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Blues legend Bonnie Raitt’s Minnesota-made debut album turns 50

on November 16, 2021 No comments
by Cecilia Johnson

Here’s something to talk about: Before becoming one of the best blues guitarists in the biz, winning 10 Grammys, and entering the Rock and Roll of Fame, Bonnie Raitt began her recording career right here in Minnesota.

In 1971, Raitt was a rookie artist with a Warner Bros. contract, and she flew to Minnesota to record her self-titled debut album. Backed by members of West Bank band Willie and the Bumblebees, Raitt and a few other friends spent a lazy August swimming, playing volleyball, and recording a free-spirited, self-titled debut. (An episode of The Current Rewind podcast provides an oral history of those days, featuring interviews with Raitt and her collaborators.)

Here’s a track-by-track look at the enduring power of Bonnie Raitt around its 50th anniversary.

Bluebird

“I fell in love with R&B and rock and roll at the same time as a little kid,” Bonnie Raitt told Ann Powers in 2012. As a 21-year-old, Raitt mashed up both genres in this bluesy Buffalo Springfield cover, which boosts the original’s energy with a piano glissando, a gang vocal breakdown, and saxophone hoots.

Mighty Tight Woman

Raitt covered two Sippie Wallace songs on this album: “Mighty Tight Woman” and “Women Be Wise.” Wallace was a blues singer and pianist known as “The Texas Nightingale.” Most active in secular music in the 1920s, Wallace earned Raitt’s admiration and several invitations to perform with her on stage. In “Mighty Tight Woman,” Raitt uses her clear-as-a-bird voice to sing sultry lyrics, staying true to her own style while paying homage to a fantastic singer and songwriter.

Thank You

This song is Bonnie Raitt’s most popular nowadays; its 16 million Spotify plays dwarf the rest of the album’s play counts, which hover around 1 million per song. “Thank You” is one of the few tunes that Bonnie herself wrote for the album, and it’s a gentle love song featuring flute and gorgeous vocals.

Finest Lovin’ Man

“Finest Lovin’ Man” reeks of blues stank, thanks to a wailing harmonica and piano twirls. Raitt and producer Willie Murphy let the band simmer this one out — it’s the album’s longest song at nearly five minutes.

Any Day Woman

Willie Murphy takes the microphone in this sweet song, backing Raitt up with quiet harmonies. Drum brushes wisp behind the duo, and piano is the trellis for their intertwining vocals.

Big Road

It’s not every day you hear tuba belching out the blues, but Daniel “Freebo” Friedberg went for it on “Big Road” and ended up performing on Raitt’s next six albums. “Big Road” is a busy cover of a composition by Tommy Johnson, the Delta bluesman who inspired the character of the same name in O Brother, Where Art Thou?.

Walking Blues

Raitt’s guitar playing stands out on “Walking Blues,” a version of the old song by Delta blues icon Robert Johnson. It’s a quick tune — just two minutes and 40 seconds — and resets the mood after the antics of “Big Road.”

Danger Heartbreak Ahead

Bonnie Raitt was remastered in 2008, but “Danger Heartbreak Ahead” still betrays the album’s poor recording quality. When you record live to a four-track in a quasi-shed, things are bound to happen. And on this song, Bonnie’s vocals on the verse are quiet, nearly drowned out by the drums. Luckily, she and the other singers amp it up on the boisterous chorus.

Since I Fell For You

Raitt’s vocals are much more intelligible on this track — they’re lovely and clear, set against a mellow piano-and-saxophone backdrop. Raitt isn’t the only one to have sung this standard; Ella Johnson popularized “Since I Fell For You” after her brother Buddy Johnson wrote it in the 1940s, and Lenny Welch, Al Jarreau, Laura Lee, and others have sung it since.

I Ain’t Blue

Bonnie Raitt’s producer Willie Murphy and engineer Dave Ray both collaborated with Spider John Koerner, a Dylan contemporary who still kicks it on the West Bank. Although he didn’t join the crew out on Lake Minnetonka, Koerner did contribute to the album, in a sense, by having co-written “I Ain’t Blue” with Murphy. The duo released the song on their 1969 album Running, Jumping, Standing Still. In Raitt’s version, percussion equals soft handclaps and the sound of a badminton shuttlecock being run against a beer cup.

Women Be Wise

Bonnie Raitt closes with another sultry Sippie Wallace number, which saunters up and down the scale.


Source: © Copyright The Current

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Bonnie Raitt’s Lake Minnetonka Beginning

on July 24, 2019 No comments

Bonnie Raitt’s Lake Minnetonka Beginning

by Andrea Swensson, Cecilia Johnson and Michaelangelo Matos
Bonnie Raitt, Freebo, Dave Ray, Willie and the Bees, et al, take a break during the recording of Raitt’s debut album on Enchanted Island on Lake Minnetonka – August 1971 © Courtesy of Eugene Hoffman

Bonnie Raitt is best known for her hits “Something to Talk About” and “I Can’t Make You Love Me.” But back in 1971, she was a 21-year-old kid with a friendly streak, guitar chops, and her first record deal. That summer, she recorded her debut album on Lake Minnetonka with a motley crew of Minneapolis musicians, making music and commotion in a wild recording experience that she calls “not Animal House, but […] just a blast.”

Bonnie Raitt and band – lunch on Enchanted Island on Lake Minnetonka – August 1971

tip: most convenient way to listen while browsing along is to use the popup button of the player.

Willie Murphy and Bonnie Raitt – Insider Magazine, September 1971

Bonnie Raitt: In Memory of Willie Murphy

I am so shocked and heartbroken to hear of my longtime friend Willie Murphy’s sudden passing. Although we’d spoken during his recent illness, and he was getting better, very excited about his new album, I don’t think many of us knew how serious his condition may have been. Along with producing my first album in 1971, he was one of the most brilliant, unique and prolific musicians I’ve ever known. His enduring contribution to one of America’s funkiest and most flavorful music scenes, the West Bank of Minneapolis, where I first fell in love with his band, Willie and and the Bees, will be treasured by all of us who can appreciate the incredible breadth, soul and inventiveness of the music he made. He lived to play and remained a defiant maverick, preferring to spend time creating music and friendships rather than get sucked into the trap of social media. He was my friend, a great inspiration and I will miss him terribly. I’m so grateful he was able to leave us with another amazing record before his untimely passing. Another bright light, gone way too soon.

-Bonnie Raitt,  January 15, 2019

Transcript of Episode 5 — Bonnie Raitt’s Lake Minnetonka Beginnings

[“I Ain’t Blue” by Bonnie Raitt]

Bonnie Raitt: Enchanted Island—yeah, I remember it like it was yesterday. I’m always reminiscing with Willie and the Bees.

Andrea Swensson: That’s folk and blues icon Bonnie Raitt, and this is The Current Rewind, the podcast that puts unsung music stories on the map. I’m Andrea Swensson, back with Side B of our first season. Over the next few weeks, we’ll take you to a Great Lakes industry town with a dark side and back to the ’80s with a wild story of anti-rock crusaders. But today, we’re zooming in on the early years of Bonnie Raitt.

[“I Ain’t Blue” crescendos, then fades. “Winging It” by Lazerbeak begins to play]

Andrea Swensson: Few performers over the last fifty years of rock have been more widely beloved than singer and guitarist Bonnie Raitt. Writing and covering a wide variety of styles, from folk to blues to rock, she has, as much as anybody, defined the roots-oriented sound of Americana. She’s known for the hits “I Can’t Make You Love Me” and “Something to Talk About.” In 1990, her album Nick of Time swept the Grammy Awards and made her a household name. But the story of Bonnie Raitt’s recording career began way back in 1971. And it began in Minnesota.

[Rewind sound effect]

Andrea Swensson: For this episode of The Current Rewind, we spoke with several of the musicians who played on Bonnie Raitt’s self-titled album from 1971, as well as a couple of writers and Raitt’s bass player from the seventies.

One person we didn’t get to talk to, unfortunately, was Bonnie herself, whose schedule didn’t allow her time. So we’ve relied on a couple of old interviews—one with NPR’s Ann Powers in 2012 and one with The Current’s Bill DeVille in 2013—to get her side of the story.

While it isn’t the best-known of her albums, Bonnie Raitt’s self-titled debut was a clear statement of purpose from a soon-to-be-major artist. She was only twenty-one, but her song choices drew deep from the wells of blues, folk, rock, and R&B music. Her singing and stage presence had turned heads since she began performing. By the summer of 1971, Warner Bros. Records, who specialized in singer-songwriters like her, was ready to put her out in the world.

And that’s how Bonnie Raitt came to the West Bank neighborhood of Minneapolis, also known as Cedar-Riverside—because that’s where she could go to find other musicians who were in the habit of ignoring genre rules and going for the gut, just like she did.

Bonnie Raitt was born into showbiz—her father was the Broadway musical leading man John Raitt, star of “Oklahoma!” and other fifties hits from the Great White Way. But as she told The Current’s Bill DeVille, Raitt was looking for something else when it came time to make her first album.

Bonnie Raitt: It’s Austin and New Orleans and Minneapolis-St. Paul that are the three cities that have been multiracial in their music scene for all this time. That’s why I wanted to make my first record there.

Maurice Jacox: John Koerner and Dave Ray were playing out on the East Coast folk circuit, and Bonnie was playing out there too.

Andrea Swensson: Maurice Jacox was the saxophonist for Willie and the Bees, the band who backed Bonnie Raitt on her first album.

Maurice Jacox: And so she got a Warner Bros. contract, and the contract was for $40,000. She asked people she trusted—Koerner and Dave Ray—and said, “I’ve got this contract. What do you think I should do? I’m supposed to make an album. I want to make a blues album. Got any suggestions, and the way I should go about doing this?”

They both said, “We’ve got some friends back in Minneapolis that might be right up your alley. You ought to come out there and see what’s happening out there.” So Bonnie actually flew out here and hung around the West Bank for about a week or so and shot pool, drank beer, drank liquor, played pinball for about four or five days and did a lot of talking.

Cyn Collins: She was known to hang out with people at the various West Bank hotspots.

Andrea Swensson: Cyn Collins is the author of “West Bank Boogie,” a history of the Cedar-Riverside folk and blues scene.

Cyn Collins: She would hang out at Palmer’s Bar doing New York Times crossword puzzles with Spider John Koerner on a daily basis while Flo tended bar.

Andrea Swensson: In fact, an autographed photo of Bonnie still hangs at Palmer’s to this day.

The Current Rewind’s Bonnie Raitt crossword puzzle

Cyn Collins: Willie Murphy would say that she was seen regularly at various places around the West Bank—the New Riverside Cafe, the Firehouse, which is now the Mixed Blood Theatre, and she performed at the New Riverside Cafe and Firehouse and other places.

Willie Murphy: She came out here and stayed at my house—we actually slept together in the same bed and went out every morning looking for a good place to put the studio to make the record.

Andrea Swensson: That’s the late Willie Murphy, speaking to me in 2014. He produced Bonnie’s debut album, and was the notoriously strong-willed, gruff, but beloved leader of Willie and the Bumblebees. Fans often called them the Bees.

[“Honey From The Bee” by Willie and the Bees]

Maurice Jacox: After that Bonnie just went, “This is the band. These are the guys I want to work with.”

Andrea Swensson: At first, the group wanted to record in the countryside. But they hit a snag.

Bonnie Raitt: Nobody would rent us a farm because we were a mixed-race bunch of raggly hippies and blues guys. Dave Ray and Sylvia, his wife at the time, found this guy who had a remedial reading summer camp, and it was isolated enough that they let us just take it over. So it was about—not Animal House, but it was very much like a summer camp. It was just a blast.

Andrea Swensson: The West Bank had been considered “blighted” during the forties, and had become part of skid row during the fifties, thanks partly to the freeway system intruding on the area, cutting it off from downtown. This relative isolation, and its proximity to the University of Minnesota campus, made the West Bank perfect for the burgeoning counterculture—first beatniks, then hippies began moving to the area. By the early seventies, the Electric Fetus, a record store and head shop catering to a hippie crowd, had opened up there; in 1972, it would stage a so-called “naked sale.” (Don’t ask.)

Spider John Koerner: I think I probably had my first drink in Palmer’s Bar in 1963 or 1964, so it’s been well over five decades that I’ve been watching the West Bank.

Andrea Swensson: The blues and folk singer Spider John Koerner has been one of the West Bank’s most visible musicians ever since.

Spider John Koerner: My first time on the West Bank, it was kind of working people. There was lots of bars. There was like probably a half a dozen up and down the avenue there, and there were some black bars up around Seven Corners up there. There was the Key Club and South of the Border, and you could go down there and see some of the top blues performers coming through Chicago and like that. It was a good mixture. Then came along the hippie era. If you left your wallet on the bar there was a 50/50 chance somebody would bring it back to you rather than getting picked up by somebody.

Eugene Hoffman: We were not hippies.

Andrea Swensson: Saxophonist Eugene Hoffman had dropped out of the University of Minnesota, and began playing with all sorts of musicians on the West Bank in the mid-sixties.

Eugene Hoffman: Even though Willie in one of his last interviews said at heart he was a hippie really, we were all in between the beatniks and the hippies. The neighborhood had been blown wide open because it was the Haight-Ashbury of Minnesota. Fourth and Cedar—there was a place above—Richter Drug Store. This Richter pharmacist was very lenient on the hippies, and people were always coming in there. They were dealing drugs on the corner—all kinds of people. What the West Bank had quickly become in about ’66 was just a lot of houses of university students.

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Bonnie Raitt gets misty, then comes out smoking at State Fair concert

on August 28, 1990 No comments
By Jon Bream
Staff Writer

A review
Bonnie Raitt

August 27 : MN State Fair – St. Paul, MN

Opening acts: Jeff Healey Band, Charles Brown
Review: Abetted by hometown harmonica player Pat Hayes, Raitt hammed it up a bit for the fans in her second hometown. However, the performance turned into her most emotional performance here— and one of her best ever locally— as she dedicated the evening to her colleague Stevie Ray Vaughan, who died in a helicopter crash yesterday.

Bonnie Raitt plays Minnesota State Fair, St. Paul, MN – Aug 27, 1990 © Richard Sennott

Long before Bonnie Raitt was synonymous with the Grammys, she acknowledged her debt to the blues figures who influenced her. She toured with her now-deceased mentors Fred McDowell and Sippie Wallace, she recorded with John Lee Hooker (they shared a blues Grammy this year) and now she has Charles Brown as an opening act on the biggest tour of her career.

Raitt, 40, also is connected to her fellow contemporary blues practitioners. She dedicated her concert Monday night at the Minnesota State Fair to Texas blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan, who died in helicopter crash yesterday morning.

“I’ll turn this feeling around,” Raitt said last night. “That’s why the blues was invented.”

That’s what her head thought, anyway; her heart often felt otherwise. She admitted last night she was wearing her heart on her sleeve so she warned that she’d have a difficult time singing ballads on this “lump-in-the-throat kind of day.” But her performance rated two thumbs up — on the ballads, rockers, blues, R&B, guitar, you name it. It was certainly the most emotional concert among the many that Raitt has given here since she recorded her 1971 debut album on an island in Lake Minnetonka.

Raitt performed with more sass and attitude in her eyes and in her strut. As always, her slide guitar was smokin.’ Her voice was strong and passionate, especially on the ballads.

An acoustic version of Paul Siebel’s “Louise,” about a prostitute “who died that afternoon,” found Raitt misty-eyed, and her poignant performance made many of the 16,607 fans feel the same. Her encore of the piano ballad, “Nick of Time,” was dedicated to Vaughan, whom she said inspired her to play the blues without “the torture” of booze and drugs. “Nick of Time,” which was released in early 1989, was the first album she has recorded sober. Last night, she said it was the first time she’d ever had to deal with the loss of someone close to her while she was sober.

Raitt’s 85-minute set was heavy on tunes from “Nick of Time,” which won the Grammy in February for album of the year. Longtime fans might have yearned for more oldies and more jams from Raitt’s excellent six-man band. The solos by Raitt, guitarist Johnny Lee Schell, saxophonist Marty Grebb and Minneapolis harmonica player Pat Hayes were hot but invariably short and to the point.

It wasn’t until “Willya Wontcha,” a Schell tune, that the band truly jammed, with Raitt and Schell trading off fiery guitar lines. Piano man Brown joined in for the encore of “Think,” during which Hayes was given extra room to move. And then Raitt and her band turned “Give It Up” into a blazing Dixieland delight.

A truncated version of the band cooked on an acoustic rendition of the bluesy “Drop Down Baby” and Raitt’s “The Road’s My Middle Name,” during which a drawing of a full moon was hoisted over the painted mountains that served as a backdrop. A face cryptically painted into the moon looked a bit like Stevie Ray Vaughan.

The Jeff Healey Band, the trio that kicked off the evening, offered a scorching encore of Vaughan’s “Called Shot,” during which Healey played a quiet, emotional guitar solo. Healey mentioned how he had been with Vaughan just 48 hours earlier in Wisconsin. (Raitt also had attended that show, featuring Vaughan, Eric Clapton and Robert Cray.)

Last night, the Healey trio smoked from its first song. However, the material was inconsistent (the noisy rocker “Full Circle” and the Cray-like “I Think I Love You Too Much” didn’t measure up to “Blue Jean Blues” and “Angel Eyes”), and the 50-minute performance was not as awesome as his headlining concert last year at the Guthrie Theater.

Brown, who followed Healey, was a genuine treat. Raitt introduced him as a bluesman who started out in 1945 and influenced everyone from Ray Charles to Chuck Berry. Brown’s 20-minute cameo of uptown nightclub blues showed the 67-year-old to be a terrific piano stylist, as he drifted stylistically through New Orleans, Kansas City and his home state of Texas.

San Francisco 1990 © Joe Rockman

Jeff (Healey) (1966-2008) was one of the sweetest, most humble and talented artists I’ve met. He had a truly unique and soulful style of guitar playing, was a great singer and such an incredible fan of a wide range of music, all of which he seemed to be able to ace. I was floored to hear his Trad Jazz band and find out that was him on Trumpet and Trombone. He gave us so much in way too short a life.
One of my favorite memories of our touring together in the early 90’s, was when we both went on the swinging chair on chains ride before one of our State Fair gigs. His drummer had to take off from our line and go back to sound check and just left me with Jeff to get him safely on the ride.
I was so nervous but he put me at great ease and I loved seeing the huge grin, hearing him laugh as we swung way high above the crowd. Fearless and like a kid. Just like he was in his music.
– Bonnie Raitt


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