Chicago Sun-Times

Texas blues legend idolized Muddy Waters

- BY JOHN HEILPRIN Associated Press

GENEVA — Texas blues legend Johnny Winter emblazoned himself into the world’s consciousn­ess with his tattooed arms churning out lightning-fast guitar riffs and his striking long white hair flowing from under his cowboy hat.

His contrastin­g appearance and devotion to the blues pioneers of the 20th century turbo-charged a career in which he emulated and, ultimately, championed, his childhood hero Muddy Waters and other icons. Mr. Winters carved out a wide niche — and became an icon himself — starting in the late 1960s and 1970s with a sound that blues and country singer Tracy Nelson, prominent during the same era with her band Mother Earth, described as “Texas second generation.”

“He did not overplay, like a lot of white blues guitarists,” she said of Mr. Winter, who collaborat­ed with the likes of Waters, John Lee Hooker and Jimi Hendrix. “His tone was a little more modern, more electric, but I could see the influences. He stayed faithful. People idolized him.”

Mr. Winter’s representa­tive, Carla Parisi, confirmed last week that he died in a hotel room just outside Zurich a day earlier at age 70. The statement said his wife, family and bandmates were all saddened by the loss of one of the world’s finest guitarists.

Mr. Winter was a leading light among the white blues guitar players, including Eric Clapton and the late Stevie Ray Vaughan, who followed in the footsteps of the earlier Chicago blues masters. He idolized Waters — and got a chance to produce some of the blues legend’s more popular albums. Rolling Stone magazine named Mr. Winter one of the top 100 guitarists of all time.

Music writer Fred Schruers said Mr. Winter played a major role in introducin­g the blues to a new audience.

“The real legacy of Johnny Winter is that he brought the blues to an audience in tie-dye that might otherwise have neglected the entire genre — and his timely work producing Muddy Waters only deepened that contributi­on,” said Schruers.

Mr. Winter had been on an extensive tour this year to celebrate his 70th birthday. His last performanc­e was on July 14 at the Cahors Blues Festival in southweste­rn France.

John Dawson Winter III was born on Feb. 23, 1944, and raised in Beaumont, Texas. He was the older brother of Edgar Winter, who like him was an albino, and rose to musical fame with the Edgar Winter Group.

“Made my first record when I was 15, started playing clubs when I was 15. Started drinking and smoking when I was 15. Sex when I was 15. Fifteen was a big year for me,” Mr. Winter recalled with a laugh in a documentar­y released this year, “Johnny Winter: Down & Dirty.”

“I love playing guitar. It’s the only thing I’ve ever really been great at,” he said.

His career received a big boost early on when Rolling Stone singled him out as one of the best blues guitarists on the Texas scene. This helped secure a substantia­l recording contract from Columbia Records in 1969 that led to an appearance at the Woodstock Festival and gave him a wide following among college students and young blues fans.

He was one of the most popular live acts of the early 1970s, when his signature fast blues guitar solos attracted a wide following. Crowds were dazzled by the speed of his guitar playing, which had its roots in urban blues but incorporat­ed elements of rock ’n’ roll.

He was inducted into the Blues Foundation Hall of Fame in 1988, and his devotion to the music never wavered.

“To me, the blues has more emotion in it than any other music I’ve ever heard,” Mr. Winter told Guitar World. “You can tell that the people that sing and play the blues mean what they are saying.”

 ?? | ERIC GAILLARD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Johnny Winter and his girlfriend in Nice, France, in 1979. Rolling Stone magazine named him as one of the top 100 guitarists of all time.
| ERIC GAILLARD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Johnny Winter and his girlfriend in Nice, France, in 1979. Rolling Stone magazine named him as one of the top 100 guitarists of all time.

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