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‘I Don’t Feel Any Urgency to Finish’
Bonnie Raitt on Her Groundbreaking Career

on February 25, 2022 No comments
Rebecca Milzoff

For more than fifty years, she’s seamlessly melded music and activism, inspiring contemporaries and newcomers alike with her guitar-playing prowess.

Bonnie Raitt resides among the redwoods.

She had always dreamed of living in Northern California like one of her heroes, Joan Baez, did, up in Big Sur. So years ago, once she had wrapped the tour for Nick of Time — her 1989 commercial breakthrough on Capitol Records that won her three Grammy Awards, including album of the year — she took a break and rented a furnished place in Marin County, outside San Francisco. She typically splits her time between here and Los Angeles. But for the past two years, the environment up north suited her especially well. “If I wasn’t going to get to play,” Raitt, 72, says today, verdant foliage encroaching on the window behind her, “at least I could hike and walk by the ocean and be near this incredible mecca of counterculture.”

It makes sense finding Raitt here. Marrying music and activism “is why I agreed to do this for a living,” she says. When she went to college at Radcliffe in the late 1960s, playing guitar was a hobby. “I was going to major in African studies and go work with the American Foreign Service and undo colonialism — yeah!” she says with a fierce little grunt. Amid the student strike of 1970, she fronted a ragtag band called the Revolutionary Music Collective. “ ‘The best things in life are free/When you take them from the bourgeoisie!’ — that was my hero line,” recalls Raitt with a laugh.

The gig was short, but the career Raitt would enjoy within a couple of years did become pretty revolutionary. Through her mentor, promoter Dick Waterman, she met and learned from the country-blues artists who were her idols — Son House, Mississippi Fred McDowell, Muddy Waters, Sippie Wallace — and became the rare woman of her era not only fronting a band but more than holding her own on guitar while doing so. Her slide guitar prowess, along with her casually confident stage presence and soulful alto, earned the respect (and friendship) of the men who were her closest contemporaries, like Jackson Browne and James Taylor.

Looking back now, Raitt is, characteristically, not ­terribly impressed with herself. “I mean, I was OK — I wasn’t that great,” she says with a shrug. “I was inexpensive, ­nonthreatening and interesting.” But she does admit that “it was an unusual thing to have a white woman — any woman — playing country-blues. I know having the chops of playing blues guitar got my foot in the door. I think I bypassed ­having to prove myself.”

Bonnie Raitt photographed on Feb. 1, 2022 at Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley, Calif.
© Gabriela Hasbun

Raitt achieved critical acclaim early on, and Warner Bros. Records signed her at just 21. But until Nick of Time — and, in the few years following it, her run of hit singles including “Something To Talk About” and “I Can’t Make You Love Me” that introduced her to a new generation of fans, the now elder millennials — commercial success wasn’t her calling card. By her own admission, she has always made her living on the road. Yet Raitt has unwaveringly stuck to her own artistic North Star and to the impulse that led her to music in the first place: using her voice to amplify causes like electing progressive political candidates, sustainable energy and environmental protection — she sets aside a share of her touring profits for them like “the sixth band member” — without ever letting them overshadow the music itself.

“She’s Bonnie Raitt — everyone knows that — but she’s created a community that both serves and benefits from her legacy,” says Brandi Carlile, who has developed a friendship with Raitt since writing to her as an admiring young artist early in her own career. “She’s absolutely beloved, she’s the greatest there is, and her talent absolutely dominates everything around it — but then why does everyone feel like they have a place [around her]? Like she’s the sum of her parts? It’s a superpower.”

And incredibly, Billboard’s 2022 Women in Music Icon Award recipient has done all that by and large as an interpreter, not a writer, of the songs on her albums — a fact that still can shock even a longtime fan. They all tend to sound like Raitt originals because she never simply sings a lyric; she inhabits it. “She was able to glean so much from these songwriters,” says Lucinda Williams, adding that she is often asked to play “Bonnie Raitt songs” that Raitt didn’t actually write. “She had good taste. When I first started out, it maybe held me back a little bit that I wanted to do so many kinds of music — rock and blues and country. But she did it, too, and she made it work. She was a great role model.”

One of those songs, from Raitt’s 1974 album, Streetlights, was by her longtime friend, the great singer-songwriter John Prine, who died from COVID-19 complications in 2020. Many artists have covered “Angel From Montgomery,” but it’s Raitt’s version that became definitive. It’s unsentimental yet deeply poignant, a plainspoken expression of longing for something more: “If dreams were lightning/And thunder were desire/This old house would have burned down a long time ago.”

She sang it for her idol Wallace, who told her of the many blueswomen who came before her, “stuck in marriages that were dead ends or being abused but had no agency to leave. Who couldn’t get free.” As a young feminist, she sang it for her mother, for her generation of women “who had to compromise and get no credit for the work they did and then later in life felt like they didn’t do enough.” Today, she sings it to honor Prine and for a whole different group of women around the world who, because of where they live or their circumstances, “don’t get a shot.”

The ones who, in other words, won’t get the chance to become a Bonnie Raitt.

“It was all I could do to try to sleep for seven hours — that’s how excited I was,”

says Raitt with a glimmer in her eye.

She has just come off three weeks in a Sausalito, Calif., studio with her band, prepping to tour her 18th studio album, Just Like That…, out April 22, and she’s positively buzzing. (Williams and Mavis Staples will join her as guests.) “It was like I was 8 years old every morning: ‘What am I going to wear today?!’ ” For Raitt — a die-hard road warrior who consistently fills theaters around the world — the past couple of years of never even being in the same room with her longtime crew were just crushing. “Night would come, and I’d go, ‘That’s it? That’s as cool as it’s going to get today?’ ”

Raitt learned very early on the value of delivering as great a performance in Topeka, Kan., as at Radio City Music Hall. Her father, John Raitt, was a dashing Broadway leading man in several classic musicals, but he never got too comfortable. “My dad chose to tour his hits regionally instead of just waiting for another Broadway show,” she recalls. “For him, bringing Oklahoma! and Carousel and The Pajama Game to the hinterlands was a life-fulfilling career that brought him great joy.” She also saw that without his proactive impulse to tour, he would simply be waiting for a call.

“I took that lesson to heart,” she says. “I can control which gigs I do, whom I open for, who opens for me when I get a little more famous, how much the ticket prices are, what to pay my band.” And when it came to a label deal, “I didn’t care if they offered me the moon — I would never let anybody tell me how to dress or what to record.”

Bonnie Raitt photographed on Feb. 1, 2022 at Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley, Calif.
© Gabriela Hasbun

Raitt spent the majority of her career at Warner Bros. and then Capitol before founding her own label, Redwing Records, a decade ago to release her music. (For Just Like That…, it’s partnering with Sub Pop for U.S. physical distribution and Alternative Distribution Alliance for global digital and ex-U.S. physical distribution.) All the while, she has managed to very much remain her own boss. In the late 1970s, after her version of Del Shannon’s “Runaway” became a hit, a bidding war over Raitt ensued between Warner Bros. and Columbia, which had been battling between themselves at the time. (James Taylor had recently left the former for the latter; Warner Bros. then signed away Columbia’s Paul Simon.) Raitt and her attorney, Nat Weiss, recognized her leverage — and renegotiated her Warner Bros. contract, “a really big deal” at the time, she would say later.

And while she doesn’t own her pre-Redwing masters, Raitt has worked out a “gentlewoman’s agreement” with Warner that she likes just fine: “They won’t sell my songs for commercials, and they won’t exploit my material without running it by me,” she explains. “I know I really serve at the good nature of the people who set that up for me, and at any point, some big monster could come in and say, ‘See ya later. If we want to use this for breakfast cereal, we will.’ But it kind of [works] better to work as a partner with your former label to maximize how you get your music out.”

That kind of calm rationale permeates how Raitt thinks about most aspects of her career, and as we talk, a kind of Bonnie’s Rules for Living seem to naturally tumble out of her. Take her advice for being an activist artist (a “radical when radical wasn’t cool,” as Carlile puts it): “It’s all about how you do it; making sure you vet where the money goes so people see you’ve really done your homework, and it’s the tone of it, too — I don’t preach from the stage.” Or her preferred vibe in the studio: “If you get the right people in the room, it’s work and it’s a joy. No idiots with bad attitudes, you know?” Or her approach to being a bandleader: “You have to risk not being liked to tell someone you’re not nuts about how they’re playing. If you don’t watch it, you push the Mom button, and nobody likes a bossy know-it-all. One thing that’s good about being in recovery — when I hurt someone’s feelings or squash their idea too soon, I apologize.”

Raitt has long been open about her past struggle with alcoholism, and her sobriety since age 37 informs another of her personal directives: how to stay not only active, but vibrant, 50 years into a music career. “All of us who are still out on the road, we didn’t used to warm up. Now we warm up our voices. We stopped trashing ourselves in our 30s, just about,” she explains. “You can’t keep up this pace if you don’t do yoga or hike or get some exercise. You have to get enough sleep. You have to keep people who are drains out of your circuitry and your life.” Getting sober “made a huge difference in how easy it is to be out on the road,” she continues. “But it’s a pleasure taking care of myself.”

Bonnie Raitt photographed on Feb. 1, 2022 at Throckmorton Theatre in Mill Valley, Calif.
© Gabriela Hasbun

On Just Like That…, Raitt certainly sounds like the best version of herself. Her voice has only become richer and more nuanced over the years, her range spanning a low purr all the way up to a floating falsetto, her ability to effortlessly bend a lyric to her will as supple as ever. “It’s show-based and what-I’ve-already-done-based,” she says of how she has always picked songs for an album: a few “killer ballads,” “a little bit of blues,” something unusual for the guitar and some “pile-driving rockers” toward the end.

Raitt produced the album, which, as usual, is studded with her hand-picked roster of songwriters (ranging from Al Anderson to her late friend Frederick “Toots” Hibbert of Toots & The Maytals), but also includes four originals by Raitt herself, the haunting title track among them. “More and more, the songs I’ve written lately are very personal,” she says. “I could farm it out to somebody more adept than I, but it’s nice to write on assignment. I don’t care if they’re not on everybody’s best-of list: They’re on mine.”

The subject of loss does come up — the close friends Raitt lost amid the pandemic and the heroes who took her under their wing and passed long ago. “But I knew being with those older people was such a gift,” she says. “They didn’t think about when they would go, and I didn’t think about it.” Like McDowell, Wallace and Prine, she has a life on the road she wouldn’t trade for the world. “To travel and wake up in five different cities a week and you’ve got to make sure you’re just as badass as the last time you came through?” she says, still sounding like a breathless 21-year-old. “It’s really fun!”

Bonnie’s Rules for Living, after all, don’t include stopping anytime soon. She always has a five-year plan, and when she is done touring Just Like That…, she’ll take a little break, and then the job will go on: time to think about the next record. “I mean, my dad toured till he was 86!” Raitt exclaims as if anything else would be plain lazy. “Look at Tony Bennett. Look at Mick and Keith. I don’t feel any urgency to finish. I feel like I’m pretty well understood, and I’ve felt understood this whole time.”

This story originally appeared in Billboard’s 2022 Women in Music issue, dated Feb. 26, 2022.

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8 Great Moments From Bonnie Raitt’s Steamy Summer Solstice Return to New York City at a New Peak in Her Six-Decade Career
"I love coming back to the Beacon," declared Raitt, opening a two-night stand at the Manhattan theater, touring behind her new charttopping album `Just Like That...'

on June 22, 2022 No comments
by Thom Duffy

On the evening of the summer solstice, the longest day of the year, Bonnie Raitt opened a two-night stand at New York’s Beacon Theatre Tuesday (June 21) with a performance packed with its own superlatives. It was the most funky, fierce, fun and heartfelt show you could ask for — from an artist who has just reached a new pinnacle in her six-decade career, with the April release of her most recent album, Just Like That….

Like the blues artists who became her lifelong inspiration, Raitt offered a set of songs that celebrated love, romantic and sexual; challenged death and the passage of time; and exuded resilience and joy. It is no wonder that she is revered by her fans, emulated by younger artists, like Brandi Carlile, and embraced by veterans, like Mavis Staples, with whom she has shared dates on this tour.

Bonnie Raitt

Beacon Theatre
New York City, New York
June 21-22, 2022

Bonnie Raitt Just Like That… Tour 2022 at The Beacon Theatre NY June 2022

Here are eight great moments from Raitt’s return to New York City.

The causes come first

“It’s activists I’m singing for — that’s my job,” Raitt told Billboard during her 2019 tour. Before a single note sounded Tuesday, fans in the theater lobby encountered organizers from the local chapter of the Sierra Club, the environmental organization with its roots in Raitt’s home state of California. They gathered signatures calling for greater action by New York State to fight climate change. Their presence was fitting. Raitt has credited her lifelong environmental activism, in part, to childhood summers she spent at a sleep-away camp in New York’s Adirondack Mountains, during the years when her father, actor John Raitt, was performing on Broadway.

A triumphant opening set

On this tour booked by Raitt’s representatives at the Creative Artists Agency, the opening artists include Staples, Marc Cohn and, for recent dates, Lucinda Williams, who is Raitt’s spiritual sister in the blues. At the Beacon, Williams’ band Buick 6 gave full bore backing to her vocals, which sounded as compelling as ever — despite the stroke Williams suffered in November 2020. The stroke has taken away her ability to play the guitar, for now, she told the crowd. “But that’s going to come back,” she declared, concluding her powerful set to an emotional, extended, standing ovation.

A magnificent red-haired presence

“I love coming back to the Beacon,” declared Raitt, as she took the stage with her five piece band to open with “Made Up Mind,” the lead single from Just Like That…, followed by “Waitin’ For You to Blow,” also from the new album that “we’re all really proud of,” said Raitt.  The 72-year-old singer looked simply magnificent, with her trademark cascade of red hair, fronted by a white forelock, wearing a luminous blue shirt and black jeans. “All of us who are still out on the road… we stopped trashing ourselves in our 30s, just about,” Raitt told Billboard earlier this year when she was named the Icon Award honoree at Billboard’s 2022 Women in Music event.  “You can’t keep up this pace if you don’t do yoga or hike or get some exercise.”

Bonnie Raitt at the Beacon Theatre New York City June 2022 © Paige Schector

Those who bring the funk

“All right, no more Mrs. Nice Guy,” quipped Raitt as she and the band powered into John Hiatt’s “No Business,” which she recorded on her 1991 album Luck of the Draw. Raitt’s signature sound is a mix of her bluesy vocals, her stinging slide guitar and the deep grooves of her stellar backing band. She took a moment early in the show to introduce her two new recruits —guitarist Duke Levine, who has backed Peter Wolf among many others, and keyboardist Glenn Patscha, whose B3 organ playing highlighted several songs — as well as her longtime colleagues, guitarist George Marinelli and “one of the baddest rhythm sections in the world,” bassist James “Hutch” Hutchinson and drummer Ricky Fataar. In front of Fataar, the drum riser was draped with the blue and gold Ukrainian flag. “That’s to remind us not to forget,” said Raitt.

Bonnie Raitt at The Beacon Theatre, NY June 2022 © Beacon Theatre

“Scared to run out of time”

Raitt sat beside Patscha to play the lead electric piano on “Nick of Time,” the title song from her massively successful 1989 breakthrough album, which led her to win three Grammy Awards (including album of the year) in 1990. “It’s hard to believe it’s been 30 years,” said Raitt. With the passage of time and the loss of loved ones, the lyrics she wrote and sang three decades ago were even more poignant: “Life gets mighty precious, when there’s less of it to waste.”

Empathy as deep as the groove

Raitt is not a prolific songwriter, but as evidenced by “Nick of Time,” when she does compose a song, it really counts. She absorbed the songwriting technique of creating, then deeply empathizing with characters in her song from her dear friend, the late John Prine — whose “unimaginable” loss was the greatest heartache of the pandemic for her, she told the crowd. Raitt credited Prine as she took up her acoustic guitar to perform “Just Like That…,” the title song of her album. It is a richly detailed lyric of a heartbroken mother who has lost her son — then meets the man who received the son’s heart in a transplant. “I lay my head upon his chest and I was with my boy again,” she sang. Prine would have been proud.

The pandemic’s shadow

The emotional toll of the pandemic sounded like a resonating chord through Raitt’s set, but often in counterpoint. Her new song, “Livin’ For the Ones,” co-written with Marinelli, was a rave up, a throw down and a shout out from a survivor:

“Livin’ for the onеs who didn’t make it

Cut down through no fault of their own

Just keep ’em in mind, all the chances denied

If you ever start to bitch and moan.”

“The healing power of music”

Prine’s classic “Angel From Montgomery” was his enduring gift to Raitt, which she has repaid by performing it as she did Tuesday night — with such emotion it was as if she were singing it for the first time. Raitt is a masterful interpreter of others’ compositions, as she proved once more in the closing songs of the show: a sensual drive through “Need You Tonight” from INXS; a fiery rendition of the Talking Heads classic “Burning Down The House” by David Byrne; and then a pair of songs she’d long since made her own — a soft torch-song take on “I Can’t Make You Love Me,” originally co-written by Mike Reid and Allen Shamblin,  and the upbeat show-closing “Not the Only One,” from Irish singer/songwriter Paul Brady.

Bonnie Raitt at the Beacon Theatre, New York City – June 22, 2022 © dianzoz (Instagram)

The common thread throughout Tuesday night was the artistry of this beloved musician who had returned to celebrate life in this moment with her longtime fans and friends.

“The healing power of music is an amazing thing,” said Raitt. “To have that experience with you again means more than I could ever say.”

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Bonnie Raitt and Lucinda Williams – Just Like That… Tour – June 2022

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Homeward Bound: A Grammy Salute to the Songs of Paul Simon
Bonnie Raitt, Garth Brooks & Trisha Yearwood, Stevie Wonder, Sting and many more performed Simon's songs.

on December 22, 2022 No comments

By Paul Grein

Paul Simon performs onstage during Homeward Bound: A GRAMMY Salute To The Songs Of Paul Simon at Hollywood Pantages Theatre on April 6, 2022 in Hollywood, California.
© Kevin Mazur /Getty Images for The Recording Academy

It’s not a surprise that Homeward Bound: A Grammy Salute to the Songs of Paul Simon, which aired (recorded April 6, 2022) on CBS on Wednesday Dec. 21, was so satisfying.

Paul Simon has long been regarded as one of our top songwriters. He won the 1970 Grammy for song of the year for “Bridge Over Troubled Water” and was nominated in that category for “Mrs. Robinson” and “Graceland.” He was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 1982 and received that organization’s highest honor, the Johnny Mercer Award, in 1998. In 2007, he became the inaugural recipient of the Gershwin Prize for Popular Song.

Many of the participants on the two-hour special spoke warmly about Simon’s songs. Elton John Elton John called him “one of the greatest songwriters of all time” and recalled early days when he and Bernie Taupin would sit “on the floor with our headphones listening to [Simon & Garfunkel’s] Bookends just in complete awe of the songs – the way you wrote the songs and the sounds. As a songwriter, you are the bees’ knees.”

Remembering his childhood home, Garth Brooks said “When your stuff was playing, our house was a sweet place to be in.” Herbie Hancock said, “Paul Simon is a truly global citizen of this musical world – a daring and visionary artist who is open to our entire musical universe.” Dustin Hoffman said, “Quite simply, The Graduate would not be The Graduate” without Simon’s songs. Sting, Oprah Winfrey, Sofia Carson and actor Woody Harrelson also paid tribute to the master songwriter.

The special included performances of 10 of Simon’s 14 top 10 hits on the Billboard Hot 100 (combining Simon & Garfunkel and solo releases). At the end of the evening, Simon said “It’s been a night of extraordinary and many unexpected pleasures. I’d really like to thank all of these artists. It’s really amazing if you’re a writer to hear another artist perform your song well. It really makes a songwriter feel good. It makes you feel like you wrote a good song.”

Simon’s first major hit, “The Sound of Silence,” includes a lyric, “People writing songs that voices never shared/And no one dared/Disturb the sound of silence.” As a songwriter, Simon has never known that feeling and never will.

Ken Ehrlich, who was the producer or executive producer of the annual Grammy telecast for four decades from 1980-2020, executive produced this special (and co-wrote it with David Wild). Ehrlich’s talent, taste and connections are a big reason the show was so compelling.

Here are nine of the most memorable performances from the special, which is available to stream on demand on Paramount+.

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Billy Porter with Take 6, “Loves Me Like a Rock”

Song history: This was the second single from There Goes Rhymin’ Simon. The song, on which Simon was backed by The Dixie Hummingbirds, reached No. 2 on the Hot 100 in October 1973.

Notes: Porter sang the song with evangelical fervor. He explained that as a gay kid who was raised in the Pentecostal church, he could relate powerfully to the song’s twin images of “a consecrated boy” and “a consummated man.” Porter said to him the song is fundamentally about a mother’s love. Indeed, many of Simon’s songs explore the theme of the parent/child relationship, including “Mother and Child Reunion” (which was performed on the show by Jimmy Cliff and Shaggy) and “Slip Slidin’ Away” (performed by Little Big Town).

Bonnie Raitt With Brad Paisley, “Something So Right”

Bonnie Raitt collaborate with Brad Paisley for the Recording Academy GRAMMYs Tribute to Paul Simon – “Something So Right” – April 6, 2022

Song history: This was also from There Goes Rhymin’ Simon. It was never released as a single for Simon, though it showed up as the B side of his 1977 hit “Slip Slidin’ Away.” Barbra Streisand recorded it on The Way We Were, which topped the Billboard 200 for two weeks in March 1974. Other artists who have recorded the song include Phoebe Snow, Annie Lennox and Yearwood.

Notes: Paisley (who had opened the show with a solid performance of “Kodachrome”) played bluesy guitar behind Raitt as she sang an exquisite version of this song. Raitt noted that “this song wasn’t a big hit single. It was just stunning and deep and true.” The song includes one of the most eloquent lyrical passages of any song in modern times: “Some people never say the words ‘I love you’/It’s not their style to be so bold/Some people never say those words ‘I love you’/But like a child, they’re longing to be told.”

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Rhiannon Giddens With Paul Simon, “American Tune”

Song history: This was the third single from Simon’s second solo album, There Goes Rhymin’ Simon. It failed to match the commercial success of the album’s first two singles, “Kodachrome” and “Loves Me Like a Rock,” both of which reached No. 2 on the Hot 100. “American Tune” peaked at No. 35 in January 1974.

Notes: “American Tune” is a hymn, really, and one of Simon’s finest songs. On the special, Simon noted that Giddens wasn’t even born when he wrote the song. But she related all the meaning of such lines as “And I don’t know a soul who’s not been battered/I don’t have a friend who feels at ease.” The song resonated amid the Vietnam/Watergate agonies of the early ‘70s and it resonates even more today after years of COVID and political turmoil. “It seems right to sing it today,” Simon said. 

Garth Brooks With Trisha Yearwood, “The Boxer”

Song history: This was initially a one-off single for Simon & Garfunkel. It reached No. 7 on the Hot 100 in May 1969 and was included on Bridge Over Troubled Water the following year.

Notes: Brooks took the lead on this faithful performance of the song, with Yearwood offering expert harmony vocals.

Sting, “America”

Song history: This ballad appeared on S&G’s 1968 album Bookends, but it wasn’t released as an S&G single until 1972, when the success of Simon & Garfunkel’s Greatest Hits (top five on the Billboard 200 in July of that year) reminded the industry of their potency. Prog-rock giants Yes had the biggest hit version of the song (No. 46 on the Hot 100 in September 1972).

Notes: It’s interesting that an Englishman chose to perform this song about searching for the soul of America, a song that was first released in one of the most turbulent years in American history. But Sting has a strong affinity for the song. ““God bless you, Paul for writing this great song,” he said. “I love it.”

Stevie Wonder With Ledisi, “Bridge Over Troubled Water”

Stevie Wonder performs during Homeward Bound: A GRAMMY Salute To The Songs Of Paul Simon at Hollywood Pantages Theatre on April 06, 2022 in Hollywood, California. © Christopher Polk /CBS via Getty Images

Song history: This power ballad topped the Hot 100 for six weeks from February to April 1970. It was both S&G’s biggest hit and the year’s biggest hit. It swept Grammys for record and song of the year. Aretha Franklin’s classic soul version reached No. 6 the following year – and also won a Grammy. Other artists who have charted with the song include disco star Linda Clifford in 1979 and Mary J. Blige & Andrea Bocelli in 2010.

Notes: Wonder and Ledisi built on Franklin’s classic soul cover version for this duet. Wonder introduced the song by calling it “one of the most beautiful songs ever written.” Wonder and Ledisi also performed S&G’s 1968 classic “Mrs. Robinson,” joined by the Jonas Brothers and Sheila E. Wonder and Simon have long shown mutual respect for each other. Wonder beat Simon for album of the year at the 1974 Grammy ceremony. When Simon won two years later for Still Crazy After All These Years, he famously remarked, “Most of all, I’d like to thank Stevie Wonder, who didn’t make an album this year.”

Paul Simon, “The Sound of Silence”

Song history: This tender ballad was Simon & Garfunkel’s first No. 1 hit on the Hot 100. It logged two weeks at No. 1 in January 1966. Disturbed’s crunching hard-rock version of the song reached No. 42 in 2016.

Notes: This was one of three songs that Simon performed to close the show, along with “Graceland” and “American Tune.” The song’s theme of disconnection is, sadly, timeless – “People talking without speaking/People hearing without listening.” The only thing that would have made this closing number it better is if Art Garfunkel had walked on stage to join his old partner.

Eric Church, “Homeward Bound”

Song history: This was Simon & Garfunkel’s second top five single on the Hot 100. It reached No. 5 in March 1966. Many artists have covered it, including Glen Campbell, who included it on By the Time I Get to Phoenix, which won the 1968 Grammy for album of the year (beating Bookends, as it happens). Simon performed “Homeward Bound” with George Harrison on Saturday Night Live in 1976.

Notes: Church offered a fine version of this ballad, which lends itself to a country spin (though it has never been a major country hit). He prefaced it by saying, “Paul Simon is a Mt. Rushmore songwriter and artist in my career – in my life, actually which makes this…terrifying.” The camera cut to Simon laughing at Church’s self-effacing remark.

Dave Matthews With Angélique Kidjo and Take 6, “You Can Call Me Al”

Angelique Kidjo and Dave Matthews are seen backstage during Homeward Bound: A GRAMMY Salute To The Songs Of Paul Simon at Hollywood Pantages Theatre on April 06, 2022 in Hollywood, California. © Kevin Mazur /Getty Images for The Recording Academy

Song history: This zesty song was the biggest hit from Simon’s Graceland album, which won a Grammy for album of the year and subsequently rose to No. 3 on the Billboard 200. The song reached No. 23 on the Hot 100 in May 1987 — Simon’s most recent top 40 hit.

Notes: Matthews, who as the announcer reminded us, was born in South Africa, sang the song on the special, backed by Angélique Kidjo and Take 6. The performers also delivered two other songs from Graceland, “Homeless” and “Under African Skies.”

© Chris Willman /Variety

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