1969 studio album by Johnny Winter
Johnny Winter is Johnny Winter 's second studio album. Columbia Records released the album in 1969, after signing Winter to the label for a reported $600,000. As with his first album, The Progressive Blues Experiment , Winter mixes some original compositions with songs originally recorded by blues artists. The album reached number 24 on the Billboard 200 albums chart.[6]
Track listing [ edit ] "I'm Yours & I'm Hers" (Johnny Winter) – 4:27 "Be Careful with a Fool" (Joe Josea , B.B. King ) – 5:15 "Dallas" (Johnny Winter) – 2:45 "Mean Mistreater" (James Gordon) – 3:53 "Leland Mississippi Blues" (Johnny Winter) – 3:19 "Good Morning Little School Girl " – (Sonny Boy Williamson ) – 2:45 "When You Got a Good Friend" (Robert Johnson ) – 3:30 "I'll Drown in My Tears " (Henry Glover ) – 4:44 "Back Door Friend" (Lightnin' Hopkins , Stan Lewis) – 2:57 2004 reissue bonus tracks "Country Girl" (B.B. King) – 3:08 "Dallas" (Johnny Winter) – 3:37 "Two Steps from the Blues" (John Riley Brown, Deadric Malone ) – 2:35 Personnel [ edit ] Johnny Winter – lead guitar, slide guitar, harmonica, vocals "Uncle" John Turner – percussion Tommy Shannon – bass Edgar Winter – piano on "I'll Drown in My Tears", alto saxophone on "Good Morning Little School Girl" Elsie Senter – backing vocals on "I'll Drown in My Tears" Carrie Hossell – backing vocals on "I'll Drown in My Tears" Peggy Bowers – backing vocals on "I'll Drown in My Tears" Stephen Ralph Sefsik – alto saxophone on "I'll Drown in My Tears" Norman Ray – baritone saxophone on "I'll Drown in My Tears" Walter "Shakey" Horton – harmonica on "Mean Mistreater" Willie Dixon – acoustic bass on "Mean Mistreater" Karl Garvin – trumpet on "Good Morning Little School Girl" A. Wynn Butler – tenor saxophone on "Good Morning Little School Girl" Production [ edit ] Johnny Winter – producer Eddie Kramer – production consultant Marvin Devonish – production assistant Charlie Bragg, Ed Hudson, Neil Wilburn - engineer Steve Paul – spiritual producer References [ edit ] ^ Koda, Cub. "Johnny Winter – Review" . AllMusic . Retrieved June 23, 2012 . ^ Welding, Pete (August 9, 1969). "Records" . Rolling Stone . Retrieved October 1, 2015 . ^ Su, Peter. "Johnny Winter: self-titled" . Popmatters.com . Retrieved June 23, 2012 . ^ g, manos (December 3, 2013). "Review: CD Johnny Winter – Johnny Winter Album" . sputnikmusic . Retrieved December 4, 2013 . ^ Russell, Tony; Smith, Chris (2006). The Penguin Guide to Blues Recordings . Penguin . p. 722. ISBN 978-0-140-51384-4 . ^ "Johnny Winter: Chart History – Billboard 200" . Billboard.com . Retrieved December 14, 2019 .
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