song of the year

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Bonnie Raitt on surprise Grammy win over Taylor Swift, Harry Styles: ‘I’m just bowled over’

on February 6, 2023 No comments
Aidin Vaziri

Few people were as dumbfounded as Bonnie Raitt when she won the prize for song of the year at the 65th Grammy Awards on Sunday, Feb. 5. The Bay Area-based singer beat out pop royalty like Taylor Swift, Harry Styles, Adele, Kendrick Lamar, Beyoncé and a handful of other nominees in the category.

“Oh my gosh,” said a visibly stunned Raitt, 73, after accepting her award from first lady Jill Biden. “I’m so surprised. I don’t know what to say.”

It’s particularly shocking as Raitt is better known as an interpreter of other people’s songs. But her award-winning composition “Just Like That,” about an organ donation, was solely written by Raitt as a tribute in the style of the late songwriter John Prine, who died from complications of COVID-19 in 2020.

“I don’t write a lot of songs, but I’m so proud that you appreciate this one and what this means for me and the rest of the songwriters who I would not be up here (without) tonight,” Raitt said.

She won two other Grammys — for best Americana performance (“Made Up Mind”) and best American roots song (“Just Like That”).

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Few viewers were likely familiar with the track before Sunday, especially compared to the other ubiquitous song of the year nominees, which included Lizzo’s “About Damn Time,” Taylor Swift’s “All Too Well (10 Minute Version),” Harry Styles’ “As It Was,” Steve Lacy’s “Bad Habit,” Adele’s “Easy on Me,” Kendrick Lamar’s “The Heart Part 5” and Beyoncé’s “Break My Soul,” among others.

Naturally, Raitt’s victory inspired plenty of hot takes and memes on social media, especially from people unfamiliar with her extensive back catalog. And to be fair, stacked against the competition it was a classic  Grammy blunder, revealing the conservative leanings of the older Grammy voters.

For many viewers, it felt like a flashback to the 2008 Grammys when Herbie Hancock won album of the year for his middling tribute album, “River: The Joni Letters,” over Amy Winehouse’s “Back to Black.”

Raitt, who also offered a tenuous version of the late Christine McVie’s “Songbird” with Sheryl Crow and Mick Fleetwood during the evening’s in memoriam segment, still seemed to relish the win.

“I’m still reeling,” she said in a blog post on Monday. “So grateful to everyone who helped bring me to last night … I thank you all for helping me get our music out to the world. And to all the friends, family and fans who lift me up with their steady love and support. And lastly, to John Prine and all the songwriters who keep inspiring and giving us the joy of sharing their music. I’m just bowled over.”

A representative said Raitt was traveling on Monday, Feb. 6, and not available for comment.

Bonnie Raitt in the press room during the 65th Grammy Awards. © Alberto E. Rodriguez /Getty Images for The Recording Academy

The Rock & Roll Hall of Famer, whose hits include “I Can’t Make You Love Me,” “Something to Talk About” and “Love Sneakin’ Up on You,” was a late bloomer. Raitt cut her first album in 1971 but didn’t crack the Billboard Top 10 until 18 years later with her 1989 multiplatinum release, “Nick of Time,” and two subsequent best-sellers, “Luck of the Draw” and “Longing in Their Hearts,” which together sold more than 14 million copies and made Raitt the best-selling artist on Capitol Records.

“Just Like That” was taken from her 21st album of the same name, released last year through her own Redwing Records label. It was recorded in Sausalito with a band that included bassist James “Hutch” Hutchinson, drummer Ricky Fataar, keyboardist and backing vocalist Glenn Patscha, and guitarist Kenny Greenberg.

Raitt, a 13-time Grammy winner, received the Recording Academy’s Lifetime Achievement Award at the 64th annual Grammy Awards last year.

I’m so happy for @BonnieRaitt. She deserves every single thing we can give her. From the time I opened for her on a tour in the early 1980’s up to now, she has been unfailingly kind and generous to me. I adore her and we’re all lucky to have her. #BonnieRaitt

— rosanne cash (@rosannecash)

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Source: © Copyright Datebook – The San Francisco Chronicle

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The Moms Who Lived Bonnie Raitt’s Grammy-Winning Song
“Just Like That” was inspired by the story of a cardiac transplant recipient who let his donor’s mother listen to her dead child’s heartbeat.

on February 6, 2023 No comments
Michael Daly

As Bonnie Raitt tells it, the inspiration for her Grammy-winning Song of the Year, “Just Like That,” was a TV segment in which a mother listened to the beat of her dead son’s heart in a transplant recipient’s chest.

“I was so inspired for this song by the incredible story of the love and the grace and the generosity of someone that donates their loved one’s organs to help another person live,” Raitt said in her acceptance speech Sunday night. “And the story was so simple and beautiful for these times.”

She sings:

I lay my head upon his chest

And I was with my boy again

Raitt has not said which transplant news story in 2018 led her to pen those lyrics, but there have been plenty since then. The grief and hope she wrote about has been on display in more than a dozen encounters chronicled by local TV stations.

Jody Pelt of Michigan lost her 19-year-old son, Bill Scruggs, when he was shot to death in 2019. Scruggs was the kind of teen who always gave whatever he had in his pocket when he encountered the homeless. He signed on as an organ donor the day he got his driver’s license in 2018. “He comes back from the counter and showed me the little sticker that says, ‘I’m an organ donor,’” Pelt told the Daily Beast on Monday. “He was very proud of himself.”

The teen’s heart went to a man named Bobby Davis at Atrium Health Sanger Heart & Vascular Institute in North Carolina. Pelt and Davis initially communicated through an intermediary, then directly. Davis sent her a recording of her son’s continuing heartbeat made during a check-up.

“The recording is beautiful, but it reminded me of an ultrasound,” she remembered . “Hearing it in real life was even better.”

She was able to do that through a stethoscope when they finally met in person at the hospital in 2021.

“I made that,” she can be heard exclaiming in a video of the moment.

She recalled, “It was sort of bittersweet—very happy for the person who had it now, but also, you very much miss your person.”

She added, “Happy tears all around… I definitely was a happy mom.”Jenny Sullivan of Texas had a similar story. Her son, Amir Aguilar, was 26 when was fatally shot. His heart went to Manny Hardy of Oklahoma, whose own heart was failing when he received a transplant on Father’s Day of 2020.

Hardy returned home from the hospital to find a letter from Sullivan. She came to see him that October and a TV news crew was on hand when they met.

“She just walked over to me and she put her head on my chest while she was hugging me,” Hardy remembered. “She cried and cried and cried.”

Sullivan recalled, “When I hear my son’s heart beating in Manny’s chest, I close my eyes and I feel like I’m having my son,” she said. “It is so precious a feeling, the deep, deep, deep love that I had for my son.”

She said that when she gazed at Hardy’s face it was as if it became translucent. She says she also saw her son’s face.

“It is something only a mother could see,” she said.

She remembered something her son had said when he was a Navy corpsman: “If I save one life with my life, I’m going to be very happy.”

Sullivan and Hardy sat and talked for hours. Hardy’s wife presented Sullivan with a gift.

“My wife went to Build a Bear and had a recording of the heartbeat put in the bear and gave it to her,” Hardy said.

Similar encounters between mothers and heart transplant recipients can be found online by anybody in need of a little inspiration. But there would be many more if there were not a perpetual and critical shortage of donated hearts.

“There’s not nearly enough hearts available,” Dr. Eric Skipper, a cardiac transplant surgeon at the same North Carolina hospital where Pelt listened to her dead son’s living heart.

In national terms, Skipper said, there are under 5,000 transplants a year. The need is close to 35,000 to 40,000. Just getting on the heart transplant list is difficult and as of Sunday the federal transplant network had 3,343 would be recipients waiting.

“You can emphasize enough how vast the need is,” he said. “You’re truly giving them the gift of life.”

The recipient of Bill Scruggs’ gift of life has arranged with the hospital to install a bell along with his photo on the heart transplant floor. What is called “Bill’s Bell”’ is rung after every successful heart transplant.

“I think the bell is an amazing tribute to Bill and I also believe that the patients who get to ring it get some kind of feeling as if they are victorious in the fight,” Pelt said.

Bill’s mother has not yet heard Bonnie Raitt’s song. But Pelt does have the recording of her son’s heartbeat.

“I still listen to it at least two or three times a month,” she said.

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Source: © Copyright The Daily Beast

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Bonnie Raitt Wins Song of the Year for “Just Like That” at Grammy Awards.

on February 6, 2023 No comments
by Alli Patton

And “Just Like That,” Bonnie Raitt takes home Song of the Year at the 65th Annual Grammy Awards ceremony, hosted Sunday night (Feb. 5).

“I’m so surprised, I don’t know what to say,” Raitt said in her acceptance speech. “This is just an unreal moment.”

Her track, “Just Like That,” went head-to-head against some of the night’s biggest songs, including Adele’s “Easy on Me,” Beyoncé’s “Break My Soul,” Harry Styles’ “As It Was,” Kendrick Lamar’s “The Heart Part 5,” Lizzo’s “About Damn Time,” Steve Lacy’s “Bad Habit,” Taylor Swift’s “All Too Well (10 Minute Version) (The Short Film),” DJ Khaled’s “God Did,” and Gayle’s “ABCDEFU.”

“I don’t write a lot of songs but I’m so proud that you appreciate this one and what this means for me and for the rest of the songwriters who I would not be up here tonight if it wasn’t for the art of the great soul digging hard-working people that put these songs and ideas to music,” she added of her self-penned tune, written as a tribute to the late singer/songwriter legend John Prine. “I’m totally humbled, I really appreciate it.”

Watch her acceptance speech below.

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During the ceremony, the artist also snagged the awards for Best Americana Performance for “Made Up Mind” and Best American Roots Song for “Just Like That” and saw a nomination for Best Americana Album. She also paid tribute to the late Christine McVie with a performance of Fleetwood Mac’s “Songbird” alongside Sheryl Crow and Mick Fleetwood.

Her studio album Just Like That… was released in April 2022 and has been met with great acclaim.

“It’s like putting together a great meal,” Raitt told American Songwriter of the album. “I’m not a terrific cook, but I appreciate why you wouldn’t want to put this vegetable with that vegetable when this one will be a better match. I want to say something new on every record, and with 21 albums, man, I’ve covered a lot of territory of what can go wrong in a love affair. Those blues guitar licks on ‘Made Up Mind,’ I could have been singing a song about a laundromat and I still would’ve cut it.”

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Source: © Copyright American Songwriter

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