Some songs don’t just belong to the artist who wrote them. They belong to the voice that made the world feel them. For Bonnie Raitt, that song has always been Angel from Montgomery. The song was written by her close friend John Prine and first appeared on his debut album in 1971. But when Bonnie recorded it for her 1974 album Streetlights, something special happened. She didn’t just sing the song. She lived inside it. With a voice full of quiet weariness and tenderness, Bonnie gave the song a feeling that listeners carried with them for decades. John Prine himself once said that while he wrote the words, it was Bonnie’s voice that helped the song truly find its home. The two shared more than a musical connection — they shared a deep friendship built on mutual respect and soul. When John Prine passed away in 2020, something changed every time Bonnie stepped on stage to sing “Angel from Montgomery.” The song was no longer just a classic. It became a memory. A thank-you. A conversation between two friends that somehow continues every time the music starts. And for many listeners, when Bonnie sings that song today… it feels like John Prine is still in the room.
In the long and winding history of American roots music, some songs arrive loudly and burn fast. Others arrive quietly—and never leave. Angel From Montgomery belongs firmly in the second…