She came up in the 70s blending blues slide guitar with folk storytelling, raised by a musical family and sharpened in club rooms.
From coffeehouses to Grammys, the long arc
After a late-career surge around
Just Like That... and a short health pause in 2023, she returns focused, relaxed, and ready to let songs lead.
What might surface tonight
The set will likely mix radio staples like
I Can't Make You Love Me and
Something to Talk About with touchstones such as
Nick of Time and a newer cut like
Made Up Mind. Expect a guest stretch with
Jon Cleary leaning into New Orleans R&B and second-line swing. The crowd skews multi-generational, with blues diehards, roots-rock fans, and piano heads drawn by Cleary, all leaning in for the quiet parts and surging for solos. Her slide usually rides the middle finger, and she often uses open A for bottleneck numbers that need wide, ringing chords. Studio lore says
I Can't Make You Love Me took shape around a live piano guide, a feel she preserves by keeping arrangements loose on stage. These notes about songs and staging reflect informed guesses from prior tours rather than a confirmed blueprint.
The Bonnie Raitt crowd, up close
Quiet respect, loud cheers
The scene feels neighborly and mixed in age, with soft denim, boots that can stand a long night, and a few vintage tour tees from earlier eras.
Little rituals that stick
Tote bags show folk festival patches, and new posters disappear early into tubes tucked under arms. During
I Can't Make You Love Me, the room goes almost silent, a few heads bowed until the final note fades. On
Something to Talk About, the chorus comes back at the stage in easy harmony, not a shout. Merch leans practical and tasteful, and slide-guitar pins draw gearheads who compare glass versus metal before the lights go down. Between songs, stories about mentors and sidemen earn warm laughs more than cheers. When
Jon Cleary sits in, a gentle second-line clap starts in one corner and spreads just enough to lift the groove. After the bow, people trade favorite deep cuts by the exit and hum guitar motifs on the way out.
How Bonnie Raitt makes a song breathe
Slide, space, and sway
The vocal sits warm and slightly husky, giving tender lines a weathered edge.
Subtle moves that land hard
Slide phrases answer the verse like a second voice, and the rhythm section leaves space so notes can ring. Tempos stay unhurried, but endings tighten with quick stops and hand cues that shape the arc. Piano and organ trade colors, with
Jon Cleary leaning into rolling left-hand patterns when the beat shifts to New Orleans. Guitars often move to open tunings for slide, and some songs drop a half-step live to keep the tone smoky at evening pitch. On ballads, the band sometimes reharmonizes the bridge just enough to tip it toward a gospel shade without losing the melody. Lights favor warm ambers and blues that fade slowly, letting the music change scenes rather than the rig. Solos stay concise, but shuffles may stretch a turnaround so the groove can stroll the room once more.
If you dig Bonnie Raitt, try these roads too
Crossroads of roots and songcraft
Fans who lean toward
Jackson Browne will hear the same careful writing, steady grooves, and road-seasoned calm.
Mavis Staples attracts listeners who crave soul authority and uplifting stage talk that still feels grounded. If you like
Lyle Lovett, the mix of dry humor, tight charts, and roomy dynamics will fit your ear.
John Hiatt overlaps in raspy heart, guitar grit, and a veteran band that plays for the song. These artists share deep catalogs, so sets flow on feel and pacing more than tricks, and the crowds show up to listen. If that balance of craft and warmth clicks for you, this bill will likely land.