Artist Name
Bonnie Raitt
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Album Only List refreshview
album thumb 2022 - Just Like That...
album thumb 2016 - Dig in Deep
album thumb 2012 - Slipstream
album thumb 2005 - Souls Alike
album thumb 2002 - Silver Lining
album thumb 1998 - Fundamental
album thumb 1994 - Longing in Their Hearts
album thumb 1991 - Luck of the Draw
album thumb 1989 - Nick of Time
album thumb 1986 - Nine Lives
album thumb 1982 - Green Light
album thumb 1979 - The Glow
album thumb 1977 - Sweet Forgiveness
album thumb 1975 - Home Plate
album thumb 1974 - Streetlights
album thumb 1973 - Takin My Time
album thumb 1972 - Give It Up
album thumb 1971 - Bonnie Raitt


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Origin
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Genre
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Style
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Mood
mood icon In Love

Born

born icon 1949

Active
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4 users heart off Bonnie Raitt - I Can't Make You Love Me
3 users heart off Bonnie Raitt - Something to Talk About
3 users heart off Bonnie Raitt - Thing Called Love
3 users heart off Bonnie Raitt - Something to Talk About
3 users heart off Bonnie Raitt - I Can't Make You Love Me


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Love Me Like a Man
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I Can't Make You Love Me
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Runaway
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Right Down the Line
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Storm Warning



Artist Biography
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Bonnie Lynn Raitt (born November 8, 1949) is an American blues singer-songwriter and slide guitar player. During the 1970s, Raitt released a series of acclaimed roots-influenced albums which incorporated elements of blues, rock, folk and country, but she is perhaps best known for her more commercially accessible recordings in the 1990s including "Nick of Time", "Something to Talk About", "Love Sneakin' Up on You", and the slow ballad "I Can't Make You Love Me". Raitt has received nine Grammy Awards in her career and is a lifelong political activist.
Raitt, the daughter of Broadway musical star John Raitt and his first wife, pianist Marjorie Haydock, began playing guitar at an early age, something few of her high school female friends did. Later she would become famous for her bottleneck-style guitar playing. "I had played a little at school and at camp", she later recalled in a July 2002 interview. The camp Raitt refers to is Camp Regis-Applejack, located on Upper St. Regis Lake in New York.
After graduating from Oakwood Friends School in Poughkeepsie, New York, in 1967 Raitt entered Radcliffe College as a freshman, majoring in social relations and African studies. "My plan was to travel to Tanzania, where President Julius Nyerere was creating a government based on democracy and socialism", Raitt recalled. "I wanted to help undo the damage that Western colonialism had done to native cultures around the world. Cambridge, Massachusetts was a hotbed of this kind of thinking, and I was thrilled."
One day, Raitt was told by a friend that blues promoter Dick Waterman was giving an interview at WHRB, Harvard's college radio station. An important figure in the blues revival of the 1960s, Waterman was also a Cambridge resident. Raitt went to see Waterman, and the two soon became friends, "much to the chagrin of my parents, who didn't expect their freshman daughter to be running around with 65-year-old bluesmen," recalled Raitt. "I was amazed by his passion for the music and the integrity with which he managed the musicians."
During Raitt's sophomore year, Waterman relocated to Philadelphia, and a number of local musicians he counted among his friends went with him. Raitt had become a strong part of that community, recalling that "... these people had become my friends, my mentors, and though I had every intention of graduating, I decided to take the semester off and move to Philadelphia .... It was an opportunity that young white girls just don't get, and as it turns out, an opportunity that changed everything."
By now, Raitt was also playing folk and rhythm and blues clubs in the Boston area, performing alongside established blues legends such as Howlin' Wolf, Sippie Wallace, and Mississippi Fred McDowell, all of whom she met through Waterman.
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Last Edit by zag
15th Feb 2023

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