Still Alive And WellJohnny Winter
Release Date: 08/23/1994
Original Release:
1973
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 157569_CD
UPC # 074646642122
Label: Legacy Recordings
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Johnny Winter
Artist: Todd Rundgren; Rick Derringer Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: Also available with CAPTURED LIVE! on BGO (478). Personnel: Johnny Winter (vocals, guitar, mandolin); Jeremy Steig (flute); Mark Klingman (piano); Randy Jo Hobbs (bass); Richard Hughes (drums). Reissue producer: Bob Irwin. Personnel: Johnny Winter (vocals, guitar, slide guitar, mandolin, harmonica); Rick Derringer (guitar, slide guitar); Jeremy Steig (flute); Mark "Moogy" Klingman (piano); Todd Rundgren (Mellotron, keyboards); Richard Hughes (drums). You might mistake this for a live record, but this is actually a 1973 studio release by the Texas blues guitar master. Winter's first release after a brief retirement/drying-out period, STILL ALIVE AND WELL, from the title on down, has the feeling of a major comeback, although Winter really hadn't been gone for very long. Looking hale and hearty on the cover--or as hale and hearty as a rail-thin albino can look, anyway--Winter sounds equally fit on the songs themselves. Produced by his longtime collaborator Rick Derringer, who also leads the tight and flashy band with his rhythm and second lead playing, the album is possibly the most pop-oriented release of Winter's tenure at Columbia. The band, which features Todd Rundgren on synthesizers and Mellotron (on a Johnny Winter album???) and Rundgren's associate Mark "Moogy" Klingman on piano, is probably mostly responsible for this, but Winter's amiable versions of the Stones' "Silver Train" and "Let It Bleed," along with Dan Hartman's "Can't You Feel It," are among his most radio-friendly work. This reissue also features uncompleted outtakes of Little Richard's "Lucille" and Dylan's "From a Buick 6," missing Winter's never-recorded lead solos.
Rolling Stone (5/10/73, p.55) - "..His fingers are as fleet and sure as ever, his vocals have bite and growl, and the flash and power of yore are hanging right in there.."
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.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
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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