BONNIE RAITT: SLIPSTREAM (2012)
1) Used To Rule The World; 2)
Right Down The Line; 3) Million Miles; 4) You Can't Fail Me Now; 5) Down To
You; 6) Take My Love With You; 7) Not Cause I Wanted To; 8) Ain't Gonna Let You
Go; 9) Marriage Made In Hollywood; 10) Split Decision; 11) Standing In The
Doorway; 12) God Only Knows.
Odd, but I like this album. It isn't altogether
different from any other Bonnie Raitt album, but I like it more than anything
she's offered us in... let's see here... scroll up... scroll up... scroll...
scroll... more scroll... okay, Green Light
was the last time I gave her a thumbs up, wasn't it? well, looks like the most
sympathetic (cautiously refraining from using the word «best») record she gave
us in thirty years. Quite a record, that.
Good choice of co-producer in Joe Henry (never
mind that the guy is married to Madonna's sister: his production credits include
veterans like Mose Allison, Ramblin' Jack Elliott, and Solomon Burke, as well
as Aimee Mann's The Forgotten Arm,
so he's cool by me). Relatively small band mostly consisting of Bonnie regulars
(the Hutchinson-Fataar rhythm section, etc.) and some surprising guests like
experimental guitar guru Bill Frisell. Very few signs of adult contemporary.
But most importantly — there's a
touch of sharpness here throughout, chasing out the flabbiness and genericity
whose shadow haunted Bonnie's work since Nick
Of Time (and some acid-tongued folks would say, since she first stepped
into the studio).
It is something on which you cannot put a
finger at all — just a pinch of crispness in the vocals, bitterness in the
playing, a slightly grumblier tone for the electric rhythm guitar, a basic
instinctive feeling that is slowly generated out of a hundred tiny nuances. It
may have something to do with the lady's age: as she hops over the 60-year
barrier and feels that two thirds, or maybe more than two thirds of the way
have passed by, a sniff of the imminent scythe (cynically speaking) sometimes
works wonders for the artist. Hardly a coincidence, wouldn't you say, that she
covers here not one, but two songs from
Dylan's Time Out Of Mind — probably
the most quintessential «death harbinger» album from a rock veteran? None of
the two are ʽNot Dark Yetʼ, but that would have been way too obvious.
However, Slipstream
on the whole is not a slow, moody, soft-textured record. ʽUsed To Rule The
Worldʼ is not a particularly optimistic title for the album's opening song —
indeed, written once again by Randall Bramblett, it is a set of bitter thoughts
on the failed illusions of the baby-boomer generation — but in its own
restrained way, it rocks, and Raitt spits out the angry summarizations
("Your life had come and gone / Now you're mystified / Standing with the
rest of us / Who used to rule the world") as if the blame were to be
placed on the baby boomers themselves (and maybe that is exactly where it is to be placed), as well as delivers her
fieriest slide work in ages, both here and on several other of the rocking
tracks. (Actually, her best slide work on the album is on ʽSplit Decisionʼ, a
humorous «boxing» song full of lyrical double entendres, written by guitarist
Al Anderson who also figuratively duels with Bonnie on the solo parts — this is
as close as a Bonnie Raitt song ever gets to «fun» and «exciting»).
The Dylan covers are done really well, and I mean musically, not merely in a «Bonnie sings
them credibly» manner, which would be dull, because she sings almost everything
credibly (dull). But on ʽMillion Milesʼ, there is a mean, swampy, overtone-loaded
slide solo, and on ʽStanding In The Doorwayʼ, there are some really exquisite slide
licks that remind me better than anything else how she can turn the instrument
from slithering snake to high-hoppin' singin' bird in a single moment. And, no
doubt, this all has to do with the fact that these are just the right songs
selected by her at exactly the right time — in fact, I am sure that the album
could have been even better had she simply decided to donate 70% of the space
to appropriately selected Dylan covers. Hey, the man has written gazillions of
songs on death and despair — each of them more gripping than anything Gerry
Rafferty or Kelly Price could offer.
Slipstream is Raitt's first album of original material
since 2005 — seven years between albums is the longest break she ever took, and
while there is no evidence whatsoever that it might be her last record, it does
look as if now, at her age, she were still interested in regularly
expectorating new stuff like clockwork, which is good, because it gives more
opportunities for a meaningful statement on something fundamental every now and
then. Perhaps my scent has been misled by the seductive Dylan covers, or by too
much theorizing, but what the heck, just one more thumbs up will not hurt anybody. We
will even overlook the fact that the quasi-obligatory boring piano ballad at
the end has the nerve to be titled the same way as Paul McCartney's favorite
song in the world, despite not being worthy to kiss its footprints.
Two things annoy me the most about Ms. Raitt —
her way-too-tight integration in the formulaic roots-rock industry, and her
courteous self-restraint and «politeness». Slipstream
may still be well integrated and much too gallant for its own good, but at
least this time around, it doesn't exactly make a cult of these values, and we'll take it as a positive sign. And if
it does happen to be the last Bonnie Raitt album, we'll take it as an even more positive sign — as decent as it is
on the whole, I seriously doubt that she will be ever able to top it.
I still say she should have never stopped drinking.
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