Great American Radio Vol 6 by Winter, Johnny & Friends (CD, 2021)

Rarewaves (668241)
98.6% positive feedback
Price:
US $18.37
ApproximatelyRM 77.59
+ $3.99 shipping
Estimated delivery Fri, 29 Aug - Thu, 4 Sep
Returns:
30 days return. Buyer pays for return shipping. If you use an eBay shipping label, it will be deducted from your refund amount.
Condition:
Brand New

About this product

Product Identifiers

Record LabelRewo, Retroworld
UPC0805772641624
eBay Product ID (ePID)23048613840

Product Key Features

Release Year2021
FormatCD
GenreBlues
ArtistWinter, Johnny & Friends
Release TitleGreat American Radio Vol 6

Dimensions

Item Height0.40 in
Item Weight0.23 lb
Item Length5.53 in
Item Width4.98 in

Additional Product Features

Number of Tracks15
Number of Discs2
TracksThe Blues Had a Baby and They Named It Rock 'N' Roll, Deep Down in Florida, Hideaway, You've Got to Love Her with a Feeling, Sweet Home Chicago, Rocket 88, Help Me, How Long, Instrumental, Mama Talk to Your Daughter, Mannish Boy, WBCN DJ Interview with Pinetop Perkins, You Don't Have to Go, Got My Mojo Working, WBCN DJ Interview with Waters Cotton Winter
NotesThis great value double CD is an in-concert recording made by Johnny Winter for the Boston radio station WBCN, and recorded at the Boston Music Hall, in Boston, Massachusetts, on 26th February 1977. By 1975, Winter had grown tired of working in the rock and roll mainstream and returned to his first musical love - The Blues. Teaming up with Muddy Waters he released the album Hard Again in January 1977 with this concert following shortly after. It is a wonderful, vivid, febrile encapsulation of a Bluesman enjoying his renewed career. With harmonica hero James Cotton on board, along with the bedrock of Waters' regular touring band, you get value-addedness to gems such as the Little Walter classic, "Help Me", which swings like a demon. There's a brisk romp through Freddie King's "Hideaway", before Winter takes the microphone on "Blues With A Feeling", burnishing the sound with his inimitable lead guitar sizzle. "Mannish Boy" is a gutsy delight with Waters' laconic vocal topping off the hearty Bluesy crunch in magisterial style. Closing with a delightful "I Got My Mojo Working", this performance offers yet more proof that, even in his latter years, Muddy Waters was not content to freewheel through his stage performances.
No ratings or reviews yet
Be the first to write a review