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Media Backlash to Bonnie Raitt’s Grammy Success
There has been a mixed media reaction to Bonnie Raitt's Song of the Year Grammy

on February 7, 2023 No comments
by Paul Cutler

Bonnie Raitt’s shock win in the prestigious Song of the Year category at the 65th Grammy Award, for “Just Like That,” was for many the triumph of the seemingly-lost art of crafted song-writing which reflects the trials and tribulations of ordinary life.

For others, particularly in the mainstream music industry, it was plain treachery

Rolling Stone magazine was among the first to react to the shock choice under a headline many might deem offensive: “WTF: Bonnie Raitt Wins Song of the Year”.

It began, somewhat condescendingly: “To be very clear, Bonnie Raitt is an absolute legend. “Just Like That” is a stellar song, and it’s amazing that she became the first woman over 50 to win Song of the Year in Grammy history.”

Rolling Stone, under a generic by-line, then opined: “That said, giving her the award over wildly popular future classics by Taylor Swift, Harry Styles, Kendrick Lamar, Beyonce, and the other nominees was a typical Grammy blunder, and one most likely fueled (sic) by name recognition for older Grammy voters.”

It added: “We thought the Grammys had moved beyond such bizarrely out-of-touch choices, but apparently not.”

Esquire deemed Bonnie’s win the “chaos vote.” Dave Holmes added: “It was already a weird night long before ol’ Bonnie swiped Song of the Year from Harry Styles’s “As It Was” and Beyonce’s “Break My Soul” with “Just Like That,” a song nobody had heard until sometime this morning, leaving us to wonder whether the win was a sort of lifetime-achievement situation for a longtime Grammy favourite, or just an expression of support for the Sex and the City reboot.”

Other perspectives were somewhat kinder.

The New York Times reaction came under the headline “Best Graceful Shocked Reaction: Bonnie Raitt.” Pop critic Jon Pareles commented: “She is one of the mature singers and songwriters who have been relegated to formats like “Americana” and “Legacy.” But Raitt has learned from the best – notably John Prine – how to tell a sad but uplifting story with a voice and a small band. Some proportion of Grammy voters – enough to lift her into a plurality above Beyonce and Adele – obviously recognised the combination of passion and terse craftsmanship.”

In Pitchfork, Sam Sodomsky continued this theme: “Inspired by empathetic story-telling of John Prine, it’s a simple song that surges with genuine emotion, human connection and the beauty of the unexpected. Fittingly, Raitt’s win for Song of the Year embraces those same qualities as she thanked the audience with visible surprise and a hard-won sense of gratitude.”

Indeed, in a most sincere acceptance speech, Raitt invoked the memory and work of her late friend John Prine, who died of COVID complications in 2020. She said: “People have been responding to the song, partly because of how much I love – and we all love – John Prine, and that was the inspiration for the music for this song and telling a story from the inside.”

Like many Prine songs, particularly in his early years, Raitt was driven to write “Just Like That” while reflecting on a real-life event which moved her emotionally.

In an interview with The New York Times prior to the Grammys, Raitt detailed how the slow, endearing “Just Like That” came to her: “And completely out of the blue, I saw this news program. They followed this woman with a film crew to the guy’s house who received her son’s heart. There was a lump in my throat – it was very emotional.”

She added: “And when he asked her to sit down next to him and asked if she’d like to put her head on his chest and listen to his heart – I can’t even tell the story to this day without choking up, because it was so moving to me.”

She translates the story to lyrical form by writing in the first person and setting a scenario whereby a stranger approaches the house of the grieving mother who lets him in because something about the man that puts her at ease. She then recounts his mission.

I’ve spent years just trying to find you
So I could easily let you know
It was your son’s heart that saved me
And a life you gave us both

Putting real-life stories into song is, of course, nothing new. They date back to great folk artists like Woody Guthrie and indeed his devoted admirer Bob Dylan.

Guthrie too was motivated by news stories when he penned his classic “Deportee (Plane Wreck at Los Gatos).” In January, 1948, Guthrie was appalled that most radio and newspaper coverage of a fatal plane crash in Los Gatos Canyon, California, had not given the names of the victims – apart from the crew and a security guard – but merely referred to the passengers as “deportees:”

Goodbye to my Juan, goodbye Rosalita
Adios mis amigos, Jesus y Maria
You won’t have your names
When you ride the big airplane
All they will call you
Will be deportees

Much of Dylan’s work in his early days around the clubs of Greenwich Village, NY, related to social issues and events of the day. Most of the songs were somewhat abstract in content, but among the more specific was “The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll,” off his ground-breaking 1964 release The Times They Are a-Changin.”

Dylan also saw the story in a newspaper. It was about the death of 51-year-old African American barmaid Hattie Carroll after being attacked by a wealthy tobacco farmer William Zantzinger in downtown Baltimore. Though not all Dylan’s facts were correct – he misspelt the assailant’s name – his song largely portrayed what he saw as a racist attack.

Got killed by a blow, lay slain by a cane
That sailed through the air and came down through the room
Doomed and determined to destroy all the gentle
And she never done nothing to William Zanzinger

Dylan later told a talk-show host: “The story I took out of a newspaper. I used it for something I wanted to say.”

And he said it best in the immortal chorus:

But you who philosophize disgrace
And criticize all fears
Bury the rag deep in your face
For now is the time for your tears

It was this very chorus which influenced Prine when writing one of his most endearing songs based on a real-life event.

It was some 14 years after Dylan’s “Hattie Carroll” that Prine released his dark tale “Bruised Orange (Chain of Sorrow),” based on his childhood experience when he was an altar boy at a Catholic church in Illinois. One Sunday morning, when he went early to shovel snow off the church steps before Mass, he came across an accident in which another altar boy had been killed by a local commuter train.

Like Dylan, we soon learn in lyrics the facts of the tragedy:

I heard sirens on the train track howl naked gettin’ nuder,
An altar boy’s been hit by a local commuter
Just from walking with his back turned
To the train that was coming so slow.

Then, as in Hattie Carroll,” Prine’s unusual chorus also preaches:

You can gaze out the window get mad and get madder,
Throw your hands in the air, say ‘what does it matter?’
But it don’t do no good to get angry,
So help me I know
For a heart stained in anger grows weak and grows bitter.
You become your own prisoner as you watch yourself sit there
Wrapped up in a trap of your very own
Chain of sorrow.

Raitt’s reference to Prine “telling a story from the inside” is no better personified than in one of Prine’s very early songs, “Hello in There,” from his 1971 debut self-titled album, which also includes “Angel from Montgomery” – a song Raitt would make her own with her majestic 1974 version.

Prine used another memory from his upbringing to write “Hello in There.” As a teen, he delivered newspapers in Chicago and his round would include an old people’s home. He later recalled: “When I was writing the song, I thought that these people have entire lives in there. They are not writers but they have a story to tell.”

So Prine chose to reflect on the stories of these elderly folk through the first-person narrative:

We lost Davy in the Korean War
And I still don’t know what for
Doesn’t matter anymore
Ya know that old trees just grow stronger
And old rivers grow wilder every day
Old people just grow lonesome
Waiting for someone to say, “hello in there hello”

The success of Raitt’s sorrowful “Just Like That” ballad is a timely reminder that there is still a place in the music industry for good old-fashioned, compassionate story-telling, even if it might be “relegated to formats like Americana.”

The Recording Academy should feel proud it chose a Raitt above a Beyonce! And it should not be intimidated by the multi-million dollar marketing machine which influences the mainstream music media.


Source: © Copyright Americana Music Appreciation

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Bonnie Raitt’s shocking Grammy win caps legendary career
The 'Something to Talk About' singer has earned 13 Grammys over 50-year career

on February 7, 2023 No comments
By Elizabeth Stanton , Larry Fink | Fox News

After winning a 2023 Grammy Award for song of the year, Bonnie Raitt reveals which artists have inspired her throughout her legendary career.
Bonnie Raitt accepts her surprise song of the year Grammy at the 2023 Grammy Awards.
© Christopher Polk /Variety via Getty Images

Bonnie Raitt took home a Grammy on Sunday for song of the year, surprising everyone watching, including Raitt herself.

The singer-songwriter was in a category stacked with younger, mainstream popular artists, including Taylor Swift, Lizzo, Adele, Harry Styles and Beyoncé. But it was Raitt who took home the trophy for her song, “Just Like That.”

After first lady Dr. Jill Biden announced her as the winner, the 73-year-old looked completely shocked.

When she took the stage for her acceptance speech, she remarked, “Oh my God. I’m so surprised. I don’t know what to say. This is just an unreal moment.”


She added, “I don’t write a lot of songs, but I’m so proud that you appreciate this one and what this means for me and for the rest of the songwriters who I would not be up here tonight if it wasn’t for the art of the great, soul-digging and hard-working people that put these songs and ideas to music.”

On Monday, Raitt took to Twitter, admitting she’s “still reeling” from the win. “So grateful to everyone who helped bring me to last night,” she wrote. “Thanks to the @RecordingAcad members who voted for me; to all the members of our mighty @Redwing_Records and support team: to my band, our brilliant engineer, Ryan Freeland..”

She continued, “and to my wonderful road crew—I thank you all for helping me get our music out to the world. And to all the friends, family and fans who lift me up with their steady love and support.

“And lastly, to @JohnPrineMusic and all the songwriters who keep inspiring and giving us the joy of sharing their music. I’m just bowled over..” Raitt concluded.

Bonnie Raitt and Taylor Swift pose during the 65th Grammy Awards. Raitt won Song of the Year over Swift in an unexpected win. © Kevin Mazur /Getty Images for The Recording Academy

Sunday evening marked the first time Raitt has ever been nominated as a songwriter.

In an interview with the New York Times shortly before the Grammys, Raitt said, “I put my heart and soul into every record, and I never know which ones are going to resonate. But I can tell people are really moved, looking out there in the audience.”

Earlier in the evening, she earned two additional trophies: best American roots song for “Just Like That” and best Americana performance for another song, “Made Up Mind,” giving her a total of 13 Grammy wins over the course of her career, including a lifetime achievement Grammy in 2022.

Bonnie Raitt winner of Best Americana Performance for “Made Up Mind,” Best American Roots Song for “Just Like That,” and Song Of The Year for “Just Like That” poses in the press room during the 65th GRAMMY Awards at Crypto.com Arena on February 05, 2023 in Los Angeles, California. © Jon Kopaloff /WireImage

Backstage at the Grammys, Fox News Digital spoke with Raitt in the press room where she shared the inspirations behind her music. “Starting in my 20s, people like Muddy Waters, and you know, til the end of his life, BB King, just sticking with it and keeping his band working,” she said.

She added to her list, including, “My dad. Tony Bennett. Aretha Franklin, Ruth Brown. All the Motown women … And to this day, touring with Mavis Staples is one of my absolute great joys and honors, because she has been, since I was 16 years old, such a hero to me. So, I would have to say right up there is Mavis Staples.”

Raitt was born into a musically inclined family. Her father was the late musical theater star John Raitt, known for his roles in productions like “Oklahoma” and “The Pajama Game.”

Bonnie Raitt with her father, John Raitt – Los Angeles, California, USA – 20 May 1981 © Bettmann /Getty Images

According to her official biography on her website, Raitt discovered her interest in blues at 14. A few years later, she moved east to attend Harvard, where she explored her passion for the genre at local coffeehouse gigs before dropping out to pursue music full time.

As she built an audience and drew attention for being, as her website says, “the young red-haired blueswoman,” she opened for several famous blues musicians, including one of her inspirations, Muddy Waters.

Bonnie Raitt performing as the opening act for The Byrds during a concert at Queens College – Flushing, Queens, New York, USA – March 21, 1971 © Harvey L. Silver /Corbis via Getty Images

She has expressed how grateful she is for the chance to speak with Waters and others, saying on her website: “I’m certain that it was an incredible gift for me to not only be friends with some of the greatest blues people who’ve ever lived, but to learn how they played, how they sang, how they lived their lives, ran their marriages, and talked to their kids.”

She added, “I was especially lucky as so many of them are no longer with us.”

Raitt released her debut album, the self-titled “Bonnie Raitt,” in 1971 to critical acclaim, and over the next several years she released eight more albums, featuring her signature blend of blues, rhythm and blues, and rock-influenced guitar and vocals.

Bonnie Raitt performs on the Jan. 28, 1978, episode of “Saturday Night Live” © NBC / NBCU Photo Bank

In 1989, she found mainstream success with her album “Nick of Time.”

“Nick of Time” earned Raitt her first Grammy wins, including album of the year, best rock vocal performance and best female pop vocal performance for the title track.

The album was so well received and impactful that in 2022 it was selected by the Library of Congress for preservation for it being a “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” work.

But “Nick of Time” wasn’t just significant for Raitt professionally. Before the album’s creation, she injured her hand in a skiing accident, and in the time she took off to heal, she also quit drinking.

In a 1989 interview with the Los Angeles Times, Raitt said, “It was almost like I wanted something to happen that would get me off the road because I couldn’t get on any kind of healthy program when I was spending six hours a day on a tour bus, and it seemed like every aspect of my life was unraveling.”

Three years after the success of “Nick of Time,” she scored her biggest mainstream hit with the Grammy-winning single “Something to Talk About,” which earned her a trophy in the best female pop vocal performance category in 1992.

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To this day, Raitt has worked continually, either in the studio or on the road, leaving little time for a personal life.

She married “Caddyshack” star “Michael O’Keefe in 1991, but the couple divorced eight years later.

Raitt also chose to not have children, instead focusing on her career and causes she cares about. In a 1998 interview with the New York Times, she said, “Having children is an incredible commitment. That’s why I chose not to. I feel that my job is to mother the causes that I’m involved in.”

Bonnie Raitt performs at Hyde Park on July 15, 2018, in London. © Brian Rasic /WireImage

Those causes include environmental and social movements, as well as honoring the blues legends who have influenced her. She has financed memorial headstones for musicians including Fred McDowell, Robert Johnson and Elmore James.

In 2000, Raitt was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In her speech at the ceremony, she said, “You can call it rock and roll … blues or R&B, to me, it’s all the same. Nobody gets up here who wasn’t obsessed, didn’t worry their parents, didn’t mess up their relationships, and if they did it right, probably their health as well. It’s the thing that still drives me most and always will. I’m never going to get enough.”

She also mentioned she hoped her induction “marks the beginning of a lot more women getting out of the kitchen and into the kick-a– fire.”

Bonnie Raitt reacts to fans as she accepts induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame on March 6, 2000. © Stan Honda /AFP via Getty Images

Raitt stood out throughout her career as one of the few women to front her own band and play guitar.

Rolling Stone put her on its list of the 100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time, praising her skill as a blues artist and noting, “When guitar was still considered a man’s game by many, Raitt busted down that barrier through sheer verve and skill.”

Bonnie Raitt at the 2023 Grammy Awards © Michael Buckner /Variety via Getty Images

She continues to inspire artists today — Brandi Carlile and Adele have both cited her as inspiration — and has no plans to slow down.

As she told Billboard in 2022, “I don’t feel any urgency to finish.”

Raitt already has tour dates listed on her website through October of this year.


Source: © Copyright Fox News

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Bonnie Raitt looks as cheerful as ever while out for the first time since shock Grammy win while out in Burbank
Blown away: 'I'm so surprised, I don't know what to say. I don't write a lot of songs but I'm so proud that you appreciate this one. I'm totally humbled' © Kevin Winter /Getty Images for The Recording Academy

on February 7, 2023 No comments
By Deirdre Simonds and Adam S. Levy For Dailymail.com

Bonnie Raitt was seen for the first time after unexpectedly winning Song of the Year over a a star-studded field of nominees at the 2023 Grammy Awards on Sunday.

While stepping out in Burbank, California on Monday morning, the 73-year-old blues singer looked happy and relaxed while showing off her lovely smile as she met up with friends.

Before preparing to catch a flight out of the Los Angeles, the I Can’t Make You Love Me hitmaker stopped to chat with some pals while rocking a black cowboy hat. 

She was dressed in a blue zip-up jacket, black sweatpants, matching sneakers and a pair of oversized shades.

Still smiling: Bonnie Raitt was seen for the first time after unexpectedly winning Song of the Year over a a star-studded field of nominees at the 2023 Grammy Awards on Sunday.
© Clint Brewer Photography /A.I.M./Backgrid
Beaming: Before preparing to catch a flight out of the Los Angeles, the I Can’t Make You Love Me hitmaker stopped to chat with some pals while rocking a black cowboy hat.
© Clint Brewer Photography /A.I.M./Backgrid

For her outing, Raitt wore her wavy auburn tresses in a low ponytail and opted not to wear any jewelry. 

The California native prevailed at the Grammys after beating out Adele, Taylor Swift, Lizzo, Harry Styles, Beyonce, Steve Lacy, DJ Khaled, GAYLE and Kendrick Lamar.

Raitt was presented Song of the Year by First Lady Dr. Jill Biden. 

Her victory marked the first time a song penned by a solo songwriter had been victorious since the classic Rehab from the late Amy Winehouse won in 2008. 

During her acceptance speech, she paid tribute to the late singer-songwriter John Prine, who died of coronavirus in April of 2020. 

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Raitt described her victory in the loaded category as an ‘unreal moment’ in honor of the track, which she said was inspired by organ donors, and the late singer-songwriter Prine. 

Raitt also cited songwriters in her speech, describing them as the ‘soul-digging, hard-working people who put these ideas to music.’ 

Raitt, during the Grammy Premiere ceremony earlier in the evening, also won the Best Americana Performance for Made Up Mind and Best American Roots Song for Just Like That. 

Winner! The California native prevailed at the Grammys after beating out Adele, Taylor Swift, Lizzo, Harry Styles, Beyonce, Steve Lacy, DJ Khaled, GAYLE and Kendrick Lamar in the Song of the Year category.
© Alberto E. Rodriguez /Getty Images for The Recording Academy

The triumphant evening brought Raitt’s total number of Grammys won to 13 over 30 all-time nominations.

Her most recent win at the show prior to Sunday came in 2013, when she collected the award for Best Americana Album for Slipstream.

Raitt said she was especially ‘proud’ to have been nominated for Song of the Year.

Wow: Bonnie’s victory marked the first time a song penned by a solo songwriter had been victorious since the classic Rehab from the late Amy Winehouse won in 2008 © CBS
Surprised: During her acceptance speech, she paid tribute to the late singer-songwriter John Prine, who died of coronavirus in April of 2020 © CBS

‘I’m always really proud to be acknowledged,’ she told People on the red carpet at the Crypto.com Arena. ‘To be acknowledged for song of the year this time is pretty big – so, for one of my tunes? That’s a big thing for me, so I’m very proud.’

Raitt – the daughter of Broadway performer John Raitt and pianist Marge Goddard – was 21 when she was signed by Warner Bros. Records, put out her self-titled debut album in 1971.

Her first Grammy nomination came at the 22nd annual Grammy Awards in 1979 for her Best Rock Vocal Performance, Female for her song You’re Gonna Get What’s Coming (Track).

Raitt had breakout success with her 1989 album Nick Of Time, which included singles including the title track, Thing Called Love, Have a Heart.

Raitt won her first four Grammy Awards with the success of the quintuple platinum album, in the categories Album Of The Year; Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female; and Best Rock Vocal Performance, Female.

She also took home the trophy for Best Traditional Blues Recording that year for the John Lee Hooker collaboration I’m In The Mood.

Her follow-up album, Luck of the Draw, in 1991 went seven-times platinum.

It spawned her highest-charting singles, Something to Talk About and I Can’t Make You Love Me.

Another for the collection: The triumphant evening brought Raitt’s total number of Grammys won to 13 over 30 all-time nominations. © Frederic J. Brown /AFP/Getty Images

Raitt won three more Grammys for her efforts on the record, including Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female for Something To Talk About; Best Rock Vocal Performance, Solo for Luck Of The Draw; and Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal for Good Man, Good Woman.

Her 1994 album Longing in Their Hearts featured the single Love Sneakin’ Up On You and garnered the Best Pop Album Grammy.

She has also collaborated with artists such as Prine, Warren Zevon, Jackson Browne, The Pointer Sisters and Little Feat, among others.

Raitt, who has released 21 albums in her career, said in a statement on her website that she prioritizes making music with a message.

‘I’m really aware of how lucky I am and I feel like my responsibility is to get out there and say something fresh and new – for me and for the fans,’ she said. ‘It’s really daunting not to repeat yourself, but I have to have something to say, or I wouldn’t put out a record.’


Source: © Copyright The Daily Mail

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