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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Bonnie Raitt Performs In Prison
Title:US CA: Bonnie Raitt Performs In Prison
Published On:2001-06-25
Source:BBC News (UK Web)
Fetched On:2008-01-25 15:55:22
BONNIE RAITT PERFORMS IN PRISON

Country blues singer Bonnie Raitt has played a free two-hour concert at San
Quentin State Prison, in the US. The singer performed in front of about
2,000 male inmates in the prison yard. In an interview before the show,
Raitt spoke about her addiction to alcohol and drugs, which she called "the
blues disease" . The concert on 23 June was her first within the walls of a
prison, she said.

'Heartbreak'

"We're all here together," Raitt said. "We're all just one infraction away
from being in a prison ourselves. I could've been here in a minute."

She added: "I could've been too angry and if I had a gun in my hand instead
of a telephone or a guitar, I'd be right in here." Raitt says she has been
sober for the last 14 years.

Raitt gave the concert because she wanted to help other inmates at the
prison to stay sober. "If I can give some help to somebody who's
struggling, whether it's with alcohol or heartbreak - music can heal," she
said. Raitt has volunteered for Bread and Roses, an organisation which
provides free live entertainment to people who live in institutions or are
otherwise excluded from society.

"This is a community that deserves to have music," Raitt continued. "I
think spiritually and personally it has a transformative effect on both the
artist and the people that we're playing for.

"It just kind of ups the humanity... it's a soul-to-soul connection."

'Message'

Prison warden Jeanne Woodford was delighted with the impact of Raitt's
concert. "The idea isn't really to entertain, although entertainment is a
part of it," she said.

She added: "It really is to send a message - that clean and sober is the
way to go. I think we have the right people here to deliver that message,
people that these guys will listen to." One inmate, recovering heroin
addict Brad Bennetto, welcomed contact with the outside world through concerts.

"We're still part of society," he said. "Maybe we're the undesirable part,
but you're going to have to deal with us eventually." San Quentin,
established in 1852 in Marin County, is California's oldest and most
notorious prison. It also contains the only gas chamber and death row in
the entire state of California.

Previous inmates include Eddie Bunker, who won the Macallan Dagger award
for Non-Fiction for his memoirs.

The book, Mr Blue, tells of the time the US actor and writer spent in San
Quentin prison before his successful writing career began.
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