Slipstream (Bonnie Raitt album)

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ReleasedApril 10, 2012
Studio
Length57:49
Slipstream
photo of Bonnie Raitt in green bustle back jacket climbing stairs with bright yellow background
Studio album by
ReleasedApril 10, 2012
Studio
GenreRock, blues rock, Americana
Length57:49
LabelRedwing Records
Producer
Bonnie Raitt chronology
Souls Alike
(2005)
Slipstream
(2012)
Dig In Deep
(2016)
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic74/100[1]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllmusicStarStarStarStar[2]
American SongwriterStarStarStarStar[3]
BlurtStarStarStarStarStarStarStar[4]
The Boston Globe(favourable)[5]
Chicago TribuneStarStarStar[6]
Entertainment WeeklyA−[7]
Paste(8.5/10)[8]
Daily ExpressStarStarStarStar[9]
Robert Christgau(2-star Honorable Mention)(2-star Honorable Mention)[10]
Rolling StoneStarStarStarStar[11]

Slipstream is the sixteenth studio album by Bonnie Raitt, released in April 2012 on Redwing Records.[12] The album peaked at No. 6 on the US Billboard 200. As well at No. 1 on the US Billboard Top Blues Albums, Top Rock Albums and Top Independent Albums charts.[13]

Two singles were released from the album, a cover of Gerry Rafferty's "Right Down the Line", and "Used to Rule the World", both of which charted on the Billboard Triple A chart.[14] The album also spawned a highly successful concert tour. The Slipstream Tour was the 82nd best-selling American tour of 2012 earning 11.3 million dollars and selling 201,313 tickets.[15]

Critical reception

Slipstream received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 74 based on 13 reviews, which indicates "generally favourable reviews".[1]

Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly called Slipstream a "superb...mix of rock, blues, folk, and funk" and "the singer's best album since 1975's underrated Home Plate".[7] Allen Morrison of American Songwriter also wrote "Slipstream is Bonnie Raitt’s best album in years and one of the best of her 40-year career."[3] The Columbus Dispatch noted "Slipstream does represent a split decision, between the quiet anguish of the Joe Henry-produced tracks and the rockers written by Al Anderson and other bluesy compatriots. But this combination of musical approaches doesn’t seem frenzied. In Raitt’s hands, it's all chicken soup for the middle-aged-rocker soul."[16]

Holly Gleason of Paste wrote: "It's been seven years since Bonnie Raitt released Souls Alike, and a lot of life has happened. Losing her parents, brother and a best friend has left the veteran blues/soul rocker with plenty to think about—and that pensiveness colors Slipstream with knowing acceptance, nuanced takes on loss and a grace that finds splendor in the raw places."[8] Thom Jurek of Allmusic wrote "There are a few lesser moments, but they don't distract; Slipstream reveals Raitt at another creative peak."[2] Simon Gage of the Daily Express declared "this eclectic album, her first in seven years..touches on blues, reggae, old-school soul and rock....The voice is as loaded with emotion as ever and the songs of the highest calibre with work by Bob Dylan and Loudon Wainwright III among them."[9]

The album was placed at No. 22 on Rolling Stone's list of the top 50 albums of 2012, with the magazine remarking: "As young stars like Adele and Katy Perry cover her songs, Raitt continues what she’s been doing, more or less, for 40-plus years: Pick a bunch of smart, tender tunes by great writers (Slipstream includes a pair by Bob Dylan), add one or two of her own, and sing them in a soulful ache, dotted by her casual slideguitar punctuations.."[17]

Slipstream also won for the Grammy for Best Americana Album at the 2013 Grammy Awards.[18]

Commercial performance

Debuting at No. 6 on the Billboard 200, Slipstream became Raitt's highest-charting album in 18 years.[19] It also debuted at No. 1 on both the Rock Albums and Blues Albums charts.[20][21] selling around 63,000 copies. The album has sold 334,000 albums in the US as of January 2016.[22]

Slipstream became the 106th best-selling album and 9th best-selling independent album in the United States in 2012.[23][24] Slipstream was also the best-selling Blues album of 2012, and Bonnie Raitt was the best-selling Blues artist of 2012.[25][26]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Used to Rule the World"Randall Bramblett4:17
2."Right Down the Line"Gerry Rafferty5:29
3."Million Miles"Bob Dylan6:26
4."You Can't Fail Me Now"Loudon Wainwright III, Joseph Lee Henry4:18
5."Down to You"George Marinelli, lyrics Bonnie Raitt, Bramblett3:59
6."Take My Love with You"Gordon Kennedy, Wayne Kirkpatrick, Kelly Price4:24
7."Not Cause I Wanted To"Al Anderson, Bonnie Bishop3:37
8."Ain't Gonna Let You Go"Anderson, Bonnie Bramlett5:59
9."Marriage Made in Hollywood"Paul Brady, Michael O'Keefe4:55
10."Split Decision"Anderson, Gary Nicholson4:35
11."Standing in the Doorway"Dylan5:24
12."God Only Knows"Joseph Lee Henry4:26
Total length:57:49

Personnel

Production

  • Producers – Bonnie Raitt (Tracks 1, 2 & 5–10); Joe Henry (Tracks 3, 4, 11 & 12).
  • Recorded and Mixed by Ryan Freeland
  • Second Engineer – Wesley Seidman
  • Various overdubs on Tracks 6, 7, 9, 10 & 12 recorded by Scott Baggett.
  • Mixed at Stampede Origin Studio (Culver City, CA).
  • Mastered by Bob Ludwig at Gateway Mastering (Portland, ME).
  • Project Coordinator – Kathy Kane
  • Art Direction and Design – Norman Miller and DesignartLA.com.
  • Photography – Matt Mindlin
  • Background Photos – Norman Miller
  • Assistant Photography – Omar Gaieck and Chris Soule
  • Management – Kathy Kane, assisted by Annie Heller-Gutwillig, Chloe Monahan and Mary Skerritt.
  • Hair – Gunn Espegard
  • Make-up – Kate Lindsay

Charts

References

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