"...Been A Long Time Coming..."
Winter's third album – the
impossibly cool "Second Winter" (a 3-sided 2LP set where Side 4 was
left blank deliberately) was his second platter for Columbia Records and
delivered on the Boogie promise of his May 1969 label debut "Johnny
Winter" (both vinyl treasures I've had on my turntables for over 45
years). I never in my wildest dreams thought Sony would afford "Second
Winter" a 'Legacy Edition' 2CD set – yet they have – and they've come up
with a fan-pleasing barnstormer into the axe-wielding bargain. Here are the
fret-burning details...
UK and Europe released 18
October 2004 (August 2004 in the USA) - "Second Winter: Legacy
Edition" by JOHNNY WINTER on Columbia/Legacy COL 511231 2 (Barcode
5099751123125) is a 2CD Remaster housed in a Stickered Plastic Outer Slipcase
and plays outs as follows:
Disc 1 - "Second
Winter" (55:13 minutes):
1. Memory Pain [Side 1]
2. I'm Not So Sure
3. The Good Love
4. Slippin' And Slidin' [Side
2]
5. Miss Ann
6. Johnny B. Goode
7. Highway 61 Revisited
8. I Love Everybody [Side 3]
9. Hustled Down In Texas
10. I Hate Everybody
11. Fast Life Rider
Tracks 1 to 11 are his 3rd
studio album "Second Winter" - released 27 October 1969 in the USA as
a 3-sided 2LP set on Columbia KCS 9947 and January 1970 in the UK on CBS 66321
(Side 4 was left blank on purpose). Produced by Johnny Winter – it peaked at
No. 55 in the USA (December 1969) and made No. 59 in the UK (May 1970).
BONUS TRACKS (Previously
Unreleased):
12. Early In The Morning
13. Tell The Truth
(Instrumental)
MUSICIANS for the LP:
JOHNNY WINTER – Lead Vocals,
Guitars & Mandolin
EDGAR WINTER – Piano, Organ,
Harpsichord & Alto Sax
TOMMY SHANNON – Bass (except
DENNIS COLLINS on “Good Love”)
"UNCLE" JOHN TURNER
– Drums & Percussion
Disc 2 (72:10 minutes):
"Live At The Royal Albert Hall 17 April 1970" – All Tracks PREVIOUSLY
UNRELEASED
1. Help Me
2. Johnny B. Goode
3. Mama Talk To Your Daughter
4. It's My Own Fault
5. Black Cat Bone
6. Mean Town Blues
7. Tobacco Road
8. Frankenstein
9. Tell The Truth
MUSICIANS for the Live Set:
JOHNNY WINTER – Lead Vocals,
Electric and Slide Guitar
EDGAR WINTER – Saxophone,
Keyboards and Vocals (Lead on "Frankenstein", Co-Lead with Johnny on
"Tell The Truth")
TOMMY SHANNON – Bass
"UNCLE" JOHN TURNER
– Drums
The 24-page Colour booklet
features unpublished photos from the period, ANDY ALEDORT liner notes
(Associate Editor for ‘Guitar World’ magazine) that include interviews with
Johnny and Edgar Winter as well as the live band members who played the Royal
Albert Hall show in April 1970 featured on Disc 2 – Bassist Tommy Shannon and
Drummer John Turner. Each of the see-through CD trays features blue and white
photos (in keeping with the original artwork) underneath the CDs. JERRY RAPPAPORT produced the Legacy Edition
while JOSEPH M. PALMACCIO did the overall Mastering. BOB AUGER recorded and
mixed the Live set - produced for 2004 release by JERRY RAPPAPORT.
Some album covers are so damn
cool – and “Second Winter” is one of them. Richard Avedon’s double-imaged
picture is the very stuff of something simple turned into something great –
that flying white hair suggesting guitar ecstasy – something fluid – like his
playing. The album opens with a Percy Mayfield cover version – the wonderful
“Memory Pain” – a hit for Mayfield way back in 1964 on Tangerine Records. Right
from the off you get huge chugging guitar and the Remaster starts to shine. Not
to be outdone by old magic – his own “I’m Not Sure” is superb – and introduces
layers of keyboards in a Funky Stevie Wonder “Innervisions” kind of way.
Bassist Dennis Collins plays once on the album – accompanying himself on his
own “The Good Love” which Johnny turns into a rapidly played Rocker. That
wicked track is followed by two out-and-out speedball classics – a duo of
Little Richard Specialty sides – “Slippin’ And Slidin’” and “Mary Ann”. The
piano boogie intro to “Slippin’ And Slidin’” reminds me so much of John
Lennon’s version five years later on his 1975 “Rock ‘n’ Roll” album. About
one-minute twenty into the piano and sax old time Rock 'n' Roll - Johnny lets
rips with the most brilliant guitar solo - fusing the song into something so
1970. His six-minute cover of Dylan's "Highway 61 Revisited" is a
souped-up slide fest but I've never been particularly fond of it.
The immediately impressive
"I Love Everybody" turned up on the "Fill Your Head With
Rock" CBS Records Double-Album Sampler in 1970 – alerting many a budding
kid to his amazing guitar playing and slightly druggy nature (love that giggle
at the start). "Hustled Down In Texas" has always been a fave of mine
- rip-roaring up and down the frets like an unleashed freight train (you can
hear him grunt in the solo). The organ-jazzy "I Hate Everybody" is a
rapid-fire hybrid between Georgie Fame scat and Winter's chugging rhythm and
the last cut - the seven-minute "Fast Life Rider" is even more
experimental - feeling like a Drums and Guitar for much of its duration. Better
for me is a Previously Unreleased cover of a Louis Jordan classic "Early
In The Morning". The remaster is remarkable - mixed in 2004 by THOM CADLEY
at Sony's studios in New York. It's a raucous rocker that would have ended the
album better than "Fast Life Rider". That boogie is followed by
another cover – this time we’re given the R&B flavored instrumental “Tell
The Truth” by Ray Charles – a song the band turns into a 9-minute celebration
on the live set (lyrics and all). Both could easily have been slotted onto a
Side 4 of the album with some quickly recorded covers thrown in...ah well...
Johnny asks the crowd
"...what's happening..." as he begins the live set. Immediately
you're hit by the sheer power of his band and that incredible playing. The
drums and bass of Sonny Boy Williamson's "Help Me" are spot on with
the vocals maybe a little too far back. Things really start to jump with his
Chuck Berry fave "Johnny B. Goode" where he assures the pleased
audience that 'he played his guitar just like ringing a bell' - and indeed he
did. J.B. Lenoir's cautionary tale "Mama Talk To Your Daughter"
boogies even more - the band cooking by now. He brings it down to some real
power Blues with B.B. King's "It's My Own Fault" - eleven and half
minutes of fabulous Rock-Blues from a master player. His own "Black Cat
Bones" livens things up considerably with some sensational slide playing
but that's as nothing to the brilliant Bo Diddley chug of "Mean Town
Blues" that bops along like ZZ Top for a full eleven minutes. We get all
jerky motion and Cream with their cover of "Tobacco Road" - a
fantastic organ and guitar spectacle with rapped vocals from Edgar that very
cleverly leads into the big one - a 9-minute "Frankenstein". The
single would sit on top of the American charts in instrumental form in April
1973 (Epic 10967). Even though there are only four of them onstage - they seem
to be making the racket of six. Drummer Turner gets his solo during
"Frankenstein" which admittedly goes on a tad - but it ends on that
huge riffage (no keyboards yet). They finish up with a crowd-pleasing
"Tell The Truth" - a bopper that sees Johnny let rip while Edgar
joins him on the verses and some rapid-fire scat.
Like many I suspect - I used
to take Johnny Winter albums for granted. But since his sad passing I can't
seem to get enough of him and his astonishing playing. Dreadful puns aside -
there's no Johnny Winter of discontent here folks...
PS: If you want more - check
out his late Seventies collaborations with MUDDY WATERS on Blue Sky Records
which feature Winter producing and playing on all (see the 3CD "Original
Album Classics" box set). See also my review for the "Woodstock
Experience" version of "Johnny Winter" his debut for Columbia
Records in 1969. It comes with a superb bonus disc of period live material and
beautiful packaging including a poster (see reviews)...
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