Showing posts with label Edgar Winter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edgar Winter. Show all posts

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Edgar Winter - Edgar Winter's White Trash (1971)

Year: 1971 (CD 1989)
Label: Epic Records (US), EK 30512
Style: Blues Rock, Rock and Roll, Funk, Gospel
Country: Beaumont, Texas, U.S. (December 28, 1946)
Time: 43:30
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 286 Mb

A quite brilliant album and no mistake and maybe the man’s most beloved of all his album releases that combines a heady mixture of rock, R&B, gospel and funk. When this album first appeared in 1971 it blew a breath of fresh air through the album releases of the time. Highlights include a smattering of gospel with Fly Away (featuring a full vocal chorus that adds the uplifting spirit of the track) and Save the Planet (a real rabble rousing song that demands that you jump off your chair and clap your hands in time to the words) on one side of the coin along with chart material such as the lower end of the Top 40 cut, Keep Playin’ That Rock and Roll while not forgetting the lovely Dying to Live that includes some fine piano work and pokes an effective dig at Vietnam, the cause celebre of the time.
In terms of audiophile reproduction, this track is a good example of the nature of the pressing which is effectively quiet without any blurring in the upper mids or smudging of the bass. There is a tremendous dynamic range in evidence here. Winter’s piano is accurate and tonally solid while Winter’s own vocal delivery is passionate, fervent but lusty in terms of the complexity that can be heard through those rasping vocal chords of his.
If there is one overarching personality of this album that links each track together, it is its joyous nature and sense of never-ending rhythm, a forward motion that also creates a perfect sense of escapism. I will bet that, before long, once you’ve learned a few lines of your own, you won’t be able to resist in singing along to much of this disc yourself.
(theaudiophileman.com/edgar-winters/)

Album recorded and mixed in the analog domain - AAD. That is, a minimum of digital processing.
A=Analog. D=digital. The first letter stands for how the music was recorded. The second letter for how it was mixed. The third letter stands for the format (all CD's will have D as the last letter).

01. Give It Everything You Got (04:32)
02. Fly Away (03:02)
03. Where Would I Be (03:59)
04. Let's Get It On (05:05)
05. I've Got News for You (03:56)
06. Save the Planet (05:41)
07. Dying to Live (04:04)
08. Keep Playin' That Rock 'n' Roll (03:46)
09. You Were My Light (05:02)
10. Good Morning Music (04:20)

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Thursday, November 13, 2025

Edgar Winter - Entrance (1970)

Year: 1970 (CD 1992)
Label: Epic Records (US), EK 48536
Style: Jazz Rock, Blues Rock, Rock
Country: Beaumont, Texas, U.S. (December 28, 1946)
Time: 47:56
Format: Flac Tracks 16/44,1 kHz
Size: 309 Mb

When blues guitarist Johnny Winter was signed to Columbia Records in 1969 he received a $600,000 advance. It was the richest record deal cut up to that point by any artist in any genre. Johnny had made a few live appearances where he delivered electrifying performances – the news of which spread quickly throughout the industry. He was seen as the next Jimi Hendrix and labels moved quickly to lock him down. His first two albums released in 1969 were backed by a band that included future Double Trouble bassist Tommy Shannon. It also included his younger brother Edgar. Through those studio outings Johnny’s talents were made clear. But it was the support he received from his brother Edgar, who provided keys, alto sax and vocals that Epic Records found difficult to ignore. They signed Edgar in 1970 and from there he set course on his own musical path – one leaning more toward jazz, fusion, and a pop-oriented sound. Johnny would move further and further into the blues.
It’s hard to imagine that Epic knew exactly what they were getting into with Edgar Winter. Entrance is more of an expression that a definable piece of music. While songs are tracked they run into each other like a singular piece of music. The title track opens the record and it’s there where Winter’s vocals and the occasional pop arrangement drew sonic comparisons to Todd Rundgren. Those continue through the record. “Entrance” has a pop sensibility that makes it sound like a forgotten track off of Something Anything. As “Entrance” moves through a number of tempo changes Winter’s incredibly flexible and soul anchored vocals rope everything together and time stamp the material.
It’s followed by a four song bundle that’s jazz drenched. Here drummer Jimmy Gillen sails, Edgar debuts his now well-known shriek, and more importantly rips into some alto sax solos that spill over with fiery runs. They arrive, get to cruising altitude, look around a bit and come to a flashy, bounce heavy landing.
Side 2 opens with a cover of JD Loudermilk’s 1960 hit “Tobacco Road”. Here Edgar is joined by brother Johnny and his band. The signature piece to this song is the closing scream which seems to last all of an hour. It’s the ultimate expression of Edgar’s broad talents. It leaves you wondering if there is anything that this guy can’t do. While he is clearly more moved by jazz, he can still lay down the blues with the best of ‘em. That’s the case here as it is with “Back In The Blues”, a smooth slinky shuffle. The tune checks all of the boxes that make every other song on this record shine so brightly. It also affords one more moment for brother Johnny to shine - this time on some tasty harmonica parts.
(full version: goldminemag.com/columns/vinyl-finds/edgar-winters-solo-entrance/)

01. Winter's Dream: Entrance (03:29)
02. Where Have You Gone (02:40)
03. Rise to Fall (04:04)
04. Fire and Ice (06:52)
05. Hung Up (03:00)
06. Back in the Blues (02:17)
07. Re-Entrance (02:30)
08. Tobacco Road (04:10)
09. Jump Right Out (04:22)
10. Peace Pipe (04:42)
11. A Different Game (05:04)
12. Jimmy's Gospel (04:41)

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