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Posted on June 10, 2026 By user user

Angel from Montgomery – Bonnie Raitt & Brandi Carlile cover John Prine at The Gorge 5.30.26

Fifty Years After Bonnie Raitt First Sang This Song, She Returned to It With Brandi Carlile—and Discovered New Meaning in Every Word

Some songs become hits.

Some become standards.

And then there are songs like “Angel From Montgomery”, songs that seem to gather new layers of meaning every time they are sung, every time they are heard, and every time another year passes.

On May 30, 2026, beneath the vast evening sky of The Gorge Amphitheatre, Bonnie Raitt and Brandi Carlile delivered a performance that felt far larger than a simple duet. It was a meeting of generations, a celebration of songwriting, and a heartfelt tribute to the enduring legacy of John Prine, whose words continue to resonate long after his passing in 2020.

For Bonnie Raitt, “Angel From Montgomery” is not just another song in her catalog. It has been a companion throughout much of her life.

When she first began performing it in the 1970s, she was a young artist interpreting the story of a woman reflecting on lost dreams, fading possibilities, and the quiet disappointments that accumulate over time. Her performances were remarkable because she somehow understood emotions she had not yet fully lived.

Half a century later, the song carries a different weight.

The young woman who once imagined the character’s struggles has become an artist who has experienced decades of triumph, heartbreak, change, and reflection. Listening to Bonnie sing these lyrics in 2026, one cannot escape the feeling that she is no longer interpreting the song.

She is conversing with it.

That transformation gives the performance extraordinary emotional depth.

See also  Bonnie Raitt & John Prine – Angel From Montgomery

Standing beside her is Brandi Carlile, one of the most respected singer-songwriters of her generation and an artist often praised for carrying forward the storytelling traditions championed by figures such as John Prine. Her presence is not merely symbolic. It represents the continuation of a musical lineage that stretches across generations.

Together, the two women create something beautiful.

Bonnie brings wisdom, patience, and lived experience.

Brandi brings intensity, passion, and the emotional force of an artist still in the midst of her own journey.

Rather than competing for attention, their voices complement one another. Each reveals something different about the song. One sounds like reflection. The other sounds like discovery.

The setting itself adds another layer to the story.

The Gorge Amphitheatre is famous for its breathtaking natural surroundings and sweeping views. It is an enormous space, yet “Angel From Montgomery” remains an intensely personal song. That contrast creates one of the evening’s most memorable qualities.

What began as the private thoughts of a lonely woman becomes a shared experience among thousands gathered beneath the open sky.

Throughout the performance, the presence of John Prine is impossible to ignore.

He never appears on stage.

His voice is never heard.

Yet he is everywhere.

Every lyric, every image, and every emotion traces back to one of America’s greatest songwriters. The performance serves as a reminder that truly great songs do not disappear when their creators are gone. They continue finding new voices, new audiences, and new meanings.

Perhaps that is why this rendition feels so moving.

See also  Brandi Carlile – God Only Knows

It is not a song about endings.

It is a song about continuity.

John Prine wrote it.

Bonnie Raitt carried it to generations of listeners.

Brandi Carlile is helping introduce it to the next generation.

The chain remains unbroken.

Nearly fifty years after Bonnie first made “Angel From Montgomery” part of her musical identity, she returned to it once again. Yet instead of sounding older, the song somehow sounded deeper.

That may be the true mark of a masterpiece.

Most songs age with time.

“Angel From Montgomery” grows wiser.

And on this unforgettable night at The Gorge, surrounded by thousands of voices and countless memories, it felt more alive than ever.

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