Johnny Winter - Death Letter

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  • čas přidán 24. 08. 2024
  • ©2016 Megaforce Records
    Published on Dec 16, 2015
    Final film of Johnny's life to be released March 4, 2016 with extensive bonus content. Pre-order:
    www.amazon.com/...

Komentáře • 639

  • @MrBagley55
    @MrBagley55 Před 5 lety +251

    There will never ever be another Johnny Winter. Truely one of a kind.

  • @oleandreasjensen5263
    @oleandreasjensen5263 Před rokem +37

    No one better than Jonny Winter. - Best blues guitarist of all time! -We will miss you, but your music will live forever!!....

    • @JoeSmith-dl9ok
      @JoeSmith-dl9ok Před rokem +2

      My vote is for SRV

    • @albertheidger645
      @albertheidger645 Před rokem +2

      Can't rate the greats, they all belong.

    • @kevinkiso4579
      @kevinkiso4579 Před rokem +2

      We all know that this isn't fckn Formula One racing; where there are times measured and being "The Best" can actually be articulated because of recorded times and amounts of races won on a circuit... Peter Green, Mike Bloomfield, Johnny Winter, SRV, Albert Collins, Jeff Beck, Jimmy Page, BB King, Tab Benoit, early Clapton, Frank Marino and Mahogany Rush, Eric Gales, Randy Hansen, etc...

    • @loilt5091
      @loilt5091 Před rokem

      @@kevinkiso4579
      Respectfully, I get your fck'n point, but you've got at least 6 blues-rockers that don't deserve to be mentioned as "BLUES" guitarists...just because they play a few in their repetoire, that's totally disrespectfull to the real deal greats of the genre. I've seen all but 2 of the guitarists you've mentioned, live.
      ☆ Think Sesame Street;
      Some of these things are not like the others,
      Some of these things just don't belong,
      Homework time & a revised formula... 📚

    • @kingkongprimpinella774
      @kingkongprimpinella774 Před rokem

      @@kevinkiso4579 Glad you mentioned Randy Hansen! I saw him in a really small club and it was awesome. That must have been in the early 90's. Greetings from Germany.

  • @robertutecht3125
    @robertutecht3125 Před 6 lety +66

    For a very long time, the greatest Blues guitar player alive

  • @penguin99ify
    @penguin99ify Před 8 lety +156

    A simple, old resonator guitar and a load of talent and skill. This is how greatness is defined and Johnny Winter was exactly that.

  • @chinto50
    @chinto50 Před 2 lety +5

    1969 and a friend of mine came to visit and said.. "have you heard this" and he handed me Johnnys first album.. I still play those tunes.. It was my first introduction to old blues.. my first spark of interest in slide.. im 70 now and play daily.. and I still play old blues, thanks Johnny.. for a life time of joy and music.. RIP man..

  • @DarkeningSkies1
    @DarkeningSkies1 Před 9 lety +85

    He sang all of the cuts on his final two albums in the first take- 'if I can't get it the first time, I can't get it". Here was a man who understood the blues. Thanks, Johnny!

  • @Crumly123
    @Crumly123 Před 7 lety +172

    May of 1971, I’m just finishing 10th grade. It’s my first rock concert, at the Philadelphia Spectrum. My older brother - who would go on to become an incredible guitarist himself - takes me to see Johnny Winter! Redbone opens the show, then the Allman Bros band, and then, Holy Crap! We’d been listening to the “And Live” album for a while, and there he is.
    He was the coolest guy I’ve ever seen on a concert stage. Yeah, the band was killin’ it, and Rick Derringer did his “Whole lotta Shakin’“ thing, - very cool - but we were there to see Johnny, and he did not disappoint. Polished? No. Slick, produced stage show? Nah. There was one thing that sticks in my mind, the brightest lights I’d ever seen - like aircraft landing lights or something - spelled out his name and blazed out from behind him to blind the audience while he was just wailing out on his guitar. He wasn’t playing tunes or performing songs, the music was pouring out of him like an active geyser. It was incredibly loud - my ears rang for 3 days afterward. At that time you could go right to the foot of the stage and there were no assigned seats. Some dude spent the entire concert sitting inside one of the EV bass bins in the PA column.
    Johnny wore a pair of boots - dark brown leather, square toe, straps over the arch and around the heel joined near the ankles by big, round cinch rings on either side. My brother and I called them Johnny Winter boots, and went out and each bought a pair after that show. My brother looked way cooler in those boots than I did, but we sure thought we were the shit wearing them.
    We’d go see him time and again, even as the venues got smaller. His brother Edgar would bring him out in a cage, and unlock him to do “Still Alive and Well.” I bought a copy of “Roadwork” just for that track. I moved to Arizona, and travelled 2 hours to go see him in Phoenix. Then back east again I’d go see him in a little club in Delaware. The Fabulous Thunderbirds opened (and stole) the show, but Johnny was still captivating.
    Whatever you do, Johnny, please do not rest in peace. Go find Jimi, or B.B., SRV, see what they’re doing. There’s got to be an Ampeg V-4 around up there somewhere to plug in to. There’s lots of folks, I’m sure, that haven’t heard “Meantown Blues” in a while…

    • @jvowell1957
      @jvowell1957 Před 6 lety +6

      my first concert was about then and it was Johnny with Brownsville Station in Detroit . I'll never forget it. you said May of 71, I guess that means you saw Dwayne Allman at that show, what Memories you must have

    • @326vince
      @326vince Před 5 lety +2

      I was there. 10 years old. Was going to many shows as I could. Love Johnny and the music then was all insanely cool

    • @SC-qi4zq
      @SC-qi4zq Před 4 lety +3

      @@jvowell1957 I saw that show back in '71. Michigan State fairgrounds around Memorial Day weekend. J. Giels Band, Bob Seger System, Mitch Ryder and Detroit, Allman Brothers Band, Johnny Winter and Edgar Winter. My first rock and roll concert.

    • @tundratunes
      @tundratunes Před 4 lety +6

      My first concert was also Johnny Winter. June 1st 1974 at Madison Square Garden, touring Saints and Sinners. I was 12 years old. OMG, it was shockingly good. He played at blistering speed. Soon after that I saw J. Geils Band, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Santana, the Who, Todd Rundgren, Grateful Dead, Lou Reed, the post-Duane Allman Brothers, etc. because I lived in New York. But nothing will EVER top that show, and I saw Johnny at least 20 times after that from the next year (1975, the Felt Forum) until 2 years before he died, the last time at a club in Helsinki. That first show at the Garden he was wearing his famous black cape, top hat and high-heeled black boots and dancing around the stage playing his guitar like it was on fire. My best friend and I got stoned out of our minds in the plaza outside Garden before the show, watching the Hare Krishnas dancing around in their bright orange flowing robes and weird hairstyles - very psychedelic scene with New York's finest just standing around, watching it all and busting no one because there was no real crime. The warm-up (10 cc) was playing (yawn) as we entered the packed venue and found our seats with the help of an usher in uniform (remember them?). Johnny just wiped 10cc off the stage. He had that same sign you mention with "Johnny Winter" in klieg lights playing behind the band during the encore. It lit up the whole stadium as bright as if God himself had just landed on the stage. I have never been able to find a setlist for that show, but I'm pretty sure the encore was "Rollin' cross the country" a killer rocker, which closes out Side 1 of the Saints and Sinners LP. Whatever it was, it brought the house down. The screaming as he left tthe stage seemed even louder than his guitar, if that is possible! It sounded like the Beatles at Shea Stadium. Man, he was adored by the New York crowd. My older brother also turned me onto him, because he was at the famous show at the Garden in 1969 when Janis Joplin introduced her "old friend from Texas" Johnny and brought him out on stage to play with her. He got signed to Columbia like the next day. Man, those were the days. I still go to shows as often as I can, but the sheer exhilaration of Johnny playing THAT music to the sold-out Garden was a once-in-a-lifetime experience I will NEVER forget! I recall high-fiving my best friend when he did a blinding version of Boney Moronie, so good and SO SO loud!

    • @jeaniechowdury576
      @jeaniechowdury576 Před 4 lety +3

      Crumly123 thank you for sharing your wonderful memories.
      It means a lot to me as i became a fan decades i “discovered/became a fan” about 20 years after you did & enjoy hearing those stories about the concerts from back in the day. When i saw him he was still amazing & legend. Thank you again!

  • @atllzable
    @atllzable Před rokem +19

    Love you, Johnny Winter,...you brought me SO MUCH JOY....Rest with God....Johnny Winter...💙💙💙

  • @russellbird7543
    @russellbird7543 Před 6 měsíci +2

    Such an underrated artist. I saw him a year or so before he passed. Never lost that blues soul spirit. RIP Johnny

  • @tonyskowronski9976
    @tonyskowronski9976 Před 4 lety +7

    I seen Johnny twice at a place just outside of Pittsburgh,Pennsylvania. Mckees Rocks, Pa. Place was called Mancini's Lounge. I wasn't more than two feet away from him both times. I'll never forget Talking to him between songs. He always had time for a word or two. What a legend. I still have the L P & cassette tape of him & Edgar. " Johnny & Edgar: Live". Every true Winter fan should find this. UNBELIEVABLE!! I'll always cherish the few kind words he took the time to share with me at both these shows. 1979 & 1980. R I P my friend.

    • @deangerazounis4638
      @deangerazounis4638 Před rokem +2

      Seen him in Pittsburgh in the 90s fantastic show one of my heroes

    • @krisscanlon4051
      @krisscanlon4051 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Da Burgh! Posting from Beaver county PA!

  • @mattbartley5712
    @mattbartley5712 Před rokem +2

    I am proud to say I'm 65 now and Johnny Winter was my first concert that I ever went to. Music Legend. He knew and played with many others including Hendrix and Muddy. I'm fortunate, and thank him for an introduction to his gift and talent to our world. He lived the blues. There really aren't that many still around that walked those crossroads.

  • @philipdjoshi7525
    @philipdjoshi7525 Před 8 lety +178

    It is through Johnny's music that I got into the blues. May his soul rest in peace.

    • @stephenmachum7033
      @stephenmachum7033 Před 7 lety +3

      BLACKCROW WALKING

    • @Marco81blues
      @Marco81blues Před 7 lety +5

      He changed many people's lifes with his music, his fan used to tell him that , I think he could never understand it. Truth is ever since I heard him play Johnny Guitar I was never the same ahah

    • @howtogethigh2297
      @howtogethigh2297 Před 6 lety

      maybe you should listen rl burnside

    • @harpsterdave2392
      @harpsterdave2392 Před 6 lety +2

      Same here. I first saw him with his brother when i was 11 or 12 years old.

    • @valentemonforte7092
      @valentemonforte7092 Před 6 lety

      same here

  • @ibane63
    @ibane63 Před 7 lety +32

    Johnny Winter, my favorite blues guitarist since a long time.

  • @Ledprostate
    @Ledprostate Před 8 lety +28

    From Texas to Japan! Quite the journey. Thank God for Johnny Winter.

  • @pedrocardutra
    @pedrocardutra Před 9 lety +18

    LEGEND! Love this man... What an unique guitar player !
    R.IP. Johnny
    his music WILL LIVE FOREVER

  • @tompease8810
    @tompease8810 Před 2 lety +18

    It's really sad and eye opening to see what trouble he had just getting around but yet how well he still played true spirit and determination

    • @billsadler3
      @billsadler3 Před rokem +1

      Arthropathy is a beach with no sun.. no fun, son.

  • @juhakorpi2930
    @juhakorpi2930 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Johnny was my idol from 1970 - and still is

  • @MAXIMUSISADOG
    @MAXIMUSISADOG Před 6 lety +15

    I saw him in Biloxi I believe the year or two before he passed. It was absolutely awesome, people didnt yell or act like they normally do at other shows, everyone knew they were witnessing one of the greats.

  • @abdelsifontes8412
    @abdelsifontes8412 Před 5 lety +7

    One of my favorite guitars players of all times. What a talent. Thanks Jhonny for a good guitar

  • @beckolajones6640
    @beckolajones6640 Před 8 lety +13

    The man in his prime shredded pentatonics like no other. Rip a true legend!

  • @jonbassett8023
    @jonbassett8023 Před 6 lety +2

    My mentor growing up. If it weren't for Johnny I wouldn't love guitar the way I do now. Thanks for the memories Johnny. God bless you and what you did for countless people worldwide. You will ALWAYS be missed and NEVER be beat!

  • @kentlofgren
    @kentlofgren Před 8 lety +44

    One of my greatest inspirations as a guitar player.

  • @dolphe.chiarino6142
    @dolphe.chiarino6142 Před 4 lety +3

    The first time I saw JW was at Hofstra University around 1969 and he was amazing. He played a tight, fast, amazing crystal clear show with brother Edgar who was just up from Texas to join Johnnys band. Edgar was amazing also, playing sax, drums, piano & organ. After that show, I saw Johnny every time he played in NY. A few months later, I was at a Jimi Hendrix concert at the Fillmore (early & late show) and after the show we went to a club called “The Scene” and watched Johnny, Jimi and Leslie West jam until 5am. Got to chat with Jimi & Johnny in between breaks and they were very cool to give us their time. Besides Woodstock, that was my favorite and most notable show. Two amazing musicians playing off each other. It doesn’t get better than that. Rock on boys, see you in a few years.....

  • @ontariobuds
    @ontariobuds Před 9 lety +43

    Fuck me, this video was amazing.
    Seeing Johnny just being normal, having a hard time tuning his guitar, and being in the studio wanting to go home.
    Bad ass rocker should be on his tombstone. I also loved how he had a Stevie Ray Vaughan CD Texas Flood in his tour bus.

    • @bobbyb5004
      @bobbyb5004 Před 9 lety +1

      Hey ontario I have an idea for putting this. Master blues man in front lets talk

    • @deweyveer7123
      @deweyveer7123 Před 8 lety +2

      he is home.

    • @Dykhopper
      @Dykhopper Před 8 lety +4

      +ontariobuds man, he was so cute..let's go home, heh-heh....always loved him....

    • @josephciresi802
      @josephciresi802 Před 7 lety +3

      ontariobuds I agree. This is so Badass in every way !!!!!

    • @flyboysteven9979
      @flyboysteven9979 Před 3 lety +1

      I would have loved to have heard him say "I'm hungry, let's do this fucker" on this video like he did on still alive and well..hahahahha

  • @travisweir2477
    @travisweir2477 Před 4 lety +2

    I grew up idolizing two men from the standpoint of music - Jimi Hendrix and Johnny Winter. It started in high school with Jimi, and I moved on from there when one night I saw one of Johnny's old performances on Don Kirshner's shows, and I was gobsmacked. I had to hear more of this amazing albino. My journey began. From Winter my subsequent journey into the blues also occurred. Thank you Johnny. RIP Mr Winter

  • @flyboysteven9979
    @flyboysteven9979 Před 3 lety +2

    I first discovered Johnny Winter when i heard the song, "Can't You Feel It", on the radio, from the Still Alive and Well album...when i first heard it, i had no idea who it was but it totally BLEW me away....I couldn't believe his lightening speed.....from that moment on, i became obsessed with him....he's always been my favorite all-time guitar idol...i bought a '69 tobacco sunburst firebird, 100 watt Marshall stack and an MXR Phase 90 phase shifter....saw every show he played here back in the 70s, including some out of town shows...i was fortunate to meet him and the band after the "John Dawson Winter III" concert on March 27th, 1975 and recorded our conversation on tape....i was on the front row of this one and caught a Holiday Inn towel he threw off stage (loaded with Johnny Winter DNA...LOL).....i still have it - its all yellowed and shit....His music will always be a part of my life and i miss him dearly.....NOBODY could pick like Johnny B Goode.....RIP Johnny!

  • @greatesttoysevermade3693
    @greatesttoysevermade3693 Před 2 lety +4

    Great old Son House song. Johnny covered it superbly, his older huskier voice really fit this tune.

  • @shirleydillard7127
    @shirleydillard7127 Před 2 lety +2

    Johnny winter is oneof the best bluesman of all time. Saw him first time in 1969. I love him and miss him.

  • @Otisxsnotbset
    @Otisxsnotbset Před 9 lety +50

    Loved seeing you live! You had more licks than a ten ton lollipop.

    • @margaretgnatguinn1550
      @margaretgnatguinn1550 Před 5 lety +1

      I was fortunate enough to see him. About 30 years ago. Acoustic blues never impressed me. Until he gave cold chills.
      He coulda showed his tube to me anytime.

  • @user-cs8sx3fi1y
    @user-cs8sx3fi1y Před 5 lety +4

    Johnny Winter is one of the best blues players in the world. He's very underrated.
    RITCIE BLACKMORE

  • @stevenadkins5784
    @stevenadkins5784 Před 2 lety +3

    johnny had the blues..he spread it around . so everyone could hear.. he lifted it up so sweetly it went into the heavens.. god said bring that boy up here . i cant get a seat to see him upon the earth .so ill have him sing it up here..

  • @emiliosg58
    @emiliosg58 Před 4 lety +2

    Great Johnny Winter blues. White skin, black heart. One of my all time favourites guitar player ever!!! RIP Mr Winter.

  • @spiderslegs99
    @spiderslegs99 Před rokem +4

    He was a huge influence on me. I always loved and still love listening to Johnny. RIP.

  • @wagnerindig7133
    @wagnerindig7133 Před 8 lety +20

    A true School of Blues ! From Texas for the world!

  • @kevinkiso4579
    @kevinkiso4579 Před rokem

    Jesus Christ, last week I listened to a bootleg of Johnny Winter live in Montreal Canada in nineteen hundred and seventy four. He fckn ripped holy hell with a ferocious viciousness and absolute intricacy, his vibrato, his picking attack and accuracy was second to none. And he was selling out fifteen/seventeen thousand seat coliseums full of kids screaming "Rock & Roll!!!" And he'd been doing it for some years at that time. I've so much respect for Johnny Winter. Rest In Peace, beautiful brother. RIP Edgar Winter.

    • @5jerry1
      @5jerry1 Před rokem

      ~ Isn't Edgar Winter still alive?

  • @tigerboy245
    @tigerboy245 Před 2 lety +4

    I always loved Johnny Winter's music. Thank you, Johnny, for all you meant to me!

  • @DEANHAITANIMUSIC
    @DEANHAITANIMUSIC Před 8 lety +16

    You are very much missed Johnny-thankyou for your inspiration

  • @SuperRetrolover
    @SuperRetrolover Před 7 lety +4

    I still have my LP of the first pressing of the first album, which I purchased within a day of its release. Played it once, went out and bought several more so I could always have that first album pristine; wore the others out, and by that time I was buying his music on, wait for it, 8 track quadrophonic! Then cassette, now cd. I never get tired listening to him. I do from time to time regret and resent that in my opinion he has never received the full recognition he deserves not only for his accomplishment, and for his music and ability, but for making it possible for others who followed to find a market for their music only because Johnny blazed the path for them, provided an audience receptive and hungry for more, worked so darn hard travelling the world providing ready made audiences everywhere; and with all that his focus always remained on the music, and making people happy always willing to stop to sign autographs, always remaining humble, grateful and kind. A truly great man, we will never see his like again. But, we, especially those old enough to have heard him at/from the beginning, can feel grateful, look back and tell ourselves "We were there, we got the best of it all, and what a time it was". Thank you Johnny Winter, for your creativity, dedication, hard work, generosity, and pretty much putting Blues, Texas style, on the public radar for others to follow the path you blazed, building their own sound based on the foundation you laid, and for always remaining a gentleman. You played the music for others to hear, but truth is, you were the music, your guitar your voice. I don't know for sure what happens when we depart this life, but if there is life after, I hope to find you playing for the angels and an open seat up front for me.

    • @dzyanist
      @dzyanist Před 6 lety

      SuperRetrolover ...Well said, man..

    • @Miatacrosser
      @Miatacrosser Před 5 lety

      Nice. Those old quadrophonic lp(not 8 track tapes although they sounded okay)vinyl records are like gold today. I've got several but would kill for the JW copy.

  • @jormawails
    @jormawails Před 8 lety +16

    should be in the rock and roll hall of fame just for all his influence on so many people that are in it. he knocked everyone on their ass at the bob dylan tribute

    • @williampotts3008
      @williampotts3008 Před 7 lety

      jormawails fuck the rock and roll hall of shame .it is run by ass holes .

  • @adamcantu8206
    @adamcantu8206 Před 5 lety +1

    I'll remember buying the live album Johnny Winter and Rick Derringer.Back in the 70's. I love it i don't have the album. But I have it on CD and i still love it to this day. Thank You Brother. R.I.P We Miss You.

  • @tobinharris8107
    @tobinharris8107 Před rokem +1

    We love you Johnny and will always hold you near and dear. Thank you! 🎸

  • @roadeyboy1
    @roadeyboy1 Před 8 lety +13

    john dawson, we love you. never be anyone like you. thanks for what you left us.

  • @markchronister4620
    @markchronister4620 Před 7 lety

    Discovered he and ABB,Leon, Freddie King, Delaney and Bonnie, Butterfield all about the same time in 69 -70. Life for my ears was never the same and that was just the start. I'm still chasing different blues artists. Johnny was a wildcat in early 70s! RIP🙏

  • @denniswatts2022
    @denniswatts2022 Před 9 lety +11

    This is blues gold.

  • @mb19512002
    @mb19512002 Před 8 lety +2

    I've seen Johnny so many times I can't remember.Started in 69!
    He's the one who influenced me to buy a steel dobro.
    His musical contributions were awesome & widespread
    RIP

  • @triggerfish6619
    @triggerfish6619 Před 6 lety +5

    Words of great wisdom and sadness. Love your woman, cherish her breath for suffering will come after her death. I know, lost my brother, wife, both parents all in 2017. Thank you Johnny.!
    God reveal His love to you all.

  • @tombuster1000
    @tombuster1000 Před 9 lety +39

    I will always remember seeing him play in the late 1980s at ‘Toad’s Place’, a bar near Yale, in New Haven CT, with a large room that could hold a two hundred or so. The stage was about four feet above the floor. This was during the time when he played ‘Highway 61’ as a closer. His guitar work was fast and flawless. His extended solos were unique and exciting, almost mesmerizing.
    He played the straight up blues of the delta blues legends and blended in his own style with a blistering speed that seemed impossible to achieve, yet he did it with ease, for him it was natural - just a regular thing.
    He played and lived the legendary blues man’s life, truer than most, recording and performing on to the end. His voice became the hardened gravely ruff tone of the true delta bluesman for his last recording of the Son House tune, “Death Letter”. Johnny sang and played solo, with his National Steel guitar and slide, authentically, in the manner of the traditional delta bluesman.
    Too often I have heard others say that: “Yes, Johnny Winter was a good blues guitarist”, but that they didn’t consider him: “as important as some of the other more popular blues guitarists and successful musicians of our time”. So it’s a fitting tribute that, for what would be his final studio recorded album he was accompanied by some other ‘more popular’ guitarists and musicians; here are their names: Jason Ricci, Ben Harper, Paul Nelson, Joe Perry, Joe Bonamassa, Brian Setzer, Billy Gibbons, Dr. John, Leslie West, and Eric Clapton.
    Legend goes that only by dying in battle, with sword in hand, could a warrior enter Valhalla, the place in the here-after where only the best are all together, forever. Johnny Winter has gone to take his place with the legendary blues guitarists in the here-after, where only the best are all together, playing on forever. Johnny died on the road, guitar in hand, playing his blues.

    • @tonym994
      @tonym994 Před 4 lety

      Johnny had a ball playing in the 70's w/ Muddy Waters. and James Cotton. and Walter''shakey '' Horton. he played w/ the greats, no matter where he ended up, or how popular he was at any given time since, they couldn't take that away from him. saw him 3 times, and the one in '87 was the best for me.as by the time I saw him again, in the 90's,he'd become a shell of himself. I just missed a 4th time when ,at (formerly Yasgur's farm) the original Woodstock venue, 30th ann. in Bethel NY, there was a rumor that he hadn't showed. after David Crosby played, the day's festivities appeared to be over. people were leaving, and I had to catch a bus ,being a long ways from home. then I find out from a neighbor who was there, that he came out and played a set! damn.

    • @sheilabrennan4481
      @sheilabrennan4481 Před 4 lety +1

      Beautiful tribute and love story. Nobody like him... totally unique and out of this world talent.

    • @minigirl6379
      @minigirl6379 Před 2 lety +1

      I cannot believe that they buried Johnny in New Haven, in that little bullshit cemetery with a nondescript headstone, that doesn't even indicate who he truly was. He loved Texas and being a Texan. He should be here in Texas. I guess his Yankee wife decided differently. RIP Johnny. We love you and miss you here in Texas.

  • @MyFacefaceface
    @MyFacefaceface Před 8 lety +11

    met this dude. best moment of my life

  • @lukewarmwater5320
    @lukewarmwater5320 Před rokem

    I was 17 years old in 1985 when I got a milk crate of about 20 or 30 albums from my fellow construction worker Pete for 20 bucks and one of the albums was "Johnny Winter Still Alive And Well", I never heard of Johnny before but I never forgot him after listening to that fuckin' album man, "Rock Me Baby" just about took my head off...

  • @74dartman13
    @74dartman13 Před 6 lety +1

    Omg! What a great player and a cool guy...I miss him. I played my heart out on the drums to his live album when I was a kid. I finally got to see him in the early 90's and he inspired me to play guitar. A show I'll never forget! The best! May he rest in peace...hopefully I'll see him again some day.

  • @lnnrllsn3226
    @lnnrllsn3226 Před 8 lety +5

    That is so Touching!! We sure do miss Johnny!!

    • @ianwilkinson4602
      @ianwilkinson4602 Před 3 lety +1

      He always gave of his best, even near the end. Great man.

  • @emiliosg58
    @emiliosg58 Před 9 lety +18

    Si alguien vivio y amo el Blues, ese fue este hombre. Johnny Winter, el que toco con los grandes, el que murio en la raya.... Hasta luego Sr. Johnny Winter, gracias por su musica, gracias por el blues.... Otro cantante de blues que va al cielo....

    • @emiliosantana2522
      @emiliosantana2522 Před 9 lety +2

      Emilio S G grossas palabras compañero!! soy violero y el Johnny fue mi descencadenante pa tocar blues!! viva winter en nuestros corazones!!

    • @TabRoss1st
      @TabRoss1st Před 5 lety

      Se habla english? No speaky mexican??? So shut up,thx

  • @johnsegriff28
    @johnsegriff28 Před 7 lety +1

    When things ain't right, I listen to JW, seems to cover everything I need to remember, feeland do in life; I have lost everything I ever had more than once in 50 years, but I never let go of my JW albums....still in good shape, thanks there are box cars in heaven.

  • @edman6968
    @edman6968 Před 9 lety +2

    Thanks Johnny ! for Highway 61, Jummpin Jack Flash,It's All Over Now, and so many other's My Band played over the US for 25+ Yrs. Truly How Rock Is meant to be Played & Heard !

  • @rudydct
    @rudydct Před rokem

    I am 64 and fortunately had an older brother by 5 yrs who steeped me in the blues. My first vinyl record album I bought was "Johnny Winter and" Live".
    I bought it in S texas at a Gibsons dept store. played the hell out of it!

  • @shootgroundhog
    @shootgroundhog Před 5 lety +2

    Pay attention kids. This is what a true legend sounds like.

  • @joechiocca8429
    @joechiocca8429 Před rokem

    I have loved and respected Johnny Winter, on some level since I was 13, in 1972. Long before I even knew what blues was, I was drawn to Johnny and his music. ❤Thanks!

  • @christianoliver434
    @christianoliver434 Před 3 lety +7

    Here Johnny had reached that final stage of the old blues man that he sought his influence from in the start.

  • @perqua
    @perqua Před 9 lety +5

    I wish you are in peace brother! Your music will be with us now! Take care wherever you are.

  • @kadj1016
    @kadj1016 Před 5 lety +1

    I was fortunate to have seen him in concert about five or six times over the years in many venues.. My guitar hero, R.I.P.

  • @arnelainesson3813
    @arnelainesson3813 Před 8 lety +19

    This is my hero.

  • @BluesLicks101
    @BluesLicks101 Před 7 lety +1

    Johnny is the ONLY guitarist since Robert Johnson to catch that true stone cold blues sound.

  • @fougee1
    @fougee1 Před 3 lety

    I saw Mr.Winter over 20 times live and every time was fantastic.
    Great guitar player if you have never heard Johnny play.
    Than you have never listened to the Best. RIP Mr.Johnny Winter!!!

  • @randallburgess46
    @randallburgess46 Před měsícem

    I went to see him in concert in Kalamazoo many times,more than any other group. One of the best blues musicians of my lifetime.

  • @zriter59escritor33
    @zriter59escritor33 Před 8 lety +3

    Hell of a bluesman, now in blues heaven. RIP, dear Johnny:)

  • @michaelconner9904
    @michaelconner9904 Před rokem

    I miss Johnny. This song was a regular of legendary Son House. This version by Johnny is awesome. Johnny never played a bad song ever. I rocked to his Edgar Winter and White Trash album called Roadwork during tour on the road with Johnny. Also had Rick Derringer on tour. to Johnny Winter and live to John Dawson Winter and still alive and well. Johnny was a regular player years ago in Memphis while he performed with legend Muddy Waters and they recorded Highway 61.Johnny was one of my favorite bluesmen. Just a skinny Albino kid from Orange Texas. Lived and died like a true Bluesman! Johnny lives on in our heads. I miss him. Never will forget him..In 1976 I went to see the Johnny and Edgar Winter together tour. at Tampa Colosseum They recorded the show and it was so good. Johnny did first song was If I can't make you happy I'll jump into the river and drown. The did a 30 minute recording of Tobacco Road. Johnny and Edgar and the whole band shined. They were in their groove. Sorry to ramble on folks.

  • @mwyatt222
    @mwyatt222 Před rokem +1

    He was my stepdads nephew. George Winter RIP. l never knew when he was married to my mom but my stepbrothers looked just like them Todd Winter RIP especially. Found out that Johnny and Edgar had played a concert together in the early 60s in my neighborhood where George lived. l live less than a block from there still.

    • @beparticular1240
      @beparticular1240 Před 3 měsíci

      That is cool. Good memories of one's family are worth more than many people realize.

  • @fordsrestorations970
    @fordsrestorations970 Před rokem

    As a teenager I heard all the radio songs , I went to concerts , but when I " heard Johnny Winter" --> it was all over.... I knew right then that I was only going 'ed listen to the true artist from that second !

  • @edwardheins2930
    @edwardheins2930 Před 4 lety +1

    whitey and i had the sheer pleasure of not only seeing jonny live but sitting with him a spell to bask in his infinite light . with love jonny rip

  • @haeuptlingaberja4927
    @haeuptlingaberja4927 Před rokem +1

    Still Alive and Well was the first album I ever bought. I was only 12 years old when it came out in 1973, and I remember rushing to our local head shop/record store to buy it, but I can't remember how I even knew about it. I still have that record, I still love it, and it's still in pretty good shape, despite me playing it so many, many times over the past 50 years. In fact, that title track has sort of become my theme song over the years...
    "Did you ever take a look to see whose left around
    Everyone I thought was cool is six feet underground
    They tried to get me lots of times but now they're coming after you
    I got out and I'm here to say baby you can get out too
    I'm still alive and well still alive and well
    Every now and then I know it's kinda hard to tell
    But I'm still alive and well..."

  • @DaltonMullins
    @DaltonMullins Před 9 lety +12

    I love you Johnny. You have inspired me and this video reminded me of how life is so short and sweet.

  • @johnallen6945
    @johnallen6945 Před 11 měsíci

    I saw Johnny at least 3 times I can remember in the 60s at festivals. He could keep a big crowd boogying for a good hour before he broke into the blues. He was my kind of guitar man. The smack got him in the end, but in his life he was unique and in my Top 5 guitarists. In

  • @barrydaws4602
    @barrydaws4602 Před 4 lety +1

    Like an amazing claret, gets better with age, as this master blues and rock God has. RIP Johnny

  • @PC-yz1jp
    @PC-yz1jp Před 2 lety

    My son and I got to see him in a small room at the Texas Guitar Show about 45 days before he passed.
    Phenomenal performance.
    Amazing man.

  • @JohnDoe-jp8fx
    @JohnDoe-jp8fx Před 7 lety +1

    The greatest to walk the earth

  • @johnlocker9020
    @johnlocker9020 Před 4 lety

    i am so glad i lived in he time of johnny winter no one articulated the blues quite like johnny him and rick derringer one night at the winterland in san francisco the best blues show i ever saw rip johnny winer you and rick derringer tearing up heaven

  • @Sunshine-do3yv
    @Sunshine-do3yv Před rokem

    Rock n Roll!!!!I saw Jonny and Derringer 1970,1971 T Filmore East new York..kicking ass.....back in the day.. I will never forget!!🎼🎼🎶🎵😎😎

  • @GBeret83
    @GBeret83 Před 5 lety +1

    I had the absolute honor and privilege of getting to see Johnny Winter play a two hour-30 minute + set at Bogarts Nightclub in Cincinnati, Ohio back in 1991, and when I mean to tell you the mad albino tore the place down that night, I mean he flat tore the place down! When he was in good health and at his peak, nobody could run a slide, especially to an uptempo song in the manner that he did when he covered Dylan's Highway 61 Revisited or on a song like Sound The Bell. An incredible guitar talent who also always put on great vocals too. Sure do miss the late, great Johnny Winter!!! Nobody else like him.

  • @1kdurant
    @1kdurant Před 2 lety +2

    He was unique, always loved his slide and style!

  • @thancrow
    @thancrow Před 9 měsíci

    I got to see Johnny Winter perform with Leon Russell. They were playing together, not separately. It was an amazing concert. R.i.p. Johnny Winter, one of the greatest blues guitarist ever. You are gone, but your music lives on.

  • @EduardoHernandez-pn7ox
    @EduardoHernandez-pn7ox Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks for your music , you will be greatly remembered R.I.P. Johnny.

  • @victoriaredsky3859
    @victoriaredsky3859 Před rokem

    Had a sweet Love at Seventeen, David his name, who played Angelically, Blues guitar, twelve string. His slide a lipstick tube, metal...
    The resulting sound delivered goosebumps inside and out...
    Like Johnny...
    He's somewhere in San Francisco. But I thought his playing would take him to Stellar places, tho never ever heard about him. A Tragic Loss for the Ears of the World!!

  • @damianknapp6193
    @damianknapp6193 Před 4 lety +2

    I saw Johnny live more times than any other act. There is nothing like Johnny playing solo on an old metal body. He was the closest thing on Earth to seeing the greats like Robert Johnson and Son House.

  • @lauranoseda255
    @lauranoseda255 Před 6 lety

    Johnny you always be alive in ours hearts you will live forever in your music

  • @sgt.pepper
    @sgt.pepper Před rokem

    A leyend. RIP and thanks for all this beautyful things.

  • @Devin-is4yl
    @Devin-is4yl Před měsícem

    Great son house tune from a great true real blues man.

  • @jaymorgan8017
    @jaymorgan8017 Před 5 lety +1

    Prolly saw him 150 times, wet is to water as Johnny is to the blues !

  • @gabbyhayes1568
    @gabbyhayes1568 Před 7 lety +1

    Loved Johnny, saw him many times in my youth during the 70's.

  • @Mission2Transition641
    @Mission2Transition641 Před 7 lety +1

    Even though it wont stay in tune..Johnny plays the slide like nobody else. Amazing. He loved his fans. Only got to see him once in Omaha around 2000. He was my first exposure to the blues when I was about 15 , when my friend had AND LIVE album.

  • @stevieflax
    @stevieflax Před rokem

    I was lucky to see Johnny play many times in Texas, he always put on a good show. For a while he'd play without his shirt, he was mighty proud of that tattoo on his chest. There was this great show he put on at the Austin Opry House, seemed like that was the best one for me, the place was packed and Johnny lit up the crowd, three or four encores. Then there was that last time I saw Johnny play, was at the new Antone's downtown. He had aged a bit and was extremely frail. I went with a friend, fellow guitar playing buddy and fisherman. Johnny maybe played for forty five minutes one of them headless guitars and his famous thunderbird. We saw him inside his bus taking pictures with fans and signing autographs and photos. I probably should have got one taken with him, but as usual I was strapped for cash. I think they were charging 50. I was a big fan and my favorite blues albums continue to be the ones he did with Muddy. Hard Again and Muddy Waters Live. On the live Album, there is this part after one of the songs, when Muddy is just barely audible, telling Johnny he was picking his ass off on that one. Delta Blues at it's finest.

  • @nancybrujakosmica4147
    @nancybrujakosmica4147 Před 5 lety +2

    I m super fan !! Rest in Peace your soul and God bless him! For the goods moments that he rewards me..!!

  • @kenamaro3942
    @kenamaro3942 Před 2 lety +1

    Still love ya Johnny.

  • @OneCupOfCoffee204
    @OneCupOfCoffee204 Před rokem

    A legend. I saw him and his brother Edgar at the Allman Brothers Live At The Filmore East concert. Also saw Elvin Bishop that night.
    He will live with me (as will my brother George who brought his little brother along) until I die.

  • @josephcharbonneau8740
    @josephcharbonneau8740 Před 2 lety +1

    REST PEACEFULLY JOHNNY AND THANK YOU FOR ALL THE AWESOME MEMORIES I MISS YOU MAN!!! 😍

  • @witchi13
    @witchi13 Před 9 lety +2

    RIP thank you for all the music Johnny!

  • @oraclejh97
    @oraclejh97 Před 9 lety +13

    Ya don't get to see & hear Johnny play acoustic very often. This is a keeper. Badass!

    • @p.schouten6597
      @p.schouten6597 Před 7 lety

      True that. There's some nice dobro performances he did on the Progressive Blues album - Bad Luck And Trouble and Broke Down Engine.

  • @kaosmonger73
    @kaosmonger73 Před 6 lety +1

    They do not come like this anymore.Once in a lifetime one of a kind.Rest in power and in eternity Johnny Winter.Hope the blues is played loud in the otherside.I might end up there with you some day.

  • @Live4NowOK
    @Live4NowOK Před rokem

    Johnny will always be one of the principle Masters of Blues Music, an absolute Icon

  • @lovethosebudgies
    @lovethosebudgies Před 7 lety +4

    Great video. It's like being right there with him.

  • @philoupaulo
    @philoupaulo Před 7 lety +4

    Poor hold Johnny, h'is passed, I loved him so well, a tear running on my cheek...