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Raitt rates multiple ovations at Tent

on August 15, 2009 No comments

Cape Cod Melody Tent, Hyannis, MA, USA.

HYANNIS – If you were from Mars and had no idea why Bonnie Raitt sold multiple platinum records and had garnered nine Grammys, or why she sold out the Melody Tent almost as soon as tickets went on sale this spring, you only had to listen to her sing “Angel From Montgomery” at the tent last night.

Raitt’s voice is sure-footed. It can soar effortlessly and put emotion into even a spoken verse. It’s stripped-down, raw when it needs to be, but is also elegant, or bluesy, or hard rocking.

It’s the range of emotions she can convey from note to note that sets her apart.
Written by John Prine, “Angel” tells the story of a woman trapped in a loveless marriage, desperate for a way out, but realizing this might just be it. Raitt included the song on 1974′s Streetlights album, and even though she’s sung it countless times in a long career, last night, before a packed house, it was like she was singing the verses and feeling them for the first time.

With Raitt, there just doesn’t seem to be that filter between what she’s feeling and what she’s singing. Emotions just flow naturally from soul to voice. Which is what the blues are all about, and one can understand why she’s always had such an affinity for the genre. After moving to Cambridge in the late ’60s, she learned to play blues guitar and became an opening act for blues giants including Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker.

Last night, she introduced blues singer and musician Taj Mahal as one of her heroes. The pair had a natural musical rapport on stage, with the give-and-take of a man with needs, and the woman who knows what’s really on his mind. Both skilled musicians, they traded licks on guitars and went toe-to-toe vocally. They rocked on old blues numbers such as “I’m Built for Comfort, But I Ain’t Built for Speed” and had fun with songs including “Good Man Good Woman” and Taj Mahal’s “She Caught the Katy (And Left Me a Mule to Ride).”

But Raitt has a large catalogue of songs, and she took time to play some audience favorites from one of her best-selling albums. The band cruised on “Something to Talk About” from 1991′s Luck of the Draw, and on “Love Letter” from 1989′s Nick of Time.
Raitt is all about the power of sex and desire in the first flush of love, then the wistful longing for love when it fades. Her rendition of “I Can’t Make You Love Me” from Luck of the Draw was musical poetry. Somehow her voice can convey both the pain of lying next to someone in the dark, and realizing that the love you have will never be returned, along with the courage it takes to move on.

The night was a fun mix of genres, incorporating everything from country to reggae, jazz, rock, and of course, the blues. An appreciative sold-out audience gave back standing ovations on nearly every song.


Source: © Copyright Cape Cod Times

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Harmonic convergence
Full of mutual admiration and praise, two musical icons finally share a tour

on August 14, 2009 No comments
By James Reed – Globe Staff

Bonnie Raitt isn’t kidding when she forewarns that you probably won’t get in a word edgewise when she and Taj Mahal lock into a conversation. “We interview ourselves and occasionally let you guys have a question,’’ she says, laughing.

You can’t blame them, of course. These two have a lot to talk about, from fond memories of their early days in Boston to shared musical influences (blues legends and unsung ’60s singers like Judy Henske and Judy Roderick) to, maybe most of all, their mutual admiration.

After 40 years of friendship, Raitt and Mahal have just launched a new joint tour called BonTaj Roulet, which comes to the Bank of America Pavilion tomorrow. (Tonight’s show at the Cape Cod Melody Tent is sold out.)

Raitt, 59, and Mahal, 67, got their professional starts around here, but their paths never crossed. He was born in Harlem but grew up in Springfield and later attended UMass-Boston and vividly remembers playing at Club 47 (now Club Passim). By the time Raitt arrived in 1967 as a freshman at Radcliffe College, Mahal had cleared out to California, but they eventually met through Dick Waterman, Raitt’s mentor back then. Raitt befriended Mahal when she opened for him at Skidmore College in the early ’70s, and he ended up coproducing her classic 1973 album, “Takin’ My Time.’’

When we spoke last month, Raitt and Mahal hadn’t ironed out the logistics for their tour, aside from exchanging wish lists of songs they’d like to perform together. The show will feature solo sets from each artist, along with a 30-minute closing segment together. Raitt mentions they’re especially proud that they’ve tried to keep ticket prices low in this tough economy, and some proceeds will benefit social causes determined by fans’ feedback at www.bontaj.com.

Following is an edited transcript of our feisty, half-hour conversation that, just as she predicted early on, Raitt and Mahal deftly guided and turned into a history lesson on four decades of playing the blues.

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Bonnie Raitt and Taj Mahal find perfect harmony on tour

on August 12, 2009 No comments
By Matthew Oshinsky
Bonnie Raitt and Taj Mahal perform Tuesday night at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark © Scott Newton

You never know beforehand if a musical duet will work. Will the partners just seem like two musicians who happen to be in the same room at the same time?

Or will their chemistry make the collaboration special?

Tuesday night at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark, Bonnie Raitt and Taj Mahal, who shared the stage for much of the evening, proved they have chemistry to spare. Growling the blues in a gruff but amiable way, Mahal brought out Raitt’s playful, animated side; they both seemed to be having the time of their lives.

“I feel like Sonny and Cher,” said Raitt at one point.

“What recession?” she shouted out later.

Bonnie Raitt smiles on stage as she and Taj Mahal perform at New Jersey Performing Arts Center Aug. 11, 2009 – Newark, New Jersey, USA © Andy Mills /Star Ledger/Corbis

There were some serious moments in the show, too — most notably, Raitt’s heart-wrenching ballads “Angel From Montgomery” and “I Can’t Make You Love Me.” But the heart of the show was its collaborative numbers.

Mahal, who performed his own set at the start of the evening, reappeared during Raitt’s set for a mini-set of blues numbers that also included a cameo by influential blues guitarist Hubert Sumlin. Then he and his band joined Raitt and her band for most of the encores; for these numbers, there were 12 musicians onstage, including two drummers and two bassists.

The duets included the half-spoken, joke-filled “Tramp” (most famous as a Otis Redding-Carla Thomas duet); one of Mahal’s signature songs, “She Caught the Katy (And Left Me a Mule to Ride)”; “Love So Strong,” written by Toots Hibbert of the reggae group Toots and the Maytals; and Raitt’s “Gnawin’ On it” (with an added excerpt from Chuck Berry’s “Little Queenie”).

They also reached back to Raitt’s 1973 album “Takin’ My Time,” which Mahal co-produced, for the calypso-flavored “Wah She Go Do.” Raitt sang, with Mahal contributing backing vocals and maraca percussion.

Written by Calypso Rose, this is something of a feminist anthem, suggesting that cheated-on women cheat right back: “If he picks up an outside woman/Show him you could pick up two outside men/That’s the only way a woman should get some respect today.” Raitt sang it as if slyly giving advice to a friend.

Mahal opened the show with his own Phantom Blues Band, including saxophonist Joe Sublett and trumpeter Darrell Leonard, who are known as the Texicali Horns. His set ranged from a mellow, soulful “Farther On Down the Road (You Will Accompany Me)” to a playfully exasperated “Leaving Trunk” and a funky “My Girl Josephine.” On “Senor Blues,” he added some Latin rhythm to the mix.

After an intermission, Raitt took the stage with her own band, with the Texicali Horns joining them for songs like “One Belief Away,” “Love Sneaking Up On You” and “Your Good Thing (Is About To End).” Raitt said she has been idolizing and learning from Majal for decades, and praised him for “showing me where the blues could go.”

She closed her set with the upbeat, rocking “I Believe I’m In Love With You” and, before welcoming Mahal back to the stage, started her encores with “I Can’t Make You Love Me,” a devastating song about unrequited love. She mentioned that she had met children from a local music-education program she supports, Little Kids Rock, earlier in the day, and added, “It will be a long time before these kids find out what this song means.”

Raitt and Mahal, who have known each other for more than 40 years, never hit the road together before this tour, which they are calling BonTaj Roulet — after the Cajun phrase, “Laissez les bon temps roulet” (“Let the good times roll”). The tour began last week, and is scheduled to run until the end of September; Raitt has said she’d like to keep touring with Mahal, occasionally, under the BonTaj Roulet name, possibly with other musicians joining them.


Source: © Copyright New Jersey On-Line

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