BONNIE RAITT: BONNIE RAITT (1971)
1) Bluebird; 2) Mighty Tight
Woman; 3) Thank You; 4) Finest Lovin' Man; 5) Any Day Woman; 6) Big Road; 7)
Walking Blues; 8) Danger Heartbreak Dead Ahead; 9) Since I Fell For You; 10) I
Ain't Blue; 11) Women Be Wise.
Upon entering Radcliffe College, Bonny Raitt
majored in social relations and African studies, and it shows — what other type
of artist would have covered not one, but two
songs by (then still fairly obscure among everybody but very hardcore blues
aficionados) Sippie Wallace? Both of which are, of course, all about social
relations (gender relations, to be exact) in the Afro-American community of
the 1920s, and not at all out of date or out of touch in the early 1970s. Yet
it is not so much the actual subject that is interesting here as it is the
approach, which can make all the difference and make you love this record, hate
this record, or use it as casual background for the «boring» category of house
parties.
Roots-rock, in those days, used to come in
extremes — it could be reverential and self-consciously «spiritual», downplaying
the earthiness of the music (they don't call it «roots» for nothing, but too
many people played «roots rock» as if it were «angels' rock» instead), or it
could assume the «dirty» form of hard-rockers, pub-rockers, shit-rockers, or
whatever you'd like to call the self-consciously irreverential crowds. If it didn't come in extremes, though, it was
running an even higher risk of not finding its own face. And it is very easy not to be impressed by this
record and just walk away saying, «yeah, so what's the big deal?..»
Because on most counts, the 21-year old Bonnie
Raitt is professional, but whether she is anything special is not so evident. She knows how to play guitar, pleasantly
but not exceptionally (and in any case, her playing on this debut album is
intentionally devoid of any flashy demonstration of her later-to-be-respected
slide technique); she is a good enough singer, but her voice is physically
weak, or, rather, at this juncture she has not yet learned to control it
rigorously; and she is not at all a «singer-songwriter», because she writes
very few songs — the two numbers that are credited to her are, respectively, a rather
generic folk-pop ballad and a rather simplistic blues vamp.
She is,
however, an interpreter and a blender of tradition; perhaps the most
interesting aspect of the album is its choice of cover material — ranging from
then-contemporary songs by Stephen Stills and Paul Siebel (and Bonnie's own, of
course) to Motown (the Marvelettes) to vocal jazz to old acoustic blues to,
most intriguingly, the «urban blues» tradition of the 1920s, as illustrated by
the two Sippie Wallace covers: love for Robert Johnson, one of whose songs is
also covered here, may have been ubiquitous in the early 1970s, but proper
understanding of the importance of the female blues singers of the
pre-Depression era was yet to come (I think that even Bessie Smith was more
revered for her legend than actually listened to — unless that feeling is being
secretly nurtured by the association with the Band song of that name that bears
no resemblance to Bessie Smith's real style whatsoever. Whatever).
There is no particular strife for
«authenticity», thank God, outside of Bonnie hiring blues legend Junior Walker
to contribute harmonica throughout — and the production by Willie Murphy is
intelligent and tasteful, as he tends to avoid any unnecessary tricks or
effects, but makes good use of all the immense host of musicians that Bonnie
dragged into the empty summer camp on Lake Minnetonka to help her carry on the musical
tradition. And this is important, because Raitt sees to it that the album never
becomes a pure guitar celebration — pianos, harmonicas, flutes, saxes, even a tuba,
comically-importantly puffed into by Freebo on ʽBig Roadʼ, are just as
important to make this whole experience into a celebration that is as much
«blues» as it is «vaudeville», not to mention «jazz» or «R&B» or
«folk-based singer-songwriting, California-style», all one.
Under this sauce, style becomes far more
important than substance: I'd like to complain that Bonnie's folksy ʽThank Youʼ
is not very memorable, and that the straightforward blues covers where she is
being «tough» (ʽMighty Tight Womanʼ) hit harder than the easily-dissipated
ballads, but that impression would probably apply to anybody, be they as talented as Ms. Raitt or much less talented.
The truth is that Bonnie intuitively gets where it's at: she is able to present
herself as a strong, independent character, but does that in the same
restrained, self-contained, «polite» manner as her pre-war idols. This is an attitude
that does not work wonders for short-time entertainment value — not
surprisingly, the album failed to chart — but might command certain respect in
the long run.
From a certain point of view, this is Bonnie
Raitt at her very best; with a song selection like that, when «old masters» are
only marginally offset by contemporary singer-songwriters, Junior Walker on
harp, and production that cleverly updates the old honky-tonk without
succumbing to the usual 1970s clichés (like drowning everything in a sea of
syrupy strings, for instance), if you don't like Bonnie Raitt, you won't like Bonnie Raitt, and if you don't get Bonnie
Raitt, there is no stopping you from completely despising her for everything
she's done once she stopped drinking, put out Nick Of Time, and became the roots-rock-spokeswoman for people
without a proper sense of humor. But you know, it can actually be fun trying to
get Bonnie Raitt, at least, in that period of hers where she still had some
sort of meaningful agenda, rather than just wanting to hang out with all the
other cool people. Thumbs up.
I can't comment on the music, but the cover photo makes me laugh. Seriously, THIS is who the music biz sharks chose to replace Janis on the "Throne of Pearl"? Take another look at the pose and tell me I'm seeing things.
ReplyDeleteWhat?
DeleteI don't know why... but I read (fake news(?)) and I thought you were dead! It's great to see you blogging in 2014, I only knew your old web page... Greetings from Buenos Aires! :)
ReplyDeleteShe should have kept on drinking.
ReplyDelete