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Review: Bonnie Raitt reconnects with her Philly fan base at the Mann

on June 16, 2022 No comments
by Dan DeLuca

The ‘Just Like That… Tour’ brought Philadelphia favorite Raitt to town behind her first album since 2016, and Lucinda Williams performed here for the first time since suffering a stroke in 2020.

The Bonnie Raitt and Lucinda Williams double bill at the Mann Center Wednesday spotlighted two women making music steeped in the blues who continue to create at a high level decades into careers of remarkable duration.

Raitt was the big draw, and for good reason. Her excellent, emotionally wrenching new album, Just Like That… is her first in six years. And the 72-year-old singer and slide guitarist extraordinaire’s special relationship with Philadelphia audiences reaches back long before 1989′s Nick of Time turned her into a superstar.

Raitt lived here in the late 1960s, when she played clubs like the Second Fret in Center City and learned from blues greats like Skip James and Mississippi John Hurt.

Her 90-minute set accompanied by highly accomplished longtime associates like drummer Ricky Fataar and bassist James “Hutch” Hutchinson — all of whom were introduced twice by Raitt, one of the world’s most gracious bandleaders — was a Philly love fest.

Bonnie Raitt performs “No Business” from her Luck of the Draw album during her “Just Like That… Tour 2022” stop at the Mann Center in Phila., Pa. on June 15, 2022. Bassist James “Hutch” Hutchinson is on the right. © ELIZABETH ROBERTSON /Staff Photographer

Early on, before a swaggering “No Business” from 1991′s Luck of the Draw that included a shout-out to the song’s writer, John Hiatt, Raitt said being at the Mann “feels like home.” She credited the Philly soul groove of the Nick of Time title track with changing her life.

And toward the end of the evening, after a beautifully rendered version of John Prine’s “Angel From Montgomery,” she called her relationship with fans “sacred” going back all the way to shows she played in Pennypack Park in the ‘60s.

(For the record, it was the second time Pennypack Park shows of yore were mentioned from the Mann stage in the last month. When Northeast Philly native Donna Rose Haim joined her daughter on stage, she mentioned seeing Hall & Oates there.)

Bonnie Raitt performs “No Business” from her Luck of the Draw album during her “Just Like That… Tour 2022” stop at the Mann Center in Phila., Pa. on June 15, 2022. © ELIZABETH ROBERTSON /Staff Photographer

For an artist with such a formidable catalog, Raitt put plenty of focus on her fine new material, playing fully half of the rock-solid and worldly wise Just Like That ….

Much of that was moving, including “Livin’ For The Ones,” a “Jumpin’ Jack Flash”-ish rocker written with George Marinelli, who, along with Duke Levine, is one of the band’s two sterling lead guitarists. That is, besides Raitt, who played precise, stinging, casually masterful slide guitar all night long.

The song mourned friends and loved ones lost, “not just to COVID,” Raitt said, but also chronological contemporaries that have died. It did so, however, by carrying on in celebration of their spirit, “livin’ for the ones who didn’t make it.”

Bonnie Raitt introduces the musicians in her band during her “Just Like That… Tour 2022” stop at the Mann Center in Phila., Pa. on June 15, 2022. © ELIZABETH ROBERTSON /Staff Photographer

More powerful still was the title song of Just Like That …., a Raitt composition partly inspired by Prine and based on a story in a TV news report about a woman’s first meeting with a man who received a transplanted heart from her late son.

Raitt delivered the song with forthright, fully engaged compassion and a tender ache that made the moment in the song when the woman hears her son’s heart beating in another man’s chest spring to life.

Like all the ballads Raitt sang, Mike Reid’s “I Can’t Make You Love Me” was also particularly good.

Williams’ opening hour-long set was her first area performance since the 69-year-old masterful storytelling songwriter suffered a stroke in November of 2020. A roadie walked her out on stage — and walked her off, after she closed with a blistering “Joy.” She did not play guitar at all.

But otherwise, her performance was unaffected. She fronted a terrific five-piece band that featured Stuart Mathis on guitar and Butch Norton on drums.

Special guest Lucinda Williams sings during the opening set prior to Bonnie Raitt taking the stage for her “Just Like That… Tour 2022” stop at the Mann Center in Phila., Pa. on June 15, 2022.
© ELIZABETH ROBERTSON /Staff Photographer

Like Raitt, she drew from the blues and other roots music idioms, but their approaches widely differ. Whereas Raitt’s ensemble is pristine, Williams’ band plays loose and dirty, leaning into country and causing a commotion well-suited to the hurt heard in the singer’s gloriously frayed voice.

Williams’ songs play like a travelogue of heartache, rambling around the American South. On Wednesday, she took the audience along to New Orleans in the swaying “Crescent City” (a new addition to the set that seemed to surprise the band).

And she delighted in the reciting of evocative place names in “Lake Charles” and “Drunken Angel,” two songs from her 1998 masterpiece Car Wheels on a Gravel Road.

The song most recently recorded by Williams in her set was also the oldest written: The reworked version of “You Can’t Rule Me,” a composition by the great Delta blues woman Memphis Minnie that dates to the 1930s and is the lead track on Williams’ fired-up 2020 album Good Souls Better Angels.

“You Can’t Rule Me” works as both a song of feminist empowerment and anti-authoritarian defiance. Its title was emblazoned on T-shirts for sale at Williams’ merch stand.

And it was also the second Memphis Minnie song sung in three days at the Mann. Robert Plant and Alison Krauss did “When the Levee Breaks,” the MM original that Plant’s band Led Zeppelin took to the bank, on Sunday. Long live Memphis Minnie!

A note about mobile phone policy during Raitt’s set. Photography was not permitted, and that warning was noted for the (vast minority) of people who held paper tickets. You could also learn it by scrolling all the way down on the concert’s page on the Mann website and clicking on “More info.”

But that messaging was not clearly delivered to the people in the seats, who have grown accustomed to to taking pictures and shooting video as they wish at the Mann and other venues.

That might be aggravating to other concertgoers and performers, but music fans have been taught that they’re allowed to do it. On Wednesday, there was no public address announcement that this show would be any different.

As a result, on Wednesday, security at the Mann were tasked with prowling aisles with flashlights, looking for concertgoers who dared to even take phones out of their pockets, much less hold them up to take a picture. It was overzealous, to say the least. If you want people to follow the rules, you need to tell them what they are.

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Source: © Copyright The Philadelphia Inquirer

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Bonnie Raitt’s Just Like That… Expands a Legendary Catalog
Taking stock of the blues and roots hero’s extensive career ahead of her visit to the Ryman

on May 25, 2022 No comments
Brittney McKenna

Releasing more than 20 albums during one’s career is an extraordinary feat in itself. But to do so with the spirit and virtuosity of Bonnie Raitt is another thing entirely. The beloved singer-songwriter and guitar slinger has racked up accolade upon accolade as her discography has unfolded over the past five-plus decades. She’s become one of blues and roots music’s most respected and decorated artists in the process. On her 21st LP Just Like That…, released in April — that count of 21 includes her two live albums, because they are no mere stopgaps — Raitt shows no sign of slowing down.

Just Like That… follows Raitt’s 2016 album Dig in Deep, a widely acclaimed record that, among other recognition, notched Raitt an Artist of the Year nomination at that year’s Americana Music Honors and Awards. Raitt’s 2012 album Slipstream, Dig in Deep and Just Like That… were all released via her own Redwing Records label, which she launched a decade ago.

Playing May 26 and 27 at the Ryman

Raitt recorded Just Like That… last summer in Sausalito, Calif., producing the album herself alongside recording and mixing engineer Ryan Freeland. Her studio band was a mix of longtime collaborators and new blood, including veteran bandmates James “Hutch” Hutchinson on bass and Ricky Fataar on drums. Relative newcomers Kenny Greenberg and Glenn Patscha joined the group on guitar and keys, respectively, while Raitt’s old friend George Marinelli lent guitar work to “Livin’ for the Ones.”

While most of Just Like That… is made up of covers, Raitt wrote four new songs for the outing. Highlights of Raitt’s original material include “Down the Hall,” based on a true story of a prison hospice program originally reported in The New York Times, and “Livin’ for the Ones,” which takes stock of the loved ones and collaborators Raitt has lost over the years with a mix of honest vulnerability and reverent homage. Raitt also pays tribute to those she lost in the album’s liner notes, including Toots Hibbert, John Prine and Allen Toussaint. “Down the Hall” in particular is a striking reminder that Raitt is a powerful lyricist, as the track takes the perspective of an inmate witnessing the last days of patients in the prison’s hospice ward.

Vocally, Raitt sounds as strong — if not stronger — as she did on landmarks of her catalog like “Angel From Montgomery” and “I Can’t Make You Love Me,” her naturally soulful voice bringing edge and gravitas to the album’s more serious moments. “Down the Hall,” for example, finds Raitt exploring a somber register as acoustic guitar and organ gently mingle beneath her voice. She can still rock and wail with the best of them, though, as heard on the achingly bluesy “Blame It on Me” and the arena-ready “Livin’ for the Ones.”

Raitt’s guitar chops are as fine as ever too, and on full display across the LP. Opening track “Made Up Mind,” written and first recorded by Canadian country-rock outfit The Bros. Landreth, serves up tasty slide licks atop soulful vocal harmonies and a groovy beat. “Blame It on Me” showcases Raitt’s understated rhythmic prowess, with a few bendy, bluesy flourishes for good measure. The title track allows space for Raitt’s more melodic playing, and “Waitin’ for You to Blow,” another of the LP’s Raitt originals, is a delightful mix of funky jazz chords, rapid-fire legato runs and creatively employed octaves.

© Marina Chavez

Releasing music isn’t all that Raitt’s been up to in 2022. In March, Billboard honored her as part of its annual Women in Music event, presenting her with the Icon Award. In April, Raitt received the Grammys’ Lifetime Achievement Award, the Recording Academy’s highest honor and one that has in the past gone to such artists as Tina Turner and Emmylou Harris. That same month, her 1989 album Nick of Time, which brought Raitt her first true commercial success, was added to the Library of Congress’ National Recording Registry.

Raitt is currently on a lengthy tour in support of Just Like That…, which stops for back-to-back nights at the Ryman on Thursday and Friday. The array of guests joining her on various dates include Marc Cohn and Mavis Staples, as well as NRBQ, whose “Something’s Got a Hold of My Heart” appears in grooving form on Raitt’s new album. Another icon, Lucinda Williams, will share the stage with Raitt in Nashville.

With an extensive catalog — stacked deep with both chart hits and fan favorites — to draw from, and a stellar live band to bring those songs to life, Raitt’s Ryman shows are sure to be live highlights of this year. Half a century into her dynamic career, she’s reached a status most musicians dream of but few ever reach: a living legend, still deep in her prime.

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Source: © Copyright Nashville Scene

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Just Like That: An Interview with James “Hutch” Hutchinson

on May 20, 2022 No comments
by Kevin Johnson

Blues and roots icon Bonnie Raitt recently released her 21st studio album, entitled Just Like That… Comprised of a mix of original songs and covers, the music is just as powerful and pensive as she has ever made.

The album features longtime bassist and session legend James “Hutch” Hutchinson. If you know Hutch, you know you’re in for tasty tones and a perfect pocket.

We caught up with him between the legs of Raitt’s extensive tour schedule and were lucky to hear about the album’s recording process, his favorite DI for recording, and playing with authenticity.

Just Like That… is available now on CD, vinyl, and as a digital download (iTunes and Amazon MP3).

The new album sounds amazing. Did you go into the studio, or did you do it all remotely?

No, we recorded it in Marin County last May and June. We went up there to do some rehearsing for the record and work out arrangements with Bonnie. Then we went ahead and cut the record up there, too. Ryan Freeland, who engineered it, came in and brought a bunch of gear from LA. We cut it in a couple of weeks.

Did it feel much different than previous records?

Sort of. Not everybody had been as active as I had during the pandemic. I think everybody stayed musical, but I don’t think everybody was playing all the time. So they were really ready to get in there and lay some stuff down, so to speak.

When we started rehearsing, it was all in January, February, and March of 2020 until the pandemic broke out. We were in the process of rehearsing and doing some warmup dates and getting ready to record in 2020.

Bonnie had most of the songs, at least the ones that other people wrote. I think she wrote a few and finished them during the pandemic, but for the most part, it was really a continuation of what we started. It was like we started it and took a two-year break.

It was fun. As I said, we did it in the Bay Area. I usually have more bases with me, but I really only had a few things up there. I pretty much had what I take on the road.

I brought my Lake Placid Blue ’63 L-Series P Bass that I’ve used on every record for 35 years. I’ve used that with Joe Cocker and Al Green… I’ve used that on a zillion records over the years. That’s what I used on “Made Up Mind”. I used one of Carey Nordstrand’s Acinonyx basses on the title tune and a few other songs. Those little basses are great.

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Lakland made me a short-scale bass, too. It’s funny that I used a lot of short-scale on the record. I’m using the Lakland on the road.

For an amp, I had my [Ampeg] B-15 there, then I brought a couple of DI’s up there that I like. One is an Ampeg tube DI, which is something I’ve always liked. I think I ended up using that more so than anything else.

It’s one of those big ones. They made them for about six months. I did an Ampeg SVT Time [livestream] a couple of weeks ago and we were talking about that. Why do these great pieces of gear have a limited lifespan? Because now those things, if you can find one, it’s like 1,800 bucks or something because they’re so rare and they’re such great DI’s. Ampeg’s talking about making one again. I love that thing and I use it a lot.

I also brought an Aguilar tube DI and might have used that a little bit. Then we were miking the amp, too.

Are you switching between DI’s much for different songs?

I have DI’s I like, but I always bring a backup. And then sometimes an engineer will like one DI better than another that may not be my choice, but you know, he has input as well.

But I really liked those Ampeg tube DI’s and I use that just on just about everything. Although right now I have one of those Reddi DI’s out on the road and a couple of other things, but that’s really pretty much for live stuff.

It’s funny… When they came out in the nineties, Ampeg gave me like four of them. They said, “Well, you work in a lot of different studios. Why don’t you sort of hand these out?”

I think they gave me five, and I kept just two, not knowing that they were going to discontinue them, of course. In the next year, they discontinued them, so I should have kept three because now you just can’t find them. I had one in a gig bag in my truck and somebody broke into the truck and stole the bag. So therefore it left me with one in the end.

I was at a friend of mine’s studio recently and I used a rackmount Messenger preamp/DI that he has, which is pretty great sounding. He said, “Hey, you want to try your Ampeg DI?” I said, “What Ampeg DI?” and he said, “Oh, you left one over here a really long time ago. I call it your DI.” So I guess if I wanted to pull rank, I could say I’ve got another one. I work in that studio lot and I forgot I even brought one over there. So he said, “Well, if you ever need that it’s yours.”

I have gear scattered all over the place. I have stuff in Boston. I have stuff in LA. I have stuff here [in Hawaii] and I have a couple of things in the Bay Area for when I work with Bonnie. All of that stuff’s on the road right now.

Your playing on the record is outstanding. I wanted to ask about a few songs. “Living for the Ones” has some nice sustained notes up on the neck that actually reminded me of The Who.

George [Marinelli], our long-time guitar player, wrote that. He’s a very Stones type of guy and he likes The Who. That high part that was on his demo and then Bonnie heard it a different way. And she said, “Oh, could you play this instead?” So then I tried playing it like she asked. By the time we finally got it, it was sort of like George’s idea and sort of like Bonnie’s idea, but it wasn’t really either one. It was something that I played that sounds like both of them without being verbatim.

And I think that’s what we do as bassists. We hear songwriters’ demos and [work with them]. Even with “Have A Heart” and some of Bonnie’s early stuff Ricky and I did with her in the eighties, they’re somewhat like the demos and if you were to ask Bonnie, she’d say it was from the demo, but it really isn’t. It’s all how you inflect that line and make it work within the rhythmic content that you have at your disposal and around the vocal. That’s what I really listen to with bass lines: vocals and drums. Everything else is incidental. [laughs] I try to play off the vocal and I try to play off the drums, as far as groove and feel and time. That’s going to alter any bass line that you have presented to you on a demo or a chart or whatever. What gives it personality and makes it stand out is the personality that you put into it.

No matter what we do, we all have little things about who we are that come out in our playing, about where we came from, and who we are. And that’s what one has to realize – you can’t play anything verbatim if you’re going to make it your own. I think that’s really important. In a way, you may think you’re playing it verbatim, but no matter what, [it’s your sound]. It’s like the Beatles when they were doing Little Richard. To them, they probably thought they sounded a lot like Little Richard. To us, they sounded like The Beatles. They were trying to emulate their heroes, but they ended up sounding like themselves. The best music is when you’re copping something, but you’re putting your own personality and your own experiences into what you’re playing, so you’re not going to play it like the demo. So a lot of those ideas came from the demos, but they ended up being nothing like the demos.

Speaking of locking in with the drums, another song I had on the list was “Waitin’ For You To Blow”. The note lengths and attack give a gnarlier feel that sits right in there with the drums.

That’s interesting because that’s a song that Bonnie had written on keys and had just a keyboard demo so there wasn’t a band demo. She heard it as kind of like West Coast jazz of the fifties, as in the Adderly brothers meet Eddie Harris type of vibe. Or a Les McCann thing.

She felt it in that way, and it ended up being a little more funk. There wasn’t a rhythm track on the demo. It’s really just her and a drum machine, so Ricky and I spent a lot of time on that arrangement.

Like so many of the things we do, they’re collaborative when it comes to the arrangement. As we play these things live more and more, they develop into the real personality of the song, and the parts really start coming out, in a way. When you’re making a record, people love them, but we live with those songs and we perform them live and they start growing.

That’s what is happening with that song, especially live because it leaves a lot of room for improvisation. I’m glad you noticed that you brought it up cause she’s pretty proud of that tune, and I think the band played it really well.

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I had the feeling someone was working hard on the arrangement because the way it drops into the shuffle beat is killer.

Yeah, and that was completely Bonnie’s idea to go into the shuffle there. It’s a bit of an homage to one of those early 70’s Sly Stone records, like “Hot Fun in the Summertime“ or all of those things. He used a lot of those shuffle beats when Larry Graham was playing bass and even later on, but he incorporated it into a funk thing and that’s what happens there. It’s cool and that’s become more prominent live when we do it. I think the first chorus is also a bit of a shuffle, but we don’t fully shuffle it. Anyway, it’s an interesting tune and we worked quite a bit on the arrangement, so I’m glad you brought it up.

I really loved your lines on “Here Comes Love” because they’re so syrupy.

I played and worked in New Orleans. That’s where I really cut my teeth, so that’s a very familiar groove to me. That’s also that same really old ’63 P Bass. It has a sort of George Porter honk to it, which I’m partial to. John Cleary is playing keyboards. Mike Finnegan’s also on it. That track was cut earlier on. It was one of those things that she wanted to record and hold onto for a minute. So I think that track was cut about four years prior to us cutting this record.

I love the way that you opened up and followed with the keys during his solo.

I think that was Cleary, so we do that a lot. New Orleans music is so conversational and that’s really what it’s about. You’re talking with somebody – you’re having a conversation with the music. Which is what you just brought up, you know, something, somebody says something to you you’re answering back, you know, and the best way you can.

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Bonnie Raitt is currently on tour in support of Just Like That… Be sure to catch Hutch on the road at a stop near you! Visit Bonnie Raitt’s website.

The video below from Ampeg SVT Time (April 2022) is added to this interview by Bonnie’s Pride and Joy.

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Ampeg SVT Time Live with James “Hutch” Hutchinson

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