Hot Stamper Pressings of the Music of Bonnie Raitt Available Now
UPDATE 2026
We’re close to having enough copies to do another shootout, our first in four years.
In 2012 we did our first one for Luck of the Draw, at the end of which we found a pressing that was clearly superior to the DCC, our default favorite at the time.
That was 14 years ago, and 14 years is a long time in audio. Having done the shootout many, many times since then, I can tell you two things we have learned:
1) Yes, of course, the domestic copies are better sounding than the DCC.
I often mention that DCC’s releases had to fight their way through Kevin Gray’s opaque, airless, low-resolution cutting system (more here). That gives an advantage to practically any pressing not mastered by him.
His list of failures is surely one of the longest in the business. Of course, we can only guess about most of them, as we are not in the business of playing junk Heavy Vinyl. We much prefer the business we are in: selling the best sounding vintage pressings of the greatest albums of all time.
2) The domestic pressings are very unlikely to ever win a shootout.
They tend to earn grades of A++ or A+ to A++, and none of them lately has managed to earn a grade of A++ on both sides.
The imports are just too good. They are clearly better sounding, and it does not take a pair of golden ears to hear it. Why that is we have no idea, and we are congenitally opposed to speculating about the subject. (More on that subject below.)
Our 2012 Shootout
Here’s the first (Super) Hot Stamper copy of Luck Of The Draw to ever hit the site! What took us so long? It’s simple, most copies out there just plain don’t deliver, and for a long time we weren’t sure we’d ever have a copy that would be a clear enough winner over the DCC pressing to merit Hot Stamper status.
Well folks, it may have taken YEARS but we’ve finally found a Hot Copy — this one rates A++ on side one and A+ to A++ on side two. We think you’ll have a very hard time finding a better sounding pressing of this album no matter what you do, and of course we guarantee it will handily beat the pants off the DCC or your money back.
Side one is excellent — punchy down low, sweet up top and unusually open and transparent. It had more analog qualities than most of the copies we heard, which tended to have that digital / sterile sound that kills so many albums from the era. The energy and presence really kick up the fun factor on this side; we gave it an A++.
Side two is almost as wonderful — super open and transparent with real immediacy. It doesn’t have all the analog richness of side one, but it was a nice step up over most pressings we played. We rated it A+ to A++.
Nick Of Time may be a slightly better album — we won’t press the point — but this is certainly a very good one as well. If you love Bonnie’s music as much as we hope you do, you will no doubt want them both. We don’t imagine we’ll be tracking down too many of these, they’re much more rare than Nick, so if you’re a fan, scoop this one up — we think you’ll be very pleased with the sound this copy gives you.
Christgau “A” Review
One reason it took Raitt two decades to achieve the El Lay iconicity she deserves is her resistance to both folk gentility and studio antisepsis. So praise Don Was for humanizing the control-freak production values she could never get on top of in the ’70s. Another is her moral seriousness. So praise songwriters like John Hiatt, Bonnie Hayes, and maybe even Paul Brady for combining heft with hookcraft, and Shirley Eikhard, whoever she is, for “Something to Talk About,” the slyest distillation of this rowdy Quaker’s sexy ways since “Love Me Like a Man.”
But after that tell Raitt that no commercial reservation should ever torpedo a “Tangled and Dark,” about a deep, long wrangle with love itself, or an “All at Once,” about losing the teenage daughter she’s never literally had. It’s like the guitar she’s afraid she hasn’t properly mastered–she stops writing at the risk of her own intelligence, idiosyncrasy, and reality.
Further Reading