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Features

Published: 2012/01/09

by Nancy Dunham

Winter’s Return A Guitar Legend Triumphs Once Again

On Thursday night Johnny Winter will make his first network television appearance in three decades when he performs on the Late Show with David Letterman. To mark the occasion, we share this feature story that ran in our December-January 2010 issue.

Photo by Paul Natkin

The faithful have lined up in the warm sun on this Saturday afternoon in September, chatting excitedly as they lounge against the outside wall of The Birchmere, a legendary music club in Alexandria, Va., just over the Washington, D.C. border.

It’s hours before blues legend Johnny Winter, 65, is scheduled to take the stage, but the fans—ranging in age from children to flower children—have arrived early hoping to catch a glimpse of the only white man that many claim epitomizes the blues.

Inside a tour bus parked at the side of the club, Winter sits on a canvas-covered bench clad in a dark T-shirt and jeans, chain-smoking cigarettes as he kills the hours before the show. Band members scoot in and out of the bus, chatting with guests and remaining alert to any of guitarist’s needs. These days Winter is dealing with complications from his albinism and, more noticeably, various addiction-related ailments which no one around him will discuss in any detail out of politeness versus protection. If there’s one thing that Winter’s entourage conveys, it’s a deep respect for the man.

The band sleeps in hotels while on tour but rents buses to travel around towns, store their gear and give Johnny a haven where he can sit back, watch reruns of classic comedies such as The Andy Griffith show and relax.

It’s also where Johnny meets his fans after gigs.

“Johnny always has time for his fans,” says manager Paul Nelson, who also plays guitar in Winter’s band. “Everyone wants to touch him, to tell him how when they first saw him, when they first heard his music. We have men come in, Vietnam Vets, who just kneel down by Johnny and cry. We just had one guy who told him, ‘Johnny you saved my life.’”

Winter, who often seems content to let Nelson do the talking, exhales another long drag of a cigarette that swirls around his trademark white hair and wipes his ever-watering right eye with a tissue.

***

Growing up in Beaumont, Texas, Winter was around five year old when he first began to play the clarinet that his father—a saxophone player who was also a member of the church choir and a barbershop quartet—bought him. He and his brother Edgar were hooked on Artie Shaw and other swing bands, so when an overbite forced him to stop playing saxophone, Winter was crushed. His father bought him a ukulele—which was the right size for the small boy’s hands—and taught him to play classic standards including “Bye, Bye Blackbird.”

When he was about 12, his dad gave him a guitar that had belonged to his grandfather. A career U.S. Army officer who later worked in the cotton business, his father said that there wasn’t much of a call for ukulele players. However, those that learn guitar just might make it in the business.

At the same time, the family’s housekeeper, Lily, was constantly listening to a local blues station on the radio while she worked. That was enough for the 15-year-old Winter, who also had absorbed large doses of rock and roll from listening to disc jockey J.P Richardson—The Big Bopper of “Chantilly Lace”—to team with his 12-year-old keyboard playing brother and start a band.

Winter spent all of his time buying blues albums—any he could find—and teaching himself to play. While he took a few lessons, he generally developed his style and technique by ear listening to the records over and over and over again. “I never really thought of myself as a musician,” says Winter amidst a swirl of smoke. “I just always really loved the blues and the guitar. I loved the feel of it.”

Comments

There are 3 comments associated with this post

marvin notti January 18, 2012, 17:06:31

I still remember hearing Johnny b. good on the radio in 1971 wandering is that really chuck berry’s song. Man we couldn’t playing it till the lp grooves wore out. the song still makes me feel good at 56 years old. MN

gary January 18, 2012, 17:25:25

Nothing like seeing Johnny Winter in the early seventies headlining a sold out show as ten thousand drunk partying fans smoke the place up and set off roman candles from the balcony.

Marcoez April 23, 2012, 00:06:09

님의 말:I loved this song upon first listen when it came out on Bluelove. When I found out that it was wtreitn and composed by Yong Hwa, it sealed the deal for me that this boy’s music fits my taste and Just Please and Y, Why were not flukes. This song showed a moodier, darker, more intense side of Yong Hwa that made me curious and excited. I loved the edgy way he sang the song, the under current of ferocity in his voice, the strong beats and guitar riffs, the hypnotic keep ons’ that keep building up, and the dark, almost morbid lyrics It was a perfect song for me. I was bitterly disappointed when it was never played (or sung since its hand-sync anyway) on the music programs, ecstatic when I first watched it performed live in the AX Shibuya Concert DVD and DIED when I heard the re-arranged version from the Yoyogi concert clips. They made an already awesome song so much more amazing! Yong Hwa upped the sexy quotient by ten-fold with his growls and drawls, Jong Hyun’s additional guitar solo was seriously haunting and the climax at the end was explosive.​I was fortunate enough to hear this song performed live in LA and I will say that this song is so so so much better live. Yong Hwa’s raspy voice grabs hold of you and DRAGS you into his world, and Jong Hyun’s guitar solo made my heart ACHE literally. I was too engulfed in the music to look at the stage and when I watched the fan cameras later, I loved how fully immersed the band was in their music; playing with body and soul. Tattoo is Yong Hwa’s sexiest composition yet and deserves way more recognition for the masterpiece I truly is.

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