to live music.

On Wednesday, the chatty Raitt conducted a roll call of all her musical friends who were at the State Theatre: Maurice Jacox, Bobby Vandell, Melanie Rosales and Ricky Peterson, who has toured in her band.

Raitt, 73, has performed dozens of times in the Twin Cities — from her debut at the Whole Coffeehouse at the University of Minnesota to big gigs at Xcel Energy Center and the State Fair (eight times at the grandstand, 1990-2016). Last summer, she rocked the new Ledge Amphitheater in Waite Park, near St. Cloud.

  • Bonnie Raitt performs at the State Theater on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023 in Minneapolis.
    by Tony Nelson /Special to the Star Tribune
  • Duke Levine performs at the State Theater on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023 in Minneapolis.
    by Tony Nelson /Special to the Star Tribune
  • Glenn Patscha performs at the State Theater on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023 in Minneapolis.
    by Tony Nelson /Special to the Star Tribune
  • Bonnie Raitt performs at the State Theater on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023 in Minneapolis.
    by Tony Nelson /Special to the Star Tribune
  • Bonnie Raitt performs at the State Theater on Wednesday, Oct. 11, 2023 in Minneapolis.
    by Tony Nelson /Special to the Star Tribune

© Tony Nelson /Special to the Star Tribune

Surprisingly, the road warrior hasn’t appeared at a Twin Cities theater in this century. The last one was the Orpheum in 1998, not counting a 2013 charity gala at the Minneapolis Convention Center. The ever-popular star’s concert Wednesday at the 2,200-seat State Theatre sold out well in advance. (She probably could have filled it for a second night.)

It was the penultimate show on a two-year tour, and, frankly, Raitt seemed a little tired. While she was emotional in her conversation, she was maybe less so in her singing.

There were winning moments, though, including a bluesy and brooding treatment of Bob Dylan’s “Million Miles,” the bluesy, jazzy, Mose Allison-evoking “Blame It on Me” with Glenn Patscha’s crying organ, and her own acoustic guitar ballad “Just Like That,” a rivetingly poignant true story about a woman who lost her 25-year-old son but got to hear his heart transplanted in another man. (Raitt did not mention that “Just Like That” won the Grammy in February for song of the year and the Americana Music Award last month for best song.)

By contrast, Raitt’s version of INXS’ “Need You Tonight” (which she dedicated to the TC Jammers band at Bunkers) lacked its usual lusty vibes, and she and her four-man band’s timing was off during “Something to Talk About,” her frisky 1991 hit. However, the group found its groove when Raitt and veteran Boston guitarist Duke Levine, who signed on just last year, jammed briefly on the reggae-flavored “Have a Heart,” another early ’90s tune.

The 13-time Grammy winner explained that she gets verklempt whenever she sings “Angel From Montgomery,” John Prine’s remarkable reflection of an older woman stuck in a bad marriage that she recorded in 1974. On this night, it was seasoned with Levine’s mandolin and Patscha’s elegantly mournful piano before Raitt delivered the last vocal line with a hauntingly painful ache in her voice. Goosebumps, hankies and a standing ovation.

To change the mood, Raitt and her band — with its terrific and longtime rhythm section of bassist Hutch Hutchinson and drummer Ricky Fataar — tore it up on Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House.”

For the encore, Raitt downshifted to the ultimate heartbreaker, “I Can’t Make You Love Me,” her momentous 1991 piano ballad. When she raised her voice on the final chorus, the crowd cheered loudly. Patscha offered a sorrowful piano passage with a little classical flourish for the coda.

Raitt was so overcome that she told her band, “I can’t sing another sad song, guys.” So she skipped the planned piece on her set list and instead moved into the hard-charging 2003 boogie “Gnawin’ on It,” featuring opening act Roy Rogers on acoustic slide guitar. Finally, some genuine guitar fireworks as the two friends exchanged smokin’ slide passages.

For the finale, “Never Make Your Move Too Soon,” a Crusaders tune made famous by B.B. King, Raitt brought out Ricky Peterson from the audience. Currently part of Stevie Nicks’ band, Peterson unleashed some seriously funky organ that prompted Raitt to start dancing and jamming on guitar with Rogers. The giddy redhead looked like she was having as much fun as she did on the West Bank back in the day.

“I wish I could stay here for a month,” Raitt declared during the encore. Alas, she has one more show on the tour — “Austin City Limits,” television’s long-lived live music program.

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Bonnie Raitt pays tribute to John Prine, Paul Cebar, Hamm’s Beer at Riverside Theater

on October 11, 2023 No comments
Cal Roach

The first generations of rock and rollers didn’t have long-term career plans; maybe they hoped they’d die before they got old, or maybe they figured on some day getting haircuts and getting real jobs. Now in their 70s and 80s, many of these pioneers carry on performing well past they have any business doing so. Some do it for the enduring adulation, some because they never learned any other skills, some because they can’t afford not to.

Bonnie Raitt, on the other hand, may only now be getting her due. Sure, there were the splashes of pop stardom thirty-some years ago, and yes, there have been Grammys, but these accolades have only solidified her reputation as an AOR balladeer. Her sentimental hits weren’t enough to justify a packed, rambunctious Tuesday night crowd at The Riverside Theater.

Last year, the title track of Raitt’s latest album, “Just Like That,” beat out the likes of Taylor Swift and Beyoncé for the Song of the Year Grammy. It may not have added up to record-breaking stadium tours, but the acoustic tear-jerker showcased Raitt’s often overlooked lyrical prowess. She wrote the song in the wake of beloved country/folk troubadour John Prine’s passing, and true to form, Tuesday night’s show was full of tributes to musical heroes past and present.

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That list included a local legend as well. Following her opening trio of songs, Raitt told the crowd about her day exploring Milwaukee with singer/songwriter/WMSE DJ Paul Cebar and his family. “This is a really cool town,” said Raitt. “Paul is such an inspiration to me, and he’s such a great artist himself, but man, that radio show, I listen to it every week, it’s killer. The Milwaukee School of Engineering is the hippest tech school in the country, clearly.”

Other tributes included John Hiatt, who wrote “No Business,” a rocking deep cut off Raitt’s biggest seller, Luck Of The Draw; Bob Dylan, via a gnarly, grooving rendition of his “Million Miles” (plus a shout-out to Lucinda Williams, as both she and Dylan are playing Milwaukee this week); and Prine himself, on what would’ve been his 77th birthday. “Just Like That” did bring the whole crowd to its feet, but even more stirring was Raitt’s version of Prine’s “Angel From Montgomery,” which she plays every night. “There’s nobody better,” she declared. “There’ll never be anyone like him.” And of the countless people who’ve covered this song, no one has ever sung it better than Bonnie.

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The song selections didn’t hold many surprises, although “Waitin’ For You To Blow” made a return after being absent for most of the year; along with “Livin’ For The Ones,” it was a high-energy highlight of the show. And there was one tune you won’t see on any printed setlist: the Hamm’s beer jingle. “From the land of sky blue wa-aters,” Raitt sang to the crowd’s delight following “Nick Of Time,” recalling the commercial from her childhood. “Milwaukee, where is that? I was out in Los Angeles and it seemed so exotic to me. Bears paddling canoes?”

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Her banter was a big part of the night’s fun, but what will probably stick out most in people’s memories were the moments when Raitt’s voice itself held everyone captive. Her late-’80s career resurgence may have owed a lot to the production sheen of Don Was, but there was no trace of it at this show. Hardcore fans have plenty of legitimate gripes, whether regarding the virtually ignored first two decades of her career or her perennially underrated guitar prowess. Her reputation as an interpreter of a loosely defined Americana songbook, however, remains intact, and her encore rendition of “I Can’t Make You Love Me” was stunning. Like any legendary soul or jazz crooner you’d care to name, Raitt brought decades of life on the road to bear on this song, and the rest of the world fell away.

The definition of an artist “in their prime” also fell away, because as a singer, Raitt has never sounded better. Maybe her guitar playing was flashier in the past, but as performers, she and her band lacked for nothing at this show. The current tour is coming to an end this weekend, and all indications are it won’t be the last for the 73-year-old icon. “Then it’s back home, and grocery shopping, and cleaning my house a lot,” she lamented, “and wishing I was back out on the road!”

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Bonnie Raitt with Just Like That…Tour 2023 at The Riverside Theater, Milwaukee, WI – October 10, 2023

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Source: © Copyright Milwaukee Record

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