Second Winter [Legacy Edition] [Digipak]Johnny Winter
Release Date: 10/19/2004
Original Release:
1969
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 534591_CD
UPC # 696998573529
Label: Legacy Recordings
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
Disc: 2
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Johnny Winter
Artist: Edgar Winter Engineer: Ed Kollis; Bob Auger Producer: Johnny Winter; Jerry Rappaport; Steve Paul; Johnny Winter Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: Also available in a 3-pack with JOHNNY WINTER and CAPTURED LIVE. Personnel: Johnny Winter (vocals, guitar, mandolin); Edgar Winter (alto saxophone, piano, harpsichord, organ); Tommy Shannon, Dennis Collins (bass); John Turner (drums, percussion). Includes liner notes by Johnny Winter. Personnel: Johnny Winter (vocals, guitar, electric guitar, slide guitar, mandolin); Edgar Winter (vocals, saxophone, alto saxophone, piano, harpsichord, organ, keyboards); Uncle John Turner (drums, percussion). Audio Mixers: Thom Cadley; Bob Auger. Liner Note Author: Andy Aledort. Recording information: Nashville, TN (07/19/1969-08/12/1969). Authors: Johnny Winter; Tommy Shannon. Photographers: Don Hunstein; Fred Lombardi; Peter Sanders; Richard Avedon; Amalie R. Rothschild. Johnny Winter's second album for Columbia--duh--1970's SECOND WINTER is also notorious for a gimmicky sales device. When the recording sessions were over, Winter had enough material for an album and a half; rather than add a side of filler, Columbia simply promoted the album as the world's first three-sided album. (In a snarky review, Rolling Stone sarcastically gave the blank fourth side an in-depth discussion.) The last of Winter's albums to feature his original backing band--drummer Uncle John Turner, bassist Tommy Shannon, and brother Edgar on keyboards and saxes--SECOND WINTER is a refinement of the blues-rock aesthetic of 1969's JOHNNY WINTER. Louder, harder, faster, and more reckless, this is to JOHNNY WINTER as Elvis Costello's THIS YEAR'S MODEL is to MY AIM IS TRUE: an album so phenomenal that it makes the debut, excellent though it is, sound weak in comparison. Highlights include the punky "I Hate Everybody" and a brilliant Hendrix-style deconstruction of Dylan's "Highway 61 Revisited." Second Winter, Johnny Winter's second album for Columbia, originally had the distinction of being the only album in rock history that was a three-sided double LP. Musically, 35 years after its original release, Second Winter is still an oddity. Issued by Sony's Legacy division, the set has been painstakingly remastered, and expanded by bonus cuts and an entire disc of live material. It's too bluesed-out to be a pure rock record, and too psychedelically dimensioned to be a pure blues album. Tommy Shannon calls it "power blues." And as for whatever else passed for blues-rock at the time -- Cream, Hendrix, Canned Heat, etc. -- forget it. This set is a whole different animal. Cut in Nashville with all tracks begin done within one or two takes, the energy of Second Winter is undeniable. The sheer range of styles Winter assaulted in his restless quest is astonishing too. The set begins with a blues-funk cover of Percy Mayfield's classic "Memory Pain," that adds a wealth of rock sonics to the mix. The same goes for the gritty originals like "I'm Not Sure," with its screaming electric mandolin, and the album's closer "Fast Life Rider." The latter two are textured with Edgar's stellar piano work. Then there's the album's centerpiece, the signature cover of Bob Dylan's "Highway 61 Revisited" with its burning, gut bucket slide work and Winter's bona fide revival of Chuck Berry's "Johnny B. Goode." Trad Delta blues makes its appearance here as well in "I Love Everybody," as does jump jazz in "I Hate Everybody," both of them with Winter's raucous edge. The original album is buoyed here with a pair of bonus tracks, an instrumental version of Ray Charles' "Tell the Truth," as well as the jump blues classic "Early in the Morning." Disc two in the set is an entire unreleased concert from the Royal Albert Hall in 1970 with the same band The show is a monster showcasing all the fiery craziness of Winter's nearly unbelievable guitar mastery on tracks such as "Mean Town Blues," "Black Cat Bone," "It's My Own Fault," "Tobacco Road," and "Johnny B. Goode." It is also significant for the early performance of Edgar's classic, "Frankenstein" -- it's a very different, and preferable -- version than the one recorded in the studio. All in all, fantastic sound, an excellent package, and good notes by Andy Aledort make this a welcome addition to the classic rock canon. ~ Thom Jurek
Rolling Stone (p.154) - Included in Rolling Stone's The 10 Best Reissues & Anthologies Of 2004 - "Winter - the ultimate white-blues sensation - made good on the hype with this late-'69 freak of a release..."
Uncut (p.92) - 3 stars out of 5 - "SECOND WINTER features blistering versions of 'Highway 6`1 Revisited' and 'Johnny B Goode', and his guitar technique is clearly phenomenal."
Goldmine - "...[though the] original album was rather tough-sounding, the CD's increased treble adds the extra layer of icing, making this one sweet release...lean and hungry sounding..."
Texan blues guitarist Johnny Winter, surely the first albino blues guitar hero, was already a convincing artist in the '60s when still in his teens. At the dawn of the '70s, he embraced the sound of the time, adopting a louder, more frenetic blues-rock style. Backed by the McCoys, including guitarist Rick Derringer, he released a series of classic blues-rock albums, while his keyboard-playing brother Edgar, with whom Johnny played on and off over the years, achieved stardom in his own right. At the end of the '70s, Winter produced Muddy Waters, helping him make a triumphant comeback. In the ensuing decades, Winter maintained a prolific schedule of touring and recording.
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Allman Brothers Band (The) Bloomfield, Mike Blues Project (The) Blues Traveler Butterfield, Paul Clapton, Eric Derringer, Rick Gov't Mule Groundhogs (The) Healey, Jeff Hendrix, Jimi Johnson, Eric (Guitar 1) Lang, Jonny Mayall, John North Mississippi Allstars Satriani, Joe Savoy Brown Shepherd, Kenny Wayne Ten Years After The Sons of Champlin Trucks, Derek Vaughan, Stevie Ray Welch, Monster Mike White Stripes (The) Widespread Panic Winter, Edgar
Influences:
Bland, Bobby "Blue" Charles, Ray Collins, Albert Copeland, Johnny Guy, Buddy Hendrix, Jimi Hooker, John Lee Hopkins, Lightnin' James, Elmore King, B.B. King, Freddie Lightnin' Slim Magic Sam Reed, Jimmy (Blues) Rush, Otis Slim, Guitar Sumlin, Hubert Walker, T-Bone Walter, Little Waters, Muddy Watson, Johnny "Guitar" Wolf, Howlin'
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