Bonnie's Pride and Joy

Fansite with ALL the news about Bonnie !

Jackson Browne, Bonnie Raitt join Edwards on Q-C stage

on November 19, 2007 No comments
by Ed Tibbetts

On a day when Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama were in central Iowa arguing over who would be more experienced on the economy, John Edwards brought a pair of near-60 rock ’n’ rollers to Davenport, arguing he’s the real agent for change.

Jackson Browne and Bonnie Raitt joined Edwards today for the first of a two-day swing through the state. At Davenport North High School’s auditorium, the pair played for about 25 minutes, sprinkling their set with occasional praise for Edwards before giving way to his more standard political set.

“We had a choice, and we’re here on purpose. You can count on it,” Raitt told the crowd of a few hundred, which included scores of kids who came over from the high school.

As Browne and Raitt sat on stools at the edge of the stage, Edwards drew comparisons between himself and Clinton on several fronts. From the war in Iraq, dealing with Iran and the approach to dealing with drug and insurance companies, the former North Carolina senator portrayed himself as the candidate most likely to shake up Washington, D.C.

“We do actually agree that this election is about change and not about the status quo, but I believe you defend the system in Washington, you’re for the status quo,” Edwards told reporters after the event. “If you want to continue the occupation in Iraq, you’re for the status quo, and if you’re not willing to stand up to Bush and Cheney on Iran, that’s the status quo.”

Edwards criticized Clinton for voting in September for a nonbinding measure urging the administration to declare Iran’s Revolutionary Guard a terrorist organization, saying it plays into the White House’s hand. However, he declined to say afterward whether he thinks the organization is a terrorist group. Obama, who also has criticized Clinton over the vote has said he thinks the revolutionary guard is a terrorist organization.

Browne said afterward that he was drawn to Edwards because of his opposition to the expansion of nuclear power, but he said he is campaigning for him because he’s the most progressive candidate.

Browne and Raitt were original members of the group that launched the No Nukes concerts in New York City in 1979. The concerts are considered ground-breaking grassroots events that fused rock music and nuclear politics.

Tornia Hill, a Muscatine woman who was walking out of the hall with an Edwards poster signed by the candidate and the two musicians, said she would caucus for Edwards, as she did in 2004.

“It’s awesome. I don’t know if it drew more people, but I hope it did. They’re both great musicians,” she said. Hill said she had seen both in concert — Raitt in Iowa City in 2004 and Browne in 1980.

Edwards, Browne and Raitt were headed to Iowa City and Cedar Rapids for two other events today, with their tour to wrap up with visits to Grinnell and Des Moines Tuesday.


Source: © Copyright The Quad-City Times

But wait, there's more!

Last Night: Bonnie Raitt at Hard Rock Live

on November 13, 2007 No comments

by Brandon K Thorpe – Friday, November 16, 2007

Bonnie Raitt
Thursday, Nov 13
Hard Rock Live

The people who show up at Bonnie Raitt shows these days are white, married, and between the ages of 40 and 60. The only teenagers I saw were two blond chicks that sat next to me and left after the third song. There were also two twentysomething black lesbians in the audience. Aside from myself, these were the only twentysomethings in view, and the only black folks period.

From the stage, Raitt never comments on the whiteness of her audience, though she seems very aware of their age. Early in the set, after a blazing, bloozey “Talk To Me,” she said: “The best part of getting to be this age is not sweating the small stuff.” Big cheers — people here know what she means. Then, to fewer cheers: “Still sweating the big stuff, though.”

Raitt made it pretty clear what she meant by “big stuff” over the next few songs. She doesn’t worry about love, doesn’t worry about dying — but singing “I Will Not Be Broken,” an eerie swamp song built around sparse, desolate guitar lines and fishing metaphors, she dedicated the proceedings to the still-homeless from New Orleans, and riffed modestly about climate change. The social responsibility rap has never been as offensive from Raitt as from some of her contemporaries (say, Don Henley or Carly Simon) — probably because of all them dues she’s paid. Starting as a Boston folkie and toiling away the decades as an electric rural blues mama more interested in that big American sound than that big American paycheck, you always got the sense that she meant what she said, and not just for the moment. She’d also apparently invited a lot of SoFla’s Everglade-conservationist biggies to the show’s front-row and arranged for tables in the lobby to let them to pass out their literature, which makes you figure her involvement might be more than a matter of rich-white-lib guilt.

But it’s not her social responsibility rap that makes or breaks Raitt’s show: it is, as you’d figure, the music. Raitt seems to make her noise effortlessly, and on record, her ease too often makes for an overly casual, almost AOR vibe. Live, her facility has the opposite effect. The whole show would have gotten a boost from increased volume — during the concert, I found I could talk to my date without raising my voice — but it didn’t matter much. Good blues and gutbucket country are commanding genres, and most performers are either overpowered by them (Janis) or else are so worried about getting swept away that they suffocate the music beneath its own formal earmarks (Dr. John). Raitt has neither problem; it seems like she’s spent all her life chasing this music, and now she’s hell-bent on sharing the wonderful things she’s found.

One of those wonderful things is John Prine’s “Angel From Montgomery,” which Raitt’s been performing for years and is finally getting to the bottom of. Her version’s always been affecting; on Wednesday, it was a revelation. When she sang “If dreams were thunder/And lightning was desire/This old house, it would have burned down/A long time ago,” the way she enunciated the word “old” and the phrase “long time ago” was almost preternaturally expressive. It made you think you didn’t really understand age or the passage of time until you’d heard her sing those words. There were a lot of years in that voice.

But wait, there's more!

Maria Muldaur is Naughty, Bawdy & Blue on New CD out May 15

on May 7, 2007 No comments

SOURCE: ALL ABOUT JAZZ PUBLICITY, Published: 2007-05-07

MARIA MULDAUR IS NAUGHTY, BAWDY & BLUE ON NEW CD OUT MAY 15 COMPLETES CLASSIC BLUES WOMEN TRILOGY ON STONY PLAIN INCLUDES SPECIAL DUET WITH MARIA AND BONNIE RAITT

{{svg_quality_icon}}
{{quality-options}}
muted
00:00 / 00:52
{{quality-options}}

 

EDMONTON, AB – Stony Plain Records has announced a May 15 release date for Maria Muldaur’s new CD, Naughty, Bawdy & Blue, which completes the trilogy of albums the acclaimed singer has released as a tribute to classic women blues singers from the 1920s through the 1940s. Both of Maria’s previous albums in this series for Canadian label Stony Plain, which is distributed in the U.S. by Navarre Corporation, were nominated for Grammy Awards: Richland Woman Blues (2001) and Sweet Lovin’ Ol’ Soul (2005).

Bonnie Raitt makes a special guest appearance on Naughty, Bawdy & Blue singing a duet with Maria on “Separation Blues,” a song written by Sippie Wallace, with whom Bonnie toured in the ’70s and ’80s. Both Maria and Bonnie sang the song with Sippie prior to her death in 1986.

“How great to hear these classic blues again, done up right by one of my favorite singers and the incredible James Dapogny’s Chicago Jazz Band,” says Bonnie Raitt about the new album. “I loved joining in on Sippie Wallace’s ‘Separation Blues’!”

Backing Maria Muldaur on most of the album is James Dapogny’s Chicago Jazz Band (who often performed with Sippie Wallace), which provides the perfect accompaniment of instruments (clarinet, sax, trumpet, trombone, tuba, banjo, guitar, piano, bass and drums) to these songs, a sassy mix of blues and jazz. Other guests on the CD include Dave Mathews on piano and Kevin Porter on trombone. Naughty, Bawdy & Blue was produced by Maria Muldaur and Ron Harwood and recorded at Solid Sound in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

But wait, there's more!