Tell Me :  Talk
Talk about your favorite band. 

Previous page Next page First page IORR home

For information about how to use this forum please check out forum help and policies.

OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Date: December 12, 2013 11:15

True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story Pays Tribute To Legendary Blues Rocker, To Celebrate His 70th Birthday On Sunday, February 23, 2014

Deluxe 4-CD box set collects 56 tracks from 27 albums on Imperial, Columbia, Blue Sky/Epic, Alligator, Point Blank, Friday Music, Megaforce, and Columbia/Legacy labels, spanning 1968 to 2011

Live cuts from 1970 Atlanta Pop Festival, previously unavailable on CD, include "Mean Mistreater" and previously unreleased "Eyesight To The Blind" and "Prodigal Son"

Available everywhere February 25, 2014, through Columbia/Legacy - follows special birthday night show at B.B. King Blues Club & Grill in NYC

































Legacy Recordings logo. Division of SONY Music Entertainment. (PRNewsFoto/Legacy Recordings)

NEW YORK, Dec. 10, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- The extraordinary four decade-plus recording career of seminal Texas blues-rocking guitar legend Johnny Winter, who celebrates his 70th birthday on February 23, 2014, will be commemorated with the release of True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story. This deluxe 4-CD box set, includes 56 tracks that span his major label career from 1968 until his most recent album of 2011, will be available everywhere February 25, 2014, through Columbia/Legacy, a division of SONY MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT. The album pre-order is live at [smarturl.it].

(Logo: [photos.prnewswire.com])

The two-time Grammy Award®-nominated, perennially touring Johnny Winter will play a special birthday night performance at the B.B. King Blues Club & Grill at Times Square in New York City on Sunday, February 23, 2014. Tickets are available for $30 in advance and $35 day of show. For tickets go to [www.bbkingblues.com].

"If it was not for Johnny Winter," said Joe Perry of Aerosmith, "I would have never picked up the guitar!" The testimonial is one of nearly 20 that accompany the box set, from such guitar luminaries as Eddie Van Halen, Angus Young, Pete Townshend, Carlos Santana, Steven Tyler, Billy Gibbons, Joe Satriani, Derek Trucks, Gregg Allman, Leslie West, Vince Gill, Glenn Tipton, Mark Knopfler, and many more. "A lot of people play the blues," said Charlie Daniels, "but there's only a handful who can reach deep into the music and make it real. Johnny Winter can take you on a ride. Juke joints and cotton fields, rotgut whiskey and back alley crap games, lowdown, lonesome, trifling women and hard times. That's the blues, y'all."

True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story lives up to its title with a chronological track sequence of studio and live material that underscores Johnny Winter's hard-won reputation as an American blues master. The contents are sourced from no less than 27 separate albums on the Imperial, Columbia, Blue Sky/Epic, Alligator, Point Blank (Virgin), Friday Music, Megaforce, and Columbia/Legacy labels. These range from his independently recorded and released The Progressive Blues Experiment of 1968 ("Bad Luck And Trouble," "Mean Town Blues") up through 2011's all-star duets project, Roots ("Maybelline" with Vince Gill, "Dust My Broom" with Derek Trucks).

Guests abound throughout True To The Blues, starting with the third track as fellow blues guitar giant Michael Bloomfield introduces Johnny Winter to the Fillmore East audience in December 1968, during a "Super Session" live concert date with Al Kooper. It was Winter's first trip to New York City, on the heels of a Texas music scene survey on the newsstands that week in Rolling Stone magazine (not yet one year old!). The issue, coupled with his incendiary playing on an 11-minute jam of John Lee Hooker's "It's My Own Fault," shot the unknown and unsigned-to-a-record-label Johnny Winter to stardom. His six-figure signing with Columbia was reportedly the biggest advance in the CBS Records era to that point in history. Winter would be signed with CBS through 1980.

Among other notable musicians on True To The Blues are Dr. John on "Illustrated Man," recorded in Chicago, 1991. A year later, Winter was invited to the Bob Dylan 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration at Madison Square Garden, to reprise his blistering version of "Highway 61 Revisited," one of two indelible covers of Dylan, along with Jimi Hendrix's "All Along the Watchtower," that defined the closing of the '60s. Joining Winter at MSG was that night's all-star 'house band' of G.E. Smith, Steve Cropper, Booker T. Jones, Donald "Duck" Dunn, Anton Fig, and Jim Keltner.

True To The Blues not only showcases Winter and the band lineups he has led over the years, many of them (up through 1976) including his brother Edgar on vocals and an array of instruments (keyboards, reeds, drums). A blues lover's dream collection, the box set also pays homage to the great forebears who influenced Winter, and with whom he was able to record during his long career, among them:
•Willie Dixon and Walter "Shakey" Horton (together on "Mean Mistreater" from Winter's self-titled Columbia debut LP, 1969); and
•Muddy Waters and his band featuring James Cotton, "Pinetop" Perkins, and Willie "Big Eyes" Smith (in the studio on Muddy's "Walkin' Thru The Park," and live on Guitar Slim's "I Done Got Over It," both from 1977).

(It is noted that Johnny Winter produced and played guitar on the final four LPs recorded by his hero Muddy Waters after he left Chess Records. The first three of those titles won consecutive Grammy Awards® as "Best Ethnic Or Traditional [i.e. Blues] Recording," namely Hard Again (1977), I'm Ready (1978), and Muddy "Mississippi" Waters – Live (1979).)

True To The Blues also draws tracks from Winter's two Grammy Award®-nominated albums:
•Guitar Slinger, nominated for Best Traditional Blues Recording at the 27th Grammy Awards (February, 1985); and
•Serious Business, nominated for Best Traditional Blues Recording at the 28th Grammy Awards (February, 1986).

At the core of True To The Blues are the six albums that Winter recorded for Columbia Records: Johnny Winter (1969), Second Winter (1969), Johnny Winter And (1970), Johnny Winter And/Live (1971), Still Alive And Well (1973), and Saints & Sinners (1975). There were also six albums that he recorded for manager Steve Paul's Blue Sky Records (distributed by Columbia's sister imprint, Epic/Portrait/Associated Labels, or E/P/A): John Dawson Winter III (1974), Together (1976), Captured Live! (1976), Nothin' But The Blues (1977), White, Hot & Blue (1978), and Raisin' Cain (1980).

In addition, True To The Blues draws tracks from a number of historic Columbia/Legacy projects: Fillmore East: The Lost Concert Tapes 12/13/68 (2003), The Woodstock Experience (2009), Second Winter: Legacy Edition (2004), and Breakin' It Up, Breakin' It Down (2007).

In addition to Winter's formidable catalog of original albums on Columbia and Blue Sky, True To The Blues revisits a lost classic of rock history, the Columbia three-LP package of 1970 known as The First Great Rock Festivals Of The Seventies - Isle Of Wight/Atlanta Pop. Previously unavailable on CD, it starred (in Atlanta) Johnny Winter And, Poco, the Chambers Brothers, the Allman Brothers, and Mountain; and (at Isle Of Wight, UK) Sly and the Family Stone, Cactus, David Bromberg, Ten Years After, Procol Harum, Leonard Cohen, Jimi Hendrix, Kris Kristofferson, and Miles Davis.

In the pole position, side one, track one of that remarkable vinyl collectors item was "Mean Mistreater" by Johnny Winter And (his group with Rick Derringer and bassist Randy Hobbs, with Edgar sitting in on drums), as recorded live at the [Second] Atlanta Inter­national Pop Festival, their only appearance on the triple-record. True To The Blues now adds two more previously unreleased numbers, Sonny Boy Williamson II's "Eyesight To The Blind" (cf. the Who's Tommy) and Johnny's take on "Prodigal Son."

True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story was produced by Jerry Rappaport, and executive produced by Paul Nelson, Johnny's guitarist and manager. The compilation was mastered by multiple Grammy Award®-winner Mark Wilder at Battery Studios in New York.

"For well over five decades," writes Guitar World magazine editor-in-chief Brad Tolinski in his liner notes for True To The Blues, "John Dawson 'Johnny' Winter III has produced and played on some of the most exciting blues and rock recordings in the history of both genres." The writer's newly researched 4,000-word essay includes fresh, revealing interview material from Johnny Winter. Tolinski has annotated previous releases from AC/DC, Charlie Christian, and Jeff Healey, and penned the notes for the double-CD, The Essential Johnny Winter (released April 2013 on Columbia/Legacy).

The notes touch on every facet of Winter's life and career: Growing up in Beaumont, Texas, influenced by his musical parents as well as the likes of Robert Johnson, T-Bone Walker, Elmore James, Hubert Sumlin and Chuck Berry; his early trio with bassist Tommy Shannon and drummer "Uncle" John (Red) Turner (as heard on the first two Columbia LPs); a pivotal wee-hours association with Jimi Hendrix in New York centering around Steve Paul's The Scene ultra-hip nightclub on 46th Street; his popular triumph at Woodstock but his regrettable absence from the movie; the transition to working in the '70s with post-McCoys Rick Derringer ("Rock And Roll Hoochie Koo") and Muddy Waters; the origins of dozens of tracks, from "Johnny B. Goode" and "Jumpin' Jack Flash" to "Harlem Shuffle" and "Bony Moronie"; his return to the blues, with "a renewed sense of confidence and a big shot of inspiration" in the '80s; and the "artistic renaissance" that has kept Johnny Winter at the absolute pinnacle of guitar heroes around the world to this day.

"His absolute command of traditional music," the notes sum up, "has earned him the respect of serious musicologists, while his tremendous agility, wicked speed and full-tilt aggression on the electric guitar and acoustic bottleneck has won over several generations of younger rock players looking to cop some the fastest and hottest licks ever committed to tape."

True To The Blues: The Johnny Winter Story
(Columbia/Legacy 88883 74085 2)

Disc One – Selections: 1. Bad Luck And Trouble (A) - 2. Mean Town Blues (A) - 3. Mike Bloomfield's Introduction Of Johnny Winter (live, cool smiley - 4. It's My Own Fault (live, cool smiley - 5. I'm Yours And I'm Hers (C) - 6. Mean Mistreater (C, with Willie Dixon and Walter "Shakey" Horton) - 7. Dallas (C) - 8. Be Careful With A Fool (C) - 9. Leland Mississippi Blues (live, D) - 10. Memory Pain (E) - 11. Highway 61 Revisited (E) - 12. Miss Ann (E) - 13. Hustled Down In Texas (E) - 14. Black Cat Bone (live, F) - 15. Johnny B. Goode (live, F).

Disc Two – Selections: 1. Eyesight To The Blind (previously unreleased, live at Atlanta Pop Festival, 1970) - 2.Johnny Winter's Intro (live at Atlanta Pop Festival, 1970) - 3. Prodigal Son (previously unreleased, live at Atlanta Pop Festival, 1970) - 4. Mean Mistreater (live, G) - 5. Rock And Roll Hoochie Koo (H) - 6. Guess I'll Go Away (H) - 7. On The Limb (H) - 8. It's My Own Fault (live, I) - 9. Jumpin' Jack Flash (live, I) - 10. Good Morning Little School Girl (live, J) - 11. Mean Town Blues (live, J).

Disc Three – Selections: 1. Still Alive And Well (K) - 2. Rock Me Baby (K) - 3. Rock & Roll (K) - 4. Rollin' 'Cross The Country (L) - 5. Hurtin' So Bad (L) - 6. Bad Luck Situation (L) - 7. Self Destructive Blues (M) - 8. Sweet Papa John (M) - 9. Rock & Roll People (M) - 10. Harlem Shuffle (live, with Edgar Winter, N) - 11. Bony Moronie (live, O) - 12. Roll With Me (live, O) - 13. Tired Of Tryin' (P) - 14. TV Mama (P) - 15. Walkin' Thru The Park (with Muddy Waters & James Cotton, P) - 16. I Done Got Over It (live, with Muddy Waters & James Cotton, Q).

Disc Four – Selections: 1. One Step At A Time (R) - 2. Honest I Do (R) - 3. Nickel Blues (R) - 4. Talk Is Cheap (S) - 5. Wolf In Sheep's Clothing (S) - 6. Bon Ton Roulet (S) - 7. Don't Take Advantage Of Me (T) - 8. Master Mechanic (U) - 9. Mojo Boogie (V) - 10. Stranger Blues (live, W) - 11. Illustrated Man (with Dr. John, X) - 12. Hard Way (Y) - 13. Highway 61 Revisited (live, Z) - 14. Maybelline (featuring Vince Gill, AA) - 15. Dust My Broom (featuring Derek Trucks, AA).

Album index:

A – from The Progressive Blues Experiment (Liberty LP-12431, recorded 1968, released 1969)
B – from Fillmore East: The Lost Concert Tapes 12/13/68 (Columbia/Legacy 85278, recorded 1968, released 2003)
C – from Johnny Winter (Columbia 9826, recorded and released 1969)
D – from The Woodstock Experience (Columbia/Legacy 88697 48244 2, rec. 1969, rel. 2009)
E – from Second Winter (Columbia 9947, recorded and released 1969)
F – from Second Winter: Legacy Edition (Columbia/Legacy 85735, recorded 1970 at The Royal Albert Hall, London, released 2004)
G – from The First Great Rock Festivals Of The Seventies – Isle Of Wight/Atlanta Pop (Columbia 30805, recorded July 5, 1970, at Middle Georgia Raceway, Byron, GA, released 1971, previously unavailable on CD)
H – from Johnny Winter And (Columbia 30221, recorded and released 1970)
I – from Johnny Winter And/Live (Columbia 30475, recorded 1970 at Pirate's World, Dania, FL, released 1971)
J – from Live At The Fillmore East 10/3/70 (Collectors Choice 60002, rec. 1970, rel. 2010)
K – from Still Alive And Well (Columbia 32188, recorded and released 1973)
L – from Saints & Sinners (Columbia 32715, recorded 1974, released 1975)
M – from John Dawson Winter III (Blue Sky 33292, recorded and released 1974)
N – from Together (Blue Sky 34033, recorded 1975 at Swing Auditorium, San Bernardino, CA, released 1976)
O – from Captured Live! (Blue Sky 33944, recorded 1976 at San Diego Sports Arena and Oakland Coliseum, released 1976)
P – from Nothin' But The Blues (Blue Sky 34813, recorded and released 1977)
Q – from Breakin' It Up, Breakin' It Down (Columbia/Legacy 88697 07283 2, recorded 1977 at Masonic Temple Theatre, Detroit, released 2007)
R – from White, Hot & Blue (Blue Sky 35475, recorded and released 1978)
S – from Raisin' Cain (Blue Sky 36343, recorded 1979, released 1980)
T – from Guitar Slinger (Alligator 4735, recorded and released 1984, Grammy®-nominated)
U – from Serious Business (Alligator 4742, recorded and released 1985, Grammy®-nominated)
V – from 3rd Degree (Alligator 4748, recorded and released 1986)
W – from Live Bootleg Series Vol. 3 (Friday Music 1085, recorded late 1980s, released 2008)
X – from Let Me In (Pointblank 91744-2, recorded and released 1991)
Y – from Hey, Where's Your Brother? (Pointblank 0777 7 86512 2 2, rec. and rel. 1992)
Z – from Bob Dylan – The 30th Anniversary Concert Celebration (Columbia 53230, recorded 1992 at Madison Square Garden, released 1993)
AA – from Roots (Megaforce 1603, recorded and released 2011)

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: stonehearted ()
Date: December 12, 2013 11:30

I remember browsing in the record shop in the early 80s and seeing the Johnny Winter album covers--he looked 70 then!

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Date: December 12, 2013 12:37

Quote
stonehearted
I remember browsing in the record shop in the early 80s and seeing the Johnny Winter album covers--he looked 70 then!

lol.


as with any time a boxset is released there are issues with it. i'll probably still get it because i'm a huge fan but here are my thoughts.
1 nothing he did prior to 1968
2 too much of it is already available material most winter fans own
3 not enough unreleased material
4 nothing from the studio albums Winter of '88, I'm a Bluesman or the live album Live in NYC '97
5 why did they license just 1 song from the bootleg series? a few more would have been nice
6 very little post 1980 material

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Come On ()
Date: December 12, 2013 14:05

thumbs up A Must-Buy Box.

2 1 2 0

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: R ()
Date: December 12, 2013 16:08

Anybody who's seen Johnny in the last twenty years has to be surprised he's having a 70th birthday.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: TheGreek ()
Date: December 12, 2013 19:07

i will get this when it comes out . love johnny winter !!!!!!!!!!

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: paulywaul ()
Date: December 12, 2013 19:39

Quote
R
Anybody who's seen Johnny in the last twenty years has to be surprised he's having a 70th birthday.

Saw him probably within the last 12 months, might even have been in the early part of this year ........... he is not in great shape. Still cuts it musically though

[ I want to shout, but I can hardly speak ]

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: loog droog ()
Date: December 12, 2013 21:16

Is one of the sides blank?

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: reg thorpe ()
Date: December 12, 2013 21:25

Quote
loog droog
Is one of the sides blank?

I remember that double album...3 sides of music and not enough to create a fourth side...so it's blank

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: tomcasagranda ()
Date: December 12, 2013 22:10

Quote
reg thorpe
Quote
loog droog
Is one of the sides blank?

I remember that double album...3 sides of music and not enough to create a fourth side...so it's blank

You're referring to Second Winter - a great album.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 12, 2013 22:27



Johnny & The Jammers circa 1959 ......



ROCKMAN

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Date: December 13, 2013 02:24

Quote
Come On
thumbs up A Must-Buy Box.

agreed if only for the respect i have of him. i would like more unreleased stuff though

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: stonehearted ()
Date: December 13, 2013 02:49

In looking at the photo posted by Rockie--I believe that's JW on the left? Is it the glare of the camera flash, or did he have white hair even way back then? He was born 70, or born to be 70, one or the other.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 13, 2013 03:12

Yeah it's a rough photo ...
Johnny and his younger brother Edgar were both born with albinism...

Yep Johnny on da left and Edgar second from right on sax .........



ROCKMAN

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Date: December 13, 2013 03:29

Quote
stonehearted
In looking at the photo posted by Rockie--I believe that's JW on the left? Is it the glare of the camera flash, or did he have white hair even way back then? He was born 70, or born to be 70, one or the other.

dude his is an albino

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: stonehearted ()
Date: December 13, 2013 04:04

^ Well, at least he never needed to worry or fret about going gray.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: TheGreek ()
Date: December 13, 2013 13:45

Quote
stonehearted
In looking at the photo posted by Rockie--I believe that's JW on the left? Is it the glare of the camera flash, or did he have white hair even way back then? He was born 70, or born to be 70, one or the other.
that's him , he is a albino

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: TheGreek ()
Date: December 13, 2013 13:49

Quote
Rockman


Johnny & The Jammers circa 1959 ......
pretty cool photo,i dont think it's 1959, because johnny winter is holding a gibson sg custom which did not come out of kalamazoo untill 1961 when it replaced the les paul which gibson dropped after 1960 because of lackluster sales. imagine that right ?

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: reg thorpe ()
Date: December 13, 2013 16:21

Quote
tomcasagranda
Quote
reg thorpe
Quote
loog droog
Is one of the sides blank?

I remember that double album...3 sides of music and not enough to create a fourth side...so it's blank

You're referring to Second Winter - a great album.


Agreed!

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Rockman ()
Date: December 13, 2013 23:11

pretty cool photo,i dont think it's 1959, because johnny winter is holding a gibson sg custom which did not come out of kalamazoo untill 1961 when it replaced the les paul which gibson dropped after 1960 because of lackluster sales. imagine that right ?

Hey your probably right Greek... cause i'm a bad detective ....







ROCKMAN

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Chris Fountain ()
Date: December 13, 2013 23:27

I'm not sure if this song is included but it is from the the classic, great great album,Roadwork - Paraphrase - "Has anyone seen your Brother? I said has anyone seen your brother?" Still Alive and Well



Edited 1 time(s). Last edit at 2013-12-13 23:30 by Chris Fountain.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: oldschool ()
Date: December 13, 2013 23:37

Glad to see it as he is one of my favorites but I agree thre is not enough rare material. Wish there ws more live stuff from the Johnny Winter And band as I love the two live releases from that verion of his band.

Going to see him in February and can't wait.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Rokyfan ()
Date: December 14, 2013 09:36

Quote
oldschool
Glad to see it as he is one of my favorites but I agree thre is not enough rare material. Wish there ws more live stuff from the Johnny Winter And band as I love the two live releases from that verion of his band.

Going to see him in February and can't wait.

That band was my first rock concert, Capitol Threater Port chester NY 1970, Edgar Winter's White trash opening.

That was a great band, with Derringer.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Chris Fountain ()
Date: December 14, 2013 10:10

Quote
Rokyfan
Quote
oldschool
Glad to see it as he is one of my favorites but I agree thre is not enough rare material. Wish there ws more live stuff from the Johnny Winter And band as I love the two live releases from that verion of his band.

Going to see him in February and can't wait.

That band was my first rock concert, Capitol Threater Port chester NY 1970, Edgar Winter's White trash opening.

That was a great band, with Derringer.


Did they play "Back in the USA" featuring Derringer (such as on RoadWork)?

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Come On ()
Date: December 14, 2013 15:51

Quote
keefriffhard4life
Quote
Come On
thumbs up A Must-Buy Box.

agreed if only for the respect i have of him. i would like more unreleased stuff though

I got all stuff on LP so a box of CDs will be perfect...

2 1 2 0

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: Rokyfan ()
Date: December 15, 2013 19:21

Quote
Chris Fountain
Quote
Rokyfan
Quote
oldschool
Glad to see it as he is one of my favorites but I agree thre is not enough rare material. Wish there ws more live stuff from the Johnny Winter And band as I love the two live releases from that verion of his band.

Going to see him in February and can't wait.

That band was my first rock concert, Capitol Threater Port chester NY 1970, Edgar Winter's White trash opening.

That was a great band, with Derringer.


Did they play "Back in the USA" featuring Derringer (such as on RoadWork)?

I remember I was there, that's about as good as it gets. It's a long time ago so I have no clue. Johnny Winter And had just been released so it was that set, pretty much the same as on the live album from the tour.

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: bleedingman ()
Date: December 15, 2013 19:48

My first Johnny show. I'll never forget the lights going down and the sight of Johnny's white hair coming on stage in the dark.


Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: stonehearted ()
Date: December 18, 2013 05:44

I wonder if the box includes Rock and Roll People, the song John Lennon wrote for him, which Winter recorded in 1974.





Lennon's version is from the 1973 Mind Games sessions.




Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Date: December 18, 2013 06:26

Quote
stonehearted
I wonder if the box includes Rock and Roll People, the song John Lennon wrote for him, which Winter recorded in 1974.





Lennon's version is from the 1973 Mind Games sessions.



rock n roll people is on the tracklisting i posted

Re: OT:Johnny Winter gets long overdue boxset for 70th birthday
Posted by: stonehearted ()
Date: December 18, 2013 06:38

Cool. Didn't have time to peruse the entire list. I was just tonight listening to Lennon's Menlove Ave album and I remembered the story of how Lennon wrote that one for him.

I noticed on YouTube that there was also a live 1974 version by Winter--no film footage in the YT clip, however.





And here's a full Don Kirschner's Rock Concert clip of Johnny looking 74 in '74. A source claims that the French announcer at the beginning got it wrong and that this was actually recorded in 1973--so he's looking just 73 in '73. There's a smoking version of Jumping Jack Flash about halfway through.






Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.

Online Users

Guests: 1882
Record Number of Users: 206 on June 1, 2022 23:50
Record Number of Guests: 9627 on January 2, 2024 23:10

Previous page Next page First page IORR home