

There are so many great songs waiting to be discovered,” she said. “I realized I had missed so much by not hearing that music that came before me-or even music older than that. When she was a teenager she listened to the music of her generation on the radio, and only later discovered the music of the past. “Good music is timeless,” Bonoff explained. They comfort me when I am feeling low.” She knows that when people come out to hear her, they want to hear the old songs that they enjoyed when they were young, or that they heard on their mom and dad’s records when they were playing around. “I’m still writing songs,” Bonoff said, “And I always hope my next one will be my best, but I am glad to have the memories that I have made. Souther, to make what is now considered a classic Southern California record. “There was something fantastic in the air during its creation, and while it was a long haul getting to that place and time, things just fell together in the right way.”īonoff employed some of Los Angeles’ best-known session musicians, such as guitarist Waddy Wachtel and the rhythm section of Leland Sklar and Russ Kunkel, as well as having guest appearances by Ronstadt, Eagles’ Don Henley, and J.D. That said, Bonoff considers her first solo album, her eponymous 1977 release, her greatest musical achievement. What does a young person really know about life? As parents die, friends pass on and move away, and you start thinking about what it means to be on the planet in a deeper way, you approach songwriting and performing differently.” I haven’t changed a whole lot in terms of subjects, but as time passes I have become more reflective. “You know, I have always written about love and relationships and all the stuff that entails since the beginning. Now that Bonoff has been in the business for more than five decades, she sees life differently than she did back then. They were supportive, but of course they were worried about me.” “Being in school during the day and going to the studio or playing a show at night wasn’t working out, so I quit school.

Growing up in the Los Angeles area, she began hanging out at the now legendary Troubadour and heard such artists as James Taylor and Jackson Browne before they even had record deals.īonoff went to UCLA for one quarter, but dropped out as she already had a record deal with a band comprised of her, Wendy Waldman, Kenny Edwards, and Andrew Gold. Her early influences were the popular artists of the day: the Beatles, Motown, Bob Dylan, and such. I would rush home from school, do my homework, and just get out the guitar and breathe,” Bonoff said. “Ever since I was 13 or 14, all I ever wanted to do was write and play songs. She noted that Gerber is a wonderful musician in her own right with CDs of her own and that the audience will get a treat by hearing her open the show. She’ll return to CSPS in Cedar Rapids on Saturday, March 31, accompanied by guitarist Linda Gerber. However, Bonoff finds performing live still gives her a thrill and goes out on mini-tours of regions of the United States or Australia to invigorate her musical chops. She hit the top ten in 1994 with a single from the film 8 Seconds called “Standing Right Next to Me” and in the same decade penned the Grammy-winning duet between Linda Ronstadt and Aaron Neville “All My Life.” Other notable covers of Bonoff’s material include “Home” by Bonnie Raitt, “Tell Me Why” by Wynonna Judd, and “Isn’t It Always Love” by Lynn Anderson. It exists on an odd island of strangeness and really didn’t do much for me or my career.” Still, Bonoff said she liked singing it and still sings it live.īonoff has enjoyed other success as both a singer and a songwriter. While the single sold lots of copies, it was not the kind of song that sold albums. It’s not associated with a particular artist. She explained that “Personally” is what those in the music industry call a “faithless” hit. “There’s something schizophrenic about the situation.” “The weird thing about it is that people either know me from that song, or they do not know that song and know me for the material covered by Linda,” Bonoff said over the phone from her California home. Her version of “Personally” made it to number three on Billboard’s Adult Contemporary chart back in the summer of 1982. Singer songwriter Karla Bonoff is best known by music fans as the person who penned three of the hits from Linda Ronstadt’s seminal 1976 album Hasten Down the Wind: “Someone to Lay Down Beside Me,” “If He’s Ever Near,” and “Lose Again.” Strangely, Bonoff’s biggest hit record was one she did not write. Karla Bonoff may not have been in the spotlight much through her long career, but her songs have.
