Chicago Sun-Times

R& B veteran Bettye LaVette covers Dylan on emotional new album

- BY SELENA FRAGASSI Selena Fragassi is a local freelance writer.

‘ I’ m proud to be the oldest person in show business with a new record contract right now,’’ says Bettye LaVette. At 72 years young, the iconic, smoky- lipped rhythm and blues singer has been in the midst of a career rebirth the past 15 years, at a time when many other contempora­ries are releasing neardaily announceme­nts about their retirement­s.

Her latest, “Things Have Changed,” marks LaVette’s debut for Verve/ Universal Records — her first major label deal in 36 years — and has the singer’s stamp on new interpreta­tions of Bob Dylan’s songbook, starting with a brooding blues version of the title track and cascading through a soulful confession­al on “It Ain’t Me Babe” and the rhythmic exploratio­n of “The Times They Are A- Changin’ ” all bound together by LaVette’s raspy, emotional bellow that has so much life behind it, you’d think it has a heartbeat of its own.

“I actually worked harder on this [ album] than anything I have ever done. I had to change genders and change so many words, and then take what was left and make it fit naturally into my mouth,” LaVette admits. She’s on the phone in a Detroit hotel room, getting ready for her new tour. It’s the city she still refers to “as the scene of the crime” where, as her great 2012 biography “A Woman Like Me” explains, a young Betty Jo Haskins was born, growing up with a jukebox in her living room and regular visits from The Soul Stirrers, Five Blind Boys of Mississipp­i and other traveling gospel groups.

LaVette remembers being kicked out of her school’s talent show in the fifth grade for wanting to do songs her own way, and by 16 she recorded her first single with Detroit producer Johnnie Mae Matthews. “My Man — He’s a Loving Man” was distribute­d by Atlantic in 1962 and became a Top 10 hit, leading to tours with Otis Redding and, later, The James Brown Revue. But success wouldn’t come easy for LaVette. Though she continued to record the next 20 years, including at the legendary Muscle Shoals Sound Studio and with her hometown label Motown Records, most works failed to chart and contracts and tours were canceled. By the ’ 90s she was playing local gigs around Detroit. “I remember one time I was working in a Chinese restaurant,” LaVette recalls. “And this woman says, ‘ Aren’t you Bettye LaVette?’ and I replied, ‘ I used to be.’ ”

Her “comeback” — she hates that word — is a culminatio­n of several factors including a series of reissues at the turn of the 21st Century on Dutch and French labels after record collectors “discovered I wasn’t dead yet,” jokes LaVette, as well as a growing soul revival that made her the topic of much conversati­on within online communitie­s. While LaVette has recorded great, Grammy- nominated works in the past 15 years like 2015’ s “Worthy” and has received awards from the Rhythm and Blues Foundation, many critics have taken most fondly to “Things Have Changed,” calling it her most raw and personal yet.

“The thing about Bob [ Dylan] is that he has all these arguments and he goes right up to the ledge, but I want to push you right off. I have been telling people I’ve been finishing his arguments on these songs,” says LaVette.

LaVette only had one chance to meet Dylan at a blues and jazz festival in Italy years ago where they were both on the bill. “I opened the door to my dressing room and security was standing there, and they said no one can come out yet because Mr. Dylan is going on the stage. But you can’t tell me that, and I went out anyway and screamed ‘ Hey, Robert Dylan,’ and he looked up, came over, took my face in both of his hands and kissed me square in the mouth and walked on stage. I thought either he does that to every woman or he likes something of mine he’s heard.”

Though she still hopes to work or tour with Dylan someday, LaVette had the great tutelage of Dylan’s guitarist Larry Campbell in the studio for “Things Have Changed” as well as producer Steve Jordan ( who she calls “the bonafide Bettye whisperer”). The album also features guest stars Trombone Shorty and Keith Richards.

“Keith and I agreed that if we had known each other 30 years ago we would have gotten into some serious trouble,” she says, laughing. “But I’m so grateful to him and of being able to meet my contempora­ries and having the opportunit­ies I have now.”

LaVette recalls recently walking into Verve Records — the longtime home of incredible jazz artists — and seeing her face on a large billboard in the offices right next to Billie Holiday and Louis Armstrong.

“You should have heard me screaming in the lobby,” she says. “To know that Verve is looking at me as legendary instead of just some old soul singer. I’m in a real good place now.”

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 ??  ?? BETTYE LAVETTE When: 8 p. m. April 13 Where: Old Town School of Folk Music, 4544 N. Lincoln Ave. Tickets: $ 40 Info: oldtownsch­ool. org
BETTYE LAVETTE When: 8 p. m. April 13 Where: Old Town School of Folk Music, 4544 N. Lincoln Ave. Tickets: $ 40 Info: oldtownsch­ool. org

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