slipstream

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Bonnie Raitt: A Brand-New Model For A Classic Sound
Bonnie Raitt’s latest album, Slipstream, is the first release on her own Redwing Records label.

on June 16, 2012 No comments
Host: Jacki Lyden

This April, roots-rock singer-guitarist Bonnie Raitt released her first album in seven years, Slipstream. It’s classic Raitt, mixing bluesy slide-guitar riffs with her soulful voice and a pop-friendly sensibility.

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The delivery system, however, is brand-new. After years of working with the majors, Raitt decided to start her own label, Redwing Records. Raitt runs Redwing with the help of a tiny staff; Slipstream is the first release in its catalog.

“A lot of my peers have been doing it for a while,” Raitt tells NPR’s Jacki Lyden. “John Prine was one of the first to do it years ago — Oh Boy Records. And then Jackson Browne and Beth Nielsen Chapman were two people that I talked to, and Beth said, ‘You’ll love the math.’ “

Raitt says Chapman was right: Advances in recording technology have made extremely small labels sustainable. But she says it’s important to remember that there’s more to releasing an album than the recording budget.

“The way that manufacturing is now with the digital age, the cost of making a CD is so much less than it was,” she says. “Since I always love to tour, we’ll be able to let people know there’s some new music. But you need to have all your ducks lined up: a great PR company, a great distribution arm and a fantastic team of four women that are just superpowers.”


Source: © Copyright National Public Radio
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First Listen: Bonnie Raitt, ‘Slipstream’
Bonnie Raitt’s new album, Slipstream, comes out April 10.

on April 13, 2012 No comments
Ann Powers
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There are two ways to carry old practices forward: Preserve or adapt. Both approaches have their ups and downs. Mere preservation can turn something hard, laying on the sheen of authenticity that masks death within. Adaptation can dilute a thing’s essence so thoroughly as to render it unrecognizable.

The most skillful practitioners of a tradition — the blues, for example — swim between these two lanes with a fluidity which belies the thought and effort that makes their work so smooth.
Bonnie Raitt has been doing this since 1971, when she emerged as a redheaded hope for a musical style that had already been co-opted by many an overblown classic rocker. With a voice as buttery as grits and a remarkable capacity for playing bottleneck guitar, Raitt quickly earned her place on the dais with forebears like Sippie Wallace and Howlin’ Wolf.
But she also had a great pop sense, finding kinship with contemporary songwriters like Jackson Browne.

Fast forward more than four decades, and Raitt still moves forward with grace and substance, showing how the blues remain relevant, both to her personally and in the larger world. Slipstream is the guitarist and singer’s first release since 2005, inaugurating her label, Redwing.
It represents a regrouping after Raitt’s loss of both parents, her brother and her best friend, and was inspired by her own struggle to reclaim the private life she’d given to her music, as well as the larger American crisis of the current recession.
Produced mostly by Raitt herself, with four outstanding tracks helmed by master of atmospherics Joe Henry, it’s warmly contemporary, while still strongly rooted in the blues moods and techniques that Raitt has always treasured.

Slipstream provides plenty of the many-sided adult-contemporary pop that made Raitt a huge star in the late 1980s with hits like “Something to Talk About.”
Chosen with Raitt’s usual impeccable taste from the cream of her songwriting circle (including Randall Bramblett, Paul Brady and Al Anderson), the bulk of Slipstream serves Raitt’s lifelong project of expressing how blues idioms apply to the life of the modern woman.
There’s a reggae take on Gerry Rafferty‘s yacht-rock favorite “Right Down the Line;” Bramblett’s “Used to Rule the World,” a sidelong glance at the American Dream that Sharon Jones would love; an almost Western ballad about fame and drugs, “Marriage Made in Hollywood” (Brady’s original sounds more Irish); and Anderson and Bonnie Bishop’s perfectly despondent “Not Cause I Wanted To,” a modern rambling-woman’s blues that allows Raitt to demonstrate her unmatchable gift for making regret beautiful.

In all of these songs and more, the production sounds clean and intimate, while the guitars — Raitt’s, Anderson’s and tourmate George Marinelli’s — take up as much room as the vocals. This is a plus. Raitt’s chops are subtly honed and her responsiveness to her bandmates turns Slipstream into a rewarding group dialogue. The talk gets most serious, though, in the four songs Henry produced, three of which also feature electric Zen masters Bill Frisell and Greg Leisz.

It’s simply a thrill to hear Raitt in her element, exchanging guitar licks and lines with Frisell and Leisz. Two Bob Dylan covers, both culled from 1997’s Time Out of Mind, allow the musicians to wax cinematic on basic blues forms. Henry’s own “You Can’t Fail Me Now,” co-written with Loudon Wainwright III for the soundtrack to Knocked Up, gains a gospel flavor here. This is preservation as quiet, personally driven innovation, with new shades of meaning shot through familiar phrases.

In these evocative moments and throughout Slipstream, Raitt and her fellow players never break a sweat about fitting in with current pop trends; they’re doing what they love, and it’s utterly relevant because it represents their well-considered lives. Raitt’s gift for expressing emotions on a real, human scale is what makes her so beloved. On Slipstream, she takes on some of the hardest, and she doesn’t fail us now.


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Bonnie Raitt’s ‘Slipstream’: A Barnstorming Good Time
Fresh Air

on April 10, 2012 No comments
Ken Tucker

The warmth and vigor of Bonnie Raitt‘s voice throughout her new album Slipstream, even when she’s covering an oldie such as Gerry Rafferty’s “Right Down the Line,” is vital and fresh — urgent, even. Raitt has always possessed a gift for taking a familiar phrase and rendering it in a manner that compels a listener to think anew about what the words really mean.

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Raitt has always mixed folk with blues, rock and the sort of funk that she’d probably link to Lowell George and Little Feat, and that I’d say is as respectful of beat and groove as any of the R&B artists she admires. You can hear it in her slide-guitar playing throughout Slipstream, and particularly the way she sets up the rhythm with her band and then slides her voice in like a letter going into an envelope addressed to you.

I know that if you’re going to praise a Bonnie Raitt album, you’re supposed to work in some comparison to her greatest commercial success, 1989’s Grammy-winning Nick of Time. But my praise is more precise: This is Raitt’s best album since 1975’s underrated Home Plate. I’m not just pulling that out for obscurity’s sake, either: Slipstream captures the kind of barnstorming fervor that can turn in the space of a song into a slow boil, the roiling storm of emotions contained within her cover of Bob Dylan‘s “Million Miles.”

I mentioned Raitt’s vocals at the start of this review, and I’m going to end there, too. It’s not that I’m ageist enough to think that someone in her 60s can sing as fluidly as Raitt does here — heck, her blues heroes were doing it a few decades beyond that. But it is rare for a performer who has maintained a 40-year career to sound so unfazed, so careful to avoid artistic short-cuts, so lacking in cynicism. She has the guile and shrewdness of a long-time pro, but it’s the purity of this beautiful mongrel music that gives it its great life.


Source: © Copyright National Public Radio

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