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Paul Ingles – The Emergence of Bonnie Raitt

on May 11, 2012 No comments

Rock and Roll Hall of Famer and multiple Grammy-Award winner Bonnie Raitt is profiled in this two hour music and commentary special featuring an exclusive interview with Bonnie as well as comments from Jackson Browne, Taj Mahal, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Maia Sharp, Freebo, Bill Payne, Ann Powers and more. Hosted by Paul Ingles.

Bonnie with show host Paul Ingles at New Orleans Jazzfest 2012

Blues/Rock/Pop star Bonnie Raitt is emerging from a 3 year studio layoff with a new record and tour. It’s an opportune time to revisit her remarkable career and personal story. So award-winning producer Paul Ingles has added Bonnie Raitt to his “Emergence” series on important musicians of the last 50 years – which so far has included Bob Dylan, Paul Simon and Joni Mitchell.

The Emergence of Bonnie Raitt includes exclusive interview material with Bonnie as well as the voices of many Bonnie’s colleagues including Jackson Browne, Taj Mahal, Beth Nielsen Chapman, Bill Payne, Maia Sharp, Freebo plus NPR Music critic Ann Powers.

The program samples music from throughout her career from her earliest recordings to her more recent work.

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(Track 2) Bonnie Raitt talks with Paul Ingles about her life and career in this extended interview. The interview was excerpted for Paul’s 2012 program THE EMERGENCE OF BONNIE RAITT. This presentation focuses on the Raitt interview alone with music excerpts sprinkled in. Bonnie talks about her early influences, her early days as a 20-something blues phenom, her brush with addiction and obscurity, then her rise back to the top with a string of Grammy awards and commercial success.

Musical Works

TitleArtistAlbumLabelYearLength
Thing Called LoveBonnie RaittRoad Tested.Capitol199503:22
Used To Rule The WorldBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing201203:00
Santy AnnoOdettaOdetta Sings Ballads and Blues.Hot JWP Music1956:40
All My TrialsJoan BaezJoan Baez.Vanguard2006:44
The Lonesome Death of Hattie CarrollBob DylanThe Times They Are A Changin’.Columbia1964:28
Slidin’ Delta BluesMississippi John HurtBlues Essentials, Vol.2 .Future Noise Music200801:25
Bukka’s Jitterbug BluesBukka WhiteThe Complete Bukka White.Sony199401:00
Fool’s GameBonnie RaittSilver Lining.Capitol2002:59
Million MilesBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing201204:20
Can’t Find My Way HomeBonnie RaittWLIR Broadcast.Ultrasonic Studios197205:41
Women Be WiseBonnie RaittBonnie Raitt.Warner Brothers197103:28
Give it Up or Let Me GoBonnie RaittGive it Up.Warner Brothers197205:00
Kokomo BluesMississippi Fred McDowellMississippi Fred McDowell.Rounder Records199401:14
Write Me A Few of Your Lines / Kokomo BluesBonnie RaittTakin’ My Time.Warner Brothers197303:00
Love You Like A ManChris SmitherI’m A Stranger Too.The Tomato Music Works2002:36
Love Me Like A ManBonnie RaittGive it Up.Warner Brothers1972:43
Under the Falling SkyJackson BrowneJackson Browne.Asylum1972:40
Under the Falling SkyBonnie RaittGive It Up.Warner Brothers197203:15
Love Has No PrideBonnie Raitt (with Crosby and Nash)The 25th Anniversary Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Concerts.Direct Holdings America201005:08
Standing In The DoorwayBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing201201:14
Luck of the DrawBonnie RaittLuck of The Draw.Capitol1991:23
That Song About the MidwayBonnie RaittStreetlights.Warner Brothers197403:21
Angel From MontgomeryBonnie RaittStreetlights.Warner Brothers197403:51
Here Come Those Tears AgainJackson BrowneThe Pretender.Asylum197601:15
Not Cause I Wanted ToBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing201203:30
Slow RideBonnie RaittLuck of The Draw.Capitol1991:20
Sugar MamaBonnie RaittHome Plate.Warner Brothers1975:59
You Can’t Fail Me NowBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing2012:15
About To Make Me Leave Home BoyBonnie RaittSweet Forgiveness.Warner Brothers197704:13
RunawayBonnie RaittNo Nukes.Asylum198003:43
Never Make Your Move Too SoonBonnie RaittRoad Tested.Capitol199501:58
I Will Not Be DeniedBonnie RaittNick of Time.Capitol1989:20
The Road Is My Middle NameBonnie RaittThe Bridge School Concerts, Vol. 1.Warner Strategic Marketing2002:59
Something To Talk AboutBonnie RaittLuck of the Draw.Capitol1991:20
Nick of TimeBonnie RaittNick of Time.Capitol198903:10
I Can’t Make You Love MeBonnie RaittRoad Tested.Capitol199505:35
God Only KnowsBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing201203:23
Down To YouBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing2012:57
Right Down The LineBonnie RaittSlipstream.Redwing201201:15

Source: © Copyright
The PRX Exchange
The PRX Exchange
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Bonnie Raitt – Words and Music – 2012

on May 10, 2012 No comments
by Rita Houston
Rita Houston talks with Bonnie Raitt on FUV – April 13, 2012 (photo courtesy of RED Music)
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It’s been a 7-year wait between studio albums, but Bonnie Raitt is back – and in fine form – with her latest release, Slipstream. A lifelong collaborator, Bonnie worked for the first time with Joe Henry on a few of the new songs, but also enlisted her longtime bandmates as well. That crew joined her at NYC’s Avatar Studios recently, where FUV’s Rita Houston had a chance to talk with Bonnie about her place in the slipstream of music.

(recorded 04/13/12)

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Past Shows and Tributes for WFUV Program Director Rita Houston

Source: © Copyright WFUV Public Radio Live

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Bonnie Raitt gave New Orleans Jazz Fest crowd something to talk about

on May 9, 2012 No comments
By Alison Fensterstock Follow on Twitter
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Bonnie Raitt, who kicked off her 2012 summer tour Sunday at the New Orleans Jazz Fest, did not start slow. After her introduction by festival producer Quint Davis – “Ladies and gentlemen, the great Raitt!” – she tore straight into what was to be pretty much 90 straight minutes of hard-hitting, sharp-toothed rock ‘n’ roll, taking no prisoners with a vicious bottleneck guitar and that sandpaper-and-smoke voice, which seems to age like a good Scotch. At nearly the very end of the 2012 fest, the guitar goddess delivered one of its most memorable shows.

Raitt, who as Davis pointed out in his introduction, was the first non-New Orleans-dwelling artist to perform at Jazz Fest, is no stranger to the city. Her shiny, zebra-striped turquoise shirt, she said, was intended to “honor the spirit of Ernie K-Doe. We drove by the Mother-in-Law Lounge on the way here.” She praised John Mooney and the Malone Brothers’ Saturday performances at Jazz Fest with a “man, it was slammin’.”

“In my long and notorious life,” she said, “I’ve been so glad I always have New Orleans to come back to.”

The guitarist was flanked by a band of veterans. Drummer Ricky Fataar has been with her since 1981; bassist James “Hutch” Hutchinson since 1983, when the two were introduced by the Neville Brothers. Second guitarist George Marinelli joined 20 years ago; road soundman Paul Middleton has been around for 25. Together, they occupied the stage like the old buddies they are, relaxed, chatty and engaging with the crowd, and making it look easy with the music.

Raitt played old-school hits like John Prine’s “Angel From Montgomery,” which she popularized in her 1974 “Streetlights” album, and, of course, “Something To Talk About,” from 1991’s “Luck of the Draw.” But for the most part, the set was drawn from her 2012 release “Slipstream” – her first studio album in seven years.

bonnie raitt–angel from montgomery–jazzfest 2012

Jazz Fest 2012 Preservation Hall Jazz Band with Allen Toussaint and Bonnie Raitt

I Believe I’m In Love With You

Right Down The Line

2012-05-06: Bonnie Raitt/Jon Cleary/Allen Toussaint, I Believe I’m in Love with You , JazzFest

bonnie raitt at jazz fest, 05 06 2012

Jazz Fest 2012 111 Bonnie Raitt @ Gentilly Stage

“Slipstream” was recorded after a tough year for Raitt, during which she lost her parents, her brother and a best friend. She doesn’t write much, and for “Slipstream,” she chose songs that reflected her pain, and her emergence from it. Some of the album tracks are for an artist who is experiencing loss, and some are for an artist who has known enough of it to treasure love and joy when she finds it. (And at least one – “Down to You,” which she co-wrote with Randall Bramblett and performed Sunday at Jazz Fest, is about putting the first and second experiences together and arriving at a third perspective: taking no mess. As the set’s penultimate song, she rocked it.)

Rain sprinkled the crowd as the band turned Bob Dylan’s “Million Miles” into a gritty, low-down blues, complete with slinky barroom piano solo from keyboardist Mike Finnegan. Before “Can’t Fail Me Now,” another “Slipstream” track written by Loudon Wainwright and Joe Henry, Raitt and Marinelli had to pause to re-tune due to the wetness.

But the sun emerged as if on a timer for one of the show’s few quiet moments. Rays beamed down as Raitt sat atop a stool sans guitar, hands folded in her lap, for the hushed ballad “I Can’t Make You Love Me.” Smartphones flew into the air to capture the performance; most folks sang along. After a set of high-octane joking and rocking, it was a lovely interlude of pure emotion.

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