Bonnie Raitt is unique among her peers: she debuted with her self-titled album in 1971, a great era for post-hippie rock music. During that time, Jackson Browne, Little Feat, Bruce Springsteen, Linda Ronstadt, Randy Newman, Elton John, Billy Joel, Warren Zevon, and Carly Simon, among others, were kicking off their careers and putting out classic albums.
But out of all of them, only Bonnie Raitt hit her stride and commercial peak once her thirties were ending, ten albums into her career. Is there any artist in any genre with a similar trajectory?
This isn’t to say that her first nine albums didn’t have gems: they did. “Thank You,” “Give It Up Or Let Me Go,” “Love Has No Pride,” and “Love Me Like A Man” are fantastic, as are her covers of Randy Newman’s “Guilty,” Joni Mitchell’s “That Song About The Midway,” Del Shannon’s “Runaway,” Jackson Browne’s “My Opening Farewell” and especially John Prine’s “Angel From Montgomery.”
Bonnie Raitt had her commercial breakthrough at a relatively late date in her career. Nick Of Time, released in March of 1989 – just a few months short of Raitt’s 40th birthday – was her ninth album. It was her best album up until that point. It might be her best album ever.
Nick Of Time has been certified five times platinum for sales in excess of five million units in America; it won three Grammy Awards, including Album of the Year. It also topped the Billboard charts. And it wasn’t a fluke, either: the follow-up, 1991’s Luck Of The Draw, went platinum seven times and also won a bunch of Grammys. Not every album since then has hit those peaks, but as of this writing, her most recent album, 2022’s Just Like That… is another milestone. It won three Grammys, including Song of the Year for the title track (more on that song below).
Most artists have early peaks. They make their mark with songs about what it’s like to be young, that were written and recorded when they’re in their 20s or (maybe) 30s. Bonnie Raitt really found her voice when she was singing about what it’s like to be middle-aged. It’s a cliche to compare someone to wine (“they improve with age”). But I’ll compare Bonnie Raitt to wine for a different reason. When I was a kid in my 20s, I didn’t “get” wine. I didn’t dislike wine; I just wasn’t interested in it. But as I grew up, I understood that wine is something that you develop a taste for, and one that maybe takes some years to appreciate. That’s how I feel about Bonnie Raitt. I was in college when Nick of Time was released: I liked her voice and loved her slide guitar playing but her records just weren’t for me.
Decades later, now I get it. Now I love her music. I’m glad I came around. She is an inspiration. Bonnie Raitt shows that you don’t have to chase who and what you were when you were in your teens, twenties, and thirties. You can, in fact, keep getting better as you progress through life. (OK, so: kind of like wine.) Here are some songs that help to make that point.