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Raitt performs at Hill in a blues celebration

on November 4, 1975 No comments

It was Sippie Wallace’s birthday Saturday, and Bonnie Raitt threw a party for her in Hill Auditorium.

By JO MARCOTTY

The entire evening was a blues extravaganza, from Robert Williams to Buddy Guy and Junior Wells, 77-year-old Wallace and culminating in a fine performance by Bonnie Raitt and her four piece band.

By the time she came on stage, the audience was ready for her, and by the time she left they were in love with her —with good reason.

She sang old songs like “I’m a Fool For You Baby,” and new ones like “I’m Blowin’ Away” in her usual clear and effortless style. And it was obvious from the very start that she loved doing it.

“If I could do this every night.” she said near the end of the show, “play with friends for people like you, I’d die doin’ it.”

Her ‘friends’ consisted of Freebo on the fretless bass, Alan Hand on the piano, Dennis Whitted on the drums and Will McFarlane playing electric guitar. And all five of them together were a mesmerizing combination.

They were tight, and played excellent music without loosing their individual styles. But aside from the musical professionalism, there was none. There was an almost tangible, silent communication between them and the audience. It wasn’t just another stop in a concert tour. Bonnie and her band were playing for this particular audience, for Ann Arbor.

© Michael Dobo

But Ann Arbor is a regular stop for Raitt. And on Saturday she reminisced about two of her previous visits here, the 1972 Blues and Jazz Festival and another time during that same year.

“I remember this as being the biggest concert hall I’d ever seen,” she said about Hill.

Raitt’s versatile talents were at their height. She breezed through “Love Me Like a Man,” belting it out like the demanding woman the song describes, and sang John Prine’s “Angel From Montgomery” with the hopeless, tired tone of an old woman.

Her newer music is still the same combination of blues, and ballad, but nowadays it’s slicker, directed at a wider audience. ‘Funk’ has made a definite appearance, especially around the piano player Alan Hand.

At one point the guitarist, Will McFarlane, went off into a long guitar solo which had clear traces of rock and roll.

But blues is still Raitt’s baby, and when the Wallace, one of grande dame’s of the blues generation sang “Woman Be Wise” with Raitt, it was a startling, but delightful contrast.

Raitt’s voice was young, vibrant, and she sang the words like a know-it-all. Sippie sang it like the wise old lady she is. Her voice was deep, sometimes gravelly, but she sang it with all the power of her 77 years.

“I just hope you see me like that when I’m 77,” Raitt said as Wallace walked slowly off stage leaning on the arm of a young man.

And if Raitt continues in the same vein, we probably will. She’s good. Her singing is excellent. But at the same time she’s different from other female vocalists of equal talent. She has something special, a disarming, engaging stage personality, tremendous wit, (“I’m smiling so hard, it’ll make my dimples bore right through to the back of my head.”) But it goes even beyond that.

Almost no women vocalists get up out of their chairs and play an electric guitar with the style and charisma of a Bruce Springsteen. Almost no women vocalists can stand in front of 3,000 people and tell a friend in the audience to zip up their fly and get away with it. But she did. Raitt is tough, slightly crass and charming, but not cute and sexy. She’s lovely, with her long red hair and freckled face, and sexual, but not cute and sexy. That’s why she’s different. That’s why she’s so likable.

Josephine Marcotty is the feature editor of The Daily’s news department.


Source: © Copyright The Michigan Daily

Daily Photo by KEN FINK

A Celebration…

November 19, 1975

Bonnie Raitt’s singular appeal and strength is in her roots. She reaches all the way back to the classic blueswoman of the Twenties for both her joyful bawdiness and her righteous, don’t-mess-with-me self-assurance, and has come up with a stance as modern as the diaphragm. So it was a rare thrill, not to say a near-miracle, for all concerned that Bonnie could simply turn to the wings and welcome onstage Detroit blueswoman Sippie Wallace, the direct source of much of her inspiration, who, coincidentally, was celebrating her 77th birthday that night.

Bonnie graciously explained later, “It was from Sippie that I first learned this type of song, where I didn’t always have to be on the shaft side of a relationship”, which point of view was potently set out as she kicked into her own “Love Me Like A Man”.

Apparently Bonnie, who is touring nationally with folk poet/drunkard Tom Waits, decided to take full advantage of her Ann Arbor date by arranging with UAC, campus promoters of the affair, to book country bluesman Robert Pete Williams, and Chicago blues artists Buddy Guy and Jr. Wells, in addition to Sippie.
It was an evening of musical entertainment and instruction that easily spanned divers locales, epochs, and idioms, all the while demonstrating the unbroken lineage connecting these artists.

Robert Pete Williams, whose talent was first discovered, or at least first recorded, at the Angola State Prison, played a pleasant, idiosyncratic opening set. The handsome, fiftyish bluesinger eschews the standard 8 or 12-bar forms. He’d sing a line and play his guitar simply and effectively for as long or as short as he felt like. It made for some diverting country music.

Guitarist Buddy Guy and vocalist premier harmonicat Jr. Wells have, in the past 5 years, probably performed their sweaty, boozy more often in Ann Arbor than anywhere else other than their native Chicago. This night the band was relatively subdued, at least visually. Highlights included every solo Buddy took and the band’s performance of Jr.’s greatest hit, “Messin’ With The Kid.”

Bonnie Raitt & Sippie Wallace and Tammy – Hill Auditorium,Ann Arbor,Michigan 1975 © John Rockwood

When Sippie hobbled out (she suffered a bad stroke three years ago) the first thing she did was to improvise a loving tribute to Bonnie on the piano. She then sang a churchy blues, “Loving You The Way I Do,” “Mighty Tight Woman,” and the gospel tune “Stand By Me.” It was all very affecting and the crowd responded with a standing ovation and then sang her “Happy Birthday.”

Bonnie came out with a strong four-man band that was easily able to reproduce her recorded sound, minus the strings, of course (just as well, I say). She was loose and lovely and clearly moved by the affection Ann Arbor showered on her. She wove her spell from familiar material done with her usual passion, including “Everybody Cryin’ Mercy”, “Give It Up Or Let Me Go” (on which she played a beautiful slide guitar solo), “Fool Yourself,” “Angel From Montgomery,” etc.

Sippie came out and she and her protogee muscled their way through “Women Be Wise” and “You’ve Been In Love Too Long,” joined onstage by Sippie’s dancing machine of a granddaughter, Tammy. Everybody was up and rocking – the only way, after all, to end an evening of such energy and inspiration.


Source: © Copyright The Ann Arbor Sun
Ann Arbor Sun – November 19, 1975
Ann Arbor Sun – November 19, 1975
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BLUES VITAL TO BONNIE

on May 12, 1975 No comments

Versatility Raitt’s forte

By MARTIN SOMMERNESS
State News Reviewer

Bonnie Raitt with Mose Allison and Sippie WallaceMay 10, 1975
Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan

Blues artist Bonnie Raitt disdainfully rejected the mantle of popular glitter rock and roll Saturday night at the Men’s Intramural Building.

“I’d like to do a song by John Prine, “Angel From Montgomery,” she said. “I would have done something by Elton or Mick, but the set is too short, and so are they.”

Raitt and her four-man band cooked their blues songs down to the essentials, without being simplistic. Her guitar passages powerfully highlighted her gutsy, yet refined vocals.

Aware of the rhythm and blues heritage that had influenced her, when she sang “To believe in this livin’ is just a hard way to go,” her plaintive voice begged whatever powers that be to “Make me an angel that flies from Montgomery.”

Whether awing the audience with her supple, primal voice, or treating them to lean, cliche-free, sparkling guitar riffs, Raitt proved herself the same versatile performer live in concert that she is on her record albums.

Her soulful, grinding rendition of “Love Me Like a Man” proved Raitt’s exceptional talent for being earthy yet cultivated. Her vocal and instrumental lines, pared down to the raw essentials’ were wrapped around her bassist Freebo’s phrases and artfully intertwined with her band’s sexually pulsating sounds.

She presented a balanced program, performing songs by Ray Charles, Jackson Browne and some tunes that she had written. All of her music clearly showed the blues heritage that she has inherited and molded into her own style.

Mississippi Wallace’s “You Can Make Me Do Anything You Want,” with the bandsmen singing the backup vocals in falsettos, provided a humorous, interesting change of pace for Raitt’s portion of the concert.

She was totally involved in her music. Her songs were a labor a love, about the labor of love. However, unlike the girl in her song, she has not been in love too long. Her music endures.

She is also involved in causes. Raitt urged the departing audience, who had demanded and received a three-song encore at 2 a.m., to contribute to the Wounded Knee defense fund.

Bonnie Raitt with Mose Allison and Sippie Wallace – MSU Men’s Intramural Building, East Lansing, Michigan – May 10, 1975

Source: © Copyright State News

Bonnie Raitt & Mose Allison At Michigan State University

by Nance Rosen & Carla Rappaport
© Doug Fulton

Holding on tight to her audience, Bonnie Raitt made the stuffy MSU gymnasium fall away May 10 to her own special celebration of spring time. Prefaced by veteran Mose Allison, it was distinctly Bonnie’s night and the crowd knew it.

Bonnie and Band took no hesitation in burning through many album-released hits. She did some newer reworkings of the Randy Newman song, “Guilty” and “I Thought I was a Child,” exhibiting genuine delight. She sang her slow sitdown stuff like “Angel from Montgomery” by John Prine and then later jumped up to bump and grind her way through raucous tunes like “You’ve Been in Love too Long.”

Not more than four songs through the first show, Raitt proudly introduced her personal favorite, blues pianist and singer Sippie Wallace. It had been three years since they first played together at the 1972 Blues & Jazz Festival. A self-proclaimed 75 years young, Wallace joined Raitt and slipped into a duet of Wallace’s own, “Make Me Do,” with rhythm guitar and bass doing an exaggerated Chiffons background. Settling down a bit later, the grand lady finished with a piano spiritual that totally awed the bleacher crowd.

The second show, minus the special guest, brought out a more accepting audience for Mose Allison. The crowd warmed to his tune “Hey Good Looking,” and moved to his vibrating instrumentals. Vocalizing the blues, however, is the compulsive force behind Mose Allison. He has been playing the piano and recounting old memories in his own casual manner for years. His mellow musical approach supercedes the more common success cliches.

Bonnie’s second set once again revealed a tight performer-band relationship. Quipping about the hot-house atmosphere (“it’s nice to have a built-in sauna”), she moved on to the music she’s made her name on. No real surprises here, just good soul-filled countrified rock and roll. Bonnie finished the nearly two-hour concert sweetly and did requests caught from the muddled noise of appreciative voices.
At 2 am she made a final bow to the riotous applause and went “movin’ on.”


Source: © Copyright Ann Arbor Sun
1975-05-23 Ann Arbor Sun
1975-05-23 Ann Arbor Sun
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Bonnie Raitt And Friends Jam at Orpheum

on October 29, 1974 No comments

by Niki Rockwell

For a long time I have been watching feminism developing in the field of music. I am tired of hearing the classic comment “Oh, that music is just for women” made about performers like Dionne Warwick. We have a few cult figures, headed by Joni Mitchell. Her commercial popularity came primarily from the male attentions of Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, although the cult realized her tremendous song writing ability many years before. We have our folk/political singer: Joan Baez, We have Fanny to convince us that females can compete with Mick Jagger’s sexual actions on stage. But there are many other areas of music that have been previously untouched on a national level by an awakened woman. We now have an amazing woman, an excellent song writer, interpreter, outstanding musician, and most importantly a friend, Bonnie Raitt.

Bonnie Raitt and Sippie Wallace – Boston 1974 – What made Sippie Wallace unique was that she was one of the first blues singers from the 1920s to write her own material. Most of the better known women vocalists from that era has merely sung songs that had been written for them by men, but Sippie Wallace had her own outlook on a woman’s role and she was more than ready to put her thoughts into songs. (You can read the rest of this essay in Dick Waterman’s new book, “Between Midnight and Day: The Last Unpublished Blues Archive.”) © Dick Waterman

Anyone who attended last Monday night’s concert at the Orpheum had the chance to observe a woman coordinate artists Sippie Wallace, Roosevelt Sykes, Junior Welles, A.G. Reed, John Payne, Dave Maxwell and others, into an incredible experience. She was in fine form, playing and singing to the top of her seemingly unending ability. As Bonnie says,

“I’m sick of being told that I’m as good as a man on the guitar.”

In fact she’s better than most. Much of her early blues experience came, from the late Mississippi Fred McDowell. Her album Give It Up is dedicated to him. She seems to grow with each musician she has come into contact with since taking that experience and making it her own. Listening to her play is a pleasure. (Most of those “hot licks” on her albums are her own, not male back up.) Her voice, as many notable critics agree, is worthy of attention as well.

Aside from her immense talent, the apparent ease, and obvious enjoyment she found in her performance, I felt, for the first time, that here was a woman could transcend the stereotypes of women in music, and do it with the love and respect of all that comes in contact with her. She controlled a group of egocentric musicians who were each used to carrying an entire program on their names alone. She put them together, something which would normally only happen in a private midnight jam, not for our ears. She didn’t allow one to dominate the other for a moment. She didn’t allow them to dominate her, either. She was the star from the minute she hit the stage.

Bonnie’s love and respect for the two old survivors of the days when blues was not so “in”, Sippie Wallace and Roosevelt Sykes, was impressive. Bonnie’s dream has always been to use her own popularity to give the spotlight to those who have been forgotten. Last Monday was an obvious satisfaction to all; both artists received standing ovations for their arrival on stage as well as for their performance.

The Mass Media Boston Oct.29, 1974

© THE MASS MEDIA

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