When Women Played Rock And
Roll For Keeps- The Music Of Bonnie Raiit
CD Review
By Zack James
Seth Garth and Jack
Callahan who had been friends since highs school down in Carver after they
returned from a whirlwind few months on the road on a magical mystery tour
yellow brick road merry pranksters adventure out in California were sitting in
Jack’s, the local hang-out bar in Cambridge where the drinks were cheap and the
conversation interesting, when a young woman stepped up to the small stage
preparing to sing. Jack mentioned to Seth that she looked familiar, that flaming
red hair a giveaway, and asked him if he could place the face. Seth who was
beginning his long career as a music critic just then for The Eye whom he had
contracted with when he was out in California blurted out that didn’t Jack
remember seeing her, seeing Bonnie Raitt, on the Boston Common before they had
taken off for California where she blew away the crowd with a cover of Down
Highway 61. Jack laughed and said that he was so stoned that night that he
wasn’t sure who he had heard (Seth reminding him that it had been an afternoon
concert.
Of course Seth as a budding
music critic, expecting to ride the way from folk to folk rock to what was now
being called “acid” rock with all the strobe lights and dipping into the drug
bag to bring out the right mood had done some basic research on Bonnie as an up
and coming star who was riding her own wave of the new trend in having female
singers lead the bands they were in. Grace Slick, Amy Kline, Nicky Adams and
then her. He had also found out that Bonnie had dropped out of Radcliffe a
little earlier in order to pursue her musical career as a result of the success
of the Boston Common concert. He also had found out that here budding virtuosity
with the slide guitar had come from sitting at the feet of country blues legend
Mississippi Fred McDowell. So she had a pedigree. Still she a was only starting
out and grateful that Jack’s had allowed her up on the stage a couple of years
earlier where she had begun to hone her skills both at presenting a professional
musical veneer and connecting with the audience. So the night Seth and Jack
were sitting there at the bar drinking and talking about everything under the
sun Bonnie was doing “pay back.” Performing for the old crowd, performing for
Jack.
She started her first set
with Hound Dog Taylor’s The Sky Is Crying and McDowell’s Highway 61 and the
rest would be history. A history which is well documented in this compilation
from those classics to Richard Thompson’s The Dimming of the Day.
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