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Artist: Johnny Winter
Album: Step Back
Bitrate: 252kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: MegaForce
Genre: Blues
Size: 95.57 megs
PlayTime: 0h 50min 25sec total
Rip Date: 2014-09-06
Store Date: 2014-09-05

Track List:
--------
01. Unchain My Heart (With Blues     3:15
    Brothers Horns)
02. Can't Hold Out (Talk To Me       4:08
    Baby) (With Ben Harper)
03. Don't Want No Woman (With Eric   3:06
    Clapton)
04. Killing Floor (With Paul         4:28
    Nelson)
05. Who Do You Love                  2:51
06. Okie Dokie Stomp (With Brian     2:57
    Setzer)
07. Where Can You Be (With Billy     3:57
    Gibbons)
08. Sweet Sixteen (With Joe          7:57
    Bonamassa)
09. Death Letter                     3:39
10. My Babe (With Jason Ricci)       4:25
11. Long Tall Sally (With Leslie     2:52
    West)
12. Mojo Hand (With Joe Perry)       3:49
13. Blue Monday (With Dr. John)      3:01

Release Notes:
--------
Johnny Winter was a 24-year-old legally blind albino kid from Texas when in 1968
Mike Bloomfield introduced him onstage as "the baddest motherfucker." Winter
proved he was just that, bringing his high-voltage blues everywhere from the
Fillmore West to Woodstock û often going on ragged, technically astounding
tangents. Sadly, it took Winter's death, at 70 in July, to get casual fans
listening again.

Winter's final album, Step Back, doesn't always match his early grit û The
Johnny Winter Story box set, released earlier this year, is much richer. With
guests like Billy Gibbons, Eric Clapton and Joe Perry, the new LP draws from the
Fifties electric blues Winter heard as a teenager, but it loses some of those
recordings' electric mud, surrounding the guitarist's ravaged howl with slick
production and unimaginative arrangements. "Unchain My Heart," popularized by
Ray Charles, drenches Winter's sound in backup singers and a Blues Brothers horn
section; "Killing Floor" (featuring Paul Nelson) and "Mojo Hand" (with Perry)
are largely polished and by-the-numbers. The highlight comes late, when Winter
plays a loose solo acoustic take of Son House's "Death Letter" û a rare
understated moment that proves even without his Gibson Firebird, Winter could go
back to the Delta with the best of them.



This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net

Artist: Johnny Winter
Album: Step Back
Bitrate: 252kbps avg
Quality: EAC Secure Mode / LAME 3.98.4 / -V0 / 44.100Khz
Label: MegaForce
Genre: Blues
Size: 95.57 megs
PlayTime: 0h 50min 25sec total
Rip Date: 2014-09-06
Store Date: 2014-09-05

Track List:
--------
01. Unchain My Heart (With Blues     3:15
    Brothers Horns)
02. Can't Hold Out (Talk To Me       4:08
    Baby) (With Ben Harper)
03. Don't Want No Woman (With Eric   3:06
    Clapton)
04. Killing Floor (With Paul         4:28
    Nelson)
05. Who Do You Love                  2:51
06. Okie Dokie Stomp (With Brian     2:57
    Setzer)
07. Where Can You Be (With Billy     3:57
    Gibbons)
08. Sweet Sixteen (With Joe          7:57
    Bonamassa)
09. Death Letter                     3:39
10. My Babe (With Jason Ricci)       4:25
11. Long Tall Sally (With Leslie     2:52
    West)
12. Mojo Hand (With Joe Perry)       3:49
13. Blue Monday (With Dr. John)      3:01

Release Notes:
--------
Johnny Winter was a 24-year-old legally blind albino kid from Texas when in 1968
Mike Bloomfield introduced him onstage as "the baddest motherfucker." Winter
proved he was just that, bringing his high-voltage blues everywhere from the
Fillmore West to Woodstock – often going on ragged, technically astounding
tangents. Sadly, it took Winter's death, at 70 in July, to get casual fans
listening again.

Winter's final album, Step Back, doesn't always match his early grit – The
Johnny Winter Story box set, released earlier this year, is much richer. With
guests like Billy Gibbons, Eric Clapton and Joe Perry, the new LP draws from the
Fifties electric blues Winter heard as a teenager, but it loses some of those
recordings' electric mud, surrounding the guitarist's ravaged howl with slick
production and unimaginative arrangements. "Unchain My Heart," popularized by
Ray Charles, drenches Winter's sound in backup singers and a Blues Brothers horn
section; "Killing Floor" (featuring Paul Nelson) and "Mojo Hand" (with Perry)
are largely polished and by-the-numbers. The highlight comes late, when Winter
plays a loose solo acoustic take of Son House's "Death Letter" – a rare
understated moment that proves even without his Gibson Firebird, Winter could go
back to the Delta with the best of them.



This NFO File was rendered by NFOmation.net


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