The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Our two bands love each other’

Road warriors James Taylor, Bonnie Raitt team up this summer

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James Taylor might just be the happiest road warrior touring today, so what makes him happier?

Bringing on old friend Bonnie Raitt this summer for concerts that include the ultimate in Americana, some of the country’s most storied baseball parks.

“I’ve loved her music and her for a long, long time,’’ Taylor told The Associated Press in a recent interview. “I’ve interacted with Bonnie, and happily so, at numerous benefits for numerous causes — environmen­tal, social, political causes — over the years. We’re very much in sync in that way. She’s an incredible giver.’’

Among their stops will be Boston’s Fenway Park, where Taylor’s home-state team, the Red Sox, live and where Raitt last joined him on the road in 2015. And the first time? Well, that was back in 1970, when he invited the Harvard junior and budding blues singer, guitar player and songwriter onstage for a campus gig at Sanders Theatre after the two met through a mutual friend.

“I was nervous to play because I hadn’t really broken my chops in for concerts that much,’’ Raitt said by phone from Toronto while on a swing through Canada. “But I was so excited. It was an honour to be both at my school and opening for him. He couldn’t have been warmer and more friendly. It was intimidati­ng to meet one of my heroes but he was just so down to earth.’’

Raitt got her first recording contract and dropped out of school around that time. Though she was based on the West Coast and Taylor on the East, the two stayed in touch over the decades.

“The affection between us is so clear and so palpable. Our two bands love each other. James and I are both social activists and we’re really proud that a dollar of every ticket will be donated to various causes,’’ Raitt said.

The two haven’t worked up their sets yet but Raitt just may include Taylor’s 1968 “Rainy Day Man,’’ from his debut album and one of her all-time Taylor favourites, written by him and Zach Wiesner. It’s old-school Taylor, desperate and lonely, focused on making a dope connection soon after he tried opiates for the first time in real life, setting him on a 20-year path of addiction.

Raitt covered the song in 1974 on her “Streetligh­ts’’ album.

“It’s so complex and deep as a point of view, especially for someone as young as James when he wrote it,’’ Raitt said.

“He was so insightful and so deeply in touch with the inner workings and the darker side of the human soul and relationsh­ips, and so much of that point of view was so beautifull­y expressed in his music. That song just speaks to me and always has.’’

The summer tour has the two working together for six weeks.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this combinatio­n photo, singer Bonnie Raitt, left, appears in New York on March 7, 2016, and singer James Taylor poses in New York on May 13, 2015. Raitt and Taylor are teaming up this summer for concerts that include the ultimate in Americana, some...
AP PHOTO In this combinatio­n photo, singer Bonnie Raitt, left, appears in New York on March 7, 2016, and singer James Taylor poses in New York on May 13, 2015. Raitt and Taylor are teaming up this summer for concerts that include the ultimate in Americana, some...

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