She is B.B. King’s favorite slide guitarist. Adele and Bon Iver perform her hits. In 40 years, Bonnie Raitt has never gone out of fashion. Now the 62-year-old Rock and Roll Hall of Famer is releasing her first album in seven years, Slipstream, with covers of two Bob Dylan songs and a sultry, bluesy vibe. “There’s a little something for everybody.” she tells Roger Friedman as she gears up for a tour starting in May.
You and Alicia Keys performed a tribute to Etta James at the Grammys, singing “A Sunday Kind of Love.” What’s your Sunday kind of love?
The part I can talk about in a family magazine? [laughs] Well, a nice leisurely morning, reading the papers, then out into the country. I live in Northern California, in Marin County, and there are many beautiful choices of hikes to take. Or my boyfriend and I go for a bike ride. We make dinner at home, watch 60 Minutes and a movie.
Who is your boyfriend? We’ve been together seven years now. He’s great, but that’s all I can say. You know, [it’s like] the Sippie Wallace song that goes, “Don’t advertise your man.”
“WHEN JANIS JOPLIN AND JIMI HENDRIX DIED, I SAID, THAT’S NOT GOING TO BE ME, I’M SMARTER THAN THAT.”
Your red hair and its streak are one of your signatures. Is it natural? The silver-white streak is natural. I was 24 [when it came in] and you can sort of see it on album covers. By 1981 it was expanding and my red was fading, so I started dyeing my hair [around the streak]. No one else in my family has it. I’ve been told it means you’ve been kissed by an anqel.
Slipstream is on your own label, Redwing Records. Why did you put it out yourself? Because I can! I have a pretty solid base of fans. I like the control, and this way if we’re messing up, at least it’s our own fault. I used to say I didn’t want to talk weasel [deal with the business end]. But I’m really driving my career. It’s not like someone else picks the songs or the looks.
You made it a point to cut out drinking a while ago. I thought I had to live that partying lifestyle in order to be authentic, but in fact if you keep it up too long, all you’re going to be is sloppy or dead. I recently had my 25th anniversary of sobriety. I was one of the lucky ones. Seeing Whitney Houston pass away, and Amy Winehouse—everyone smiled at her “Rehab” song, but for me it was heartbreaking to hear her sing that because it just looked like she was on a slippery slope.
Do you like touring? I love it. But when I went through a lot of loss [Raitt’s parents died in 2004 and 2005, and she lost a brother to a long battle with cancer], I took a hiatus. I’m just watching the pace, keeping a nice balance. If my memory serves me well, I’ve already made it. [laughs]
How do you get comfortable on the road? Our tour bus becomes a second home. Email really helps me stay in touch with friends and save my voice. But I have to remember to get off the laptop and onto the yoga mat.
LOS ANGELES — Whether touring, winning Grammys or fighting for the rights of music veterans, singer and guitarist Bonnie Raitt has always had plenty to keep her busy. So over the course of her four-decade career, a gap of a few years between albums wasn’t unprecedented.
But this time around, the seven-year lapse between her last CD and her new effort, “Slipstream” (arriving Tuesday), is different.
The nine-time Grammy Award winner pulled off the road, put the band that she’s toured with for decades on ice, and joined the audience.
“I got to go to gigs — just be a fan, no pressure whatsoever,” said Raitt, 62, in between sips of iced tea at the vintage Sportsmen’s Lodge in Studio City, the neighborhood just outside where she grew up as the daughter of Broadway star John Raitt and singer-pianist Marge Goddard. “I got to see a lot of jazz, African world music and the symphony, and Hardly Strictly Bluegrass (Festival in San Francisco) — I got to go two years in a row. That’ll fire you up to get back into music.”
The experience recharged Raitt for the making of her new and 19th album, most of which she produced, sans four tracks that came out of sessions with singer, songwriter and producer Joe Henry.
“I waited until I was really ready, and then those Joe Henry sessions, it was like having my blood changed,” she said. “You can be off only so long when you have this in your blood.”
BONNIE RAITT started her new album, “Slipstream” — her first since 2005, and her first on her own label, Redwing Records — last year in a basement in South Pasadena, Calif.: at the home studio of the songwriter and producer Joe Henry.
The studio has low ceilings, exposed brick and stone walls, casual floral-patterned chairs and prized vintage instruments and microphones close at hand. Some of the sound-absorbing foam in its closet-size vocal booth, where Ms. Raitt sang, is the packing material with gramophone-shaped cutouts that cushioned Mr. Henry’s three Grammy awards.
It was a homey spot to get a new perspective on her music. Ms. Raitt, 62, was easing back into a career she had paused — a career, as it enters its fifth decade, with enough loyal fans to sell out midsize theaters across the United States and abroad. She met me in late March for an interview in a North Hollywood rehearsal studio, as her longtime band was setting up to practice.
Steeped in the blues — she dropped out of Radcliffe to hit the road alongside mentors like Mississippi Fred McDowell, Sippie Wallace, Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker — Ms. Raitt has never been bound to any genre. She has been an occasional songwriter — “because I have high standards,” she said — and a discriminating interpreter, wading through countless demos and oldies to find songs like “Love Has No Pride” and “I Can’t Make You Love Me.”
In the 1970s she built a following concert by concert, as pop radio largely ignored her. Warner Brothers, which released her first album in 1971, dropped her in 1986. Just three years later she started a streak as a multimillion-selling, Grammy-winning singer at Capitol Records with the albums “Nick of Time” (1989), “Luck of the Draw” (1991) and “Longing in Their Hearts” (1994). Her Capitol contract ran out in 2005, and while Ms. Raitt had plenty of offers, research persuaded her to start her third phase with her own label.
“I know that CDs sell less and less, and I’d rather have more of a piece of it,” she said. “I like to have my freedom. Nobody ever told me what to play or when to come out with a record or who to work with. But it’s best to have it really be on my terms.”
At this point “I don’t have to worry about having a hit or not,” she said. “If I can sing, even if I couldn’t play guitar, I could probably get a gig. Or I could play guitar if I couldn’t sing.”
Through the years Ms. Raitt has been a scrupulous musician with a conscience, supporting human rights, feminist and environmental causes and playing countless benefit concerts. Her tour bus is powered by biodiesel; her album packages use recycled material and soy ink. She has a custom purple Larry Pogreba resonator guitar made of salvaged wood and recycled aircraft aluminum, with a big round metal R (for Raitt) that was a 1951 Rambler hubcap. Principle has not come cheap; the environmentally conscious package of “Luck of the Draw” cost her 33 cents per unit, on an album that sold seven million copies in the United States alone. “But I was proud to do it,” she said. “I got karma.”
After a 2009 tour with the bluesman Taj Mahal and a performance at the 25th anniversary concert of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame — she was inducted in 2000 — Ms. Raitt gave herself a yearlong hiatus for the first time since the mid-1990s. She suspended a routine of steady touring, telling her band, “I need to take a break till I get an appetite for it again.”
It wasn’t entirely a vacation. Ms. Raitt was also dealing with the estates and belongings of her older brother, Steve Raitt, who died in 2009, and her father, the actor John Raitt, who died in 2005. She also, she said, “did a lot of work on myself during the break. I got taken to the bottom and built myself slowly, learned about some things, let some feelings come out. I hope it shows in my voice. It would be crazy to go through something like that and not have come out of it a little deeper person.”
She was appreciated anew during her absence. “I Can’t Make You Love Me” (written by Mike Reid and Allen Shamblin, and first recorded by Ms. Raitt on “Luck of the Draw”), was revived by both Bon Iver and Adele, who gushed to a concert audience, “I think it’s just perfect in every single way, and she’s got a stunning voice.”
As her band set up for rehearsal, Ms. Raitt, with her trademark mane of bright red hair and white forelock — “this Pepe Le Pew thing,” she called it — was in a plaid shirt and blue jeans, looking forward to polishing some 40 songs, new and old, for the tour she starts in May, including shows at the Beacon Theater in New York on June 20 and 21.
She had wanted to resume touring with a new album. And for that she needed the fresh start of the sessions at Mr. Henry’s home studio as catalyst and experiment. She tried to keep them a secret — in part, she said, because “I felt like I was cheating on my band.”
Ms. Raitt, who wanted to record some of Mr. Henry’s songs, and Mr. Henry, who had long wanted to produce Ms. Raitt, had finally aligned. In an initial phone conversation that lasted over two hours, Mr. Henry offered to have Ms. Raitt try recording for a couple of days with his regular session musicians and a guest, the guitarist Bill Frisell.
“You cover the cost of the musicians, the engineer and the catering,” Mr. Henry suggested, he said. “I’ll give you the studio and my time. And you get to decide whether it has any use to you or not.” Ms. Raitt “got fired up after that call,” she said. “What was thrilling was for me not to produce, for me not to think about when I’m going to put this out. I could pay for it myself. It was the perfect way to get back in.”
They settled, through frequent e-mails, on songs by Mr. Henry and Bob Dylan; they wrote a song together, though it didn’t end up on “Slipstream.” Ms. Raitt arrived at the studio with what she calls “beginner’s mind,” a Zen term, and got to work recording Mr. Dylan’s bleak, bluesy “Million Miles.”
“I wanted to show up with beginner’s mind and just open my mouth and sing,” Ms. Raitt said. “There was the idea of trying to make all those lyrics work when you don’t talk about it, and you haven’t discussed an arc. These guys, we didn’t discuss anything except key. They just started playing.”
They worked fast. In two two-day sessions, they recorded an album’s worth of songs, none of them uptempo, capturing a singular tone of hushed attentiveness and mysterious tidings. Four tracks — two Dylan songs, two by Mr. Henry — ended up on “Slipstream.” But Ms. Raitt also had her live audiences and her band in mind; they would need earthier material onstage.
“All the women and men in the audience — you’re singing for their sexuality, their longing, their heartbreak, their anger, their loneliness,” Ms. Raitt said. “In an evening you’re getting around to all those. That’s why it’s so cathartic to do it together.”
The rest of “Slipstream” doesn’t make a radical break with Ms. Raitt’s previous albums. She recorded and produced the majority of its songs with her road band and longtime friends at a venerable Hollywood studio, Ocean Way Recording, working variations on funk, blues shuffles, reggae, rockabilly two-beats and ballads. Most of the songwriters — Randall Bramblett, Al Anderson, Paul Brady — have contributed to her previous albums. But all the band’s camaraderie comes through in its down-home jamming, and Ms. Raitt’s song-picking skills are proven again, particularly with a gorgeously penitent breakup song, “Not Cause I Wanted To.”
“When I sing a ballad I’m digging deep in that pain pit,” Ms. Raitt said. “And when I want to play an uptempo thing or a bluesy thing, it’s like getting a match lit in your solar plexus, and it just spreads, and oh God, it’s the greatest.”
Rehearsal got off to a rocky start as the band and crew struggled to make sure the musicians could hear one another; it was their first day with their full sound system. “We’ve got to get used to it,” Ms. Raitt said, “ ’cause those stages are big.” But after considerable tweaking the band found its balance: carrying “Million Miles” toward some dimly lighted after-hours joint, lingering over the quiet ache in “Not Cause I Wanted To,” kicking through the backbeat of “Split Decision.”
The road awaited once again. “It’s just like revving up an old motorbike that’s in your garage,” Ms. Raitt said. “I missed that smell of the gas.”
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Bonnie has contributed a new recording of "Prison Bound Blues" written by Leroy Carr to a project called Better Than Jail, an extraordinary new album benefiting Free Hearts and Equal Justice USA. Better Than Jail is available everywhere today and features covers of iconic prison songs from Steve Earle, Taj Mahal,Margo Price, The War and Treaty and many more. The album seeks to raise awareness and support for the urgent need to reduce the harm of the criminal justice system. https://found.ee/BetterThanJail.
I'm so proud to have joined in with so many illustrious artists in creating this very special album in support of rural prison reform. Overlooked for far too long, this issue cuts across all cultural and political divides and deserves all our focused attention to finally bring about some swift and meaningful action. Better Than Jail is one of the most inspired and heartfelt albums I've been blessed to be a part of and I hope it sets a fire in hearts far and wide to join in our efforts." ~ Bonnie Raitt
Released on: 2024-10-04 Executive Producer: Brian Hunt Producer: Kenny Greenberg Producer: Wally Wilson Producer: Bonnie Raitt Recording Engineer: Jason Lehning at Sound Emporium Mastering Engineer: Alex McCollough at True East Mastering Production Assistant: Shannon Finnegan Mixer: Justin Niebank at Hounds Ear Music Publisher: Universal Music Corp. Composer, Lyricist: Leroy Carr ℗ Believe Entertainment Group and Wyatt Road Records
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The Fabulous Thunderbirds - Nothing in Rambling Ft. Bonnie Raitt, Taj Mahal, Keb' Mo' & Mick Fleetwood
In celebration of the band’s 50th Anniversary, The Fabulous Thunderbirds have just released Struck Down, their first studio album in eight years on Stony Plain Records. The ten-track album includes a wonderful cover of Memphis Minnie’s “Nothing in Rambling,” featuring longtime friends, T-Birds founding member Kim Wilson, along with Bonnie, Keb’ Mo’, Taj Mahal and Mick Fleetwood. — BRHQ
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Little Feat - Long Distance Call
“I’ve always loved Little Feat and this new incarnation of the band is bringing some serious heat, cred and new blood to their enduring legacy. Every Feat fan loves us some Sam. I’m so glad he’s now gotten a chance to step out front and center and put his spin on these wonderful blues songs. I loved singing "Long Distance Call" with him, always one of my favorites, and Scott slayed on slide. Know you’ll enjoy hanging out with us at Sam’s Place!" -- Bonnie Raitt
“Long Distance Call” was written by blues legend, Muddy Waters. It has Sam Clayton and Bonnie Raitt on vocals, Scott Sharrard on Dobro, Fred Tackett on acoustic guitar, Tony Leone on drums, and Michael “The Bull” LoBue on harmonica. The album also features Bill Payne on piano and Kenny Gradney on bass.
Little Feat have composed an album that’s their love letter to the blues entitled, ‘Sam’s Place.’ “Long Distance Call” plus many other blues classics are on this album. You can stream and order ‘Sam’s Place’ here: https://orcd.co/samsplace
Broken Hearts & Dirty Windows: Songs of John Prine, Vol. 2, the anticipated new John Prine tribute record from Oh Boy Records, is out today. Stream/purchase HERE.
Created as a celebration of Prine’s life and career, the album features new renditions of some of Prine’s most beloved songs performed by Brandi Carlile (“I Remember Everything”), Tyler Childers (“Yes I Guess They Oughta Name A Drink After You”), Iris DeMent (“One Red Rose”), Emmylou Harris (“Hello In There”), Jason Isbell (“Souvenirs”), Valerie June (“Summer’s End”), Margo Price (“Sweet Revenge”), Bonnie Raitt (“Angel From Montgomery”), Nathaniel Rateliff & The Night Sweats (“Pretty Good”), Amanda Shires (“Saddle in the Rain”), Sturgill Simpson(“Paradise”) and John Paul White (“Sam Stone”). Proceeds from the album will benefit twelve different non-profit organizations, one selected by each of the featured artists.
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Bonnie Raitt - Write Me a Few of Your Lines/Kokomo Blues
60 years anniversary celebration of Arhoolie
December 10, 2020
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Arhoolie Foundation celebrates it's 60th anniversary (1960-2020) with an online broadcast.
Bonnie Raitt - Shadow of Doubt
Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival
October 3, 2020
Hardly Strictly Bluegrass celebrates it's 20th anniversary with an online broadcast titled “Let The Music Play On”.
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Bonnie Raitt & Boz Scaggs - You Don't Know Like I Know
Farm Aid 2020 On the Road
Sam & Dave classic written by Isaac Hayes and David Porter.
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Sheryl Crow & Bonnie Raitt - Everything Is Broken
[Eric Clapton’s Crossroads 2019]
Eric Clapton, one of the world’s pre-eminent blues/rock guitarists, once again summoned an all-star team of six-string heroes for his fifth Crossroads Guitar Festival in 2019. Held at the American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, the two-day concert event raised funds for the Crossroads Centre in Antigua, the chemical dependency treatment and education facility that Clapton founded in 1998.
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'A Tribute To Mose Allison'
Celebrates The Music Of An Exciting Jazz Master
Raitt contributed to a new album, If You're Going To The City: A Tribute To Mose Allison, which celebrates the late singer and pianist, who famously blended the rough-edged blues of the Mississippi Delta with the 1950s jazz of New York City.
NPR's Lulu Garcia-Navarro talks to Bonnie Raitt about her friendship with the Mose Allison. They're also joined by Amy Allison — his daughter, who executive produced the album — about selecting an unexpected list of artists to contribute songs to the album.
Recorded on tour June 3, 2017 - Centennial Hall, London - Ontario Canada