Johnny Winter

Bild Quelle:


  • blues
  • blues rock
  • rock
  • guitar
  • classic rock
Johnny Winter (born John Dawson Winter III on 23 February 1944 in Beaumont, Texas) is an American blues guitarist and singer. He is the first son of John and Edwina Winter who were very much responsible for Johnny and his younger brother Edgar Winter's early musical awareness. He began performing at a young age with Edgar, who is also affected with albinism. His recording career began at the age of 15, when their band "Johnny and the Jammers" released "School Day Blues" on a Houston record label.

Mehr Informationen...

Songs

  •  
    Sleppin' And Slidin'

  •  
    Slidin' In

  •  
    Slippin' and Slidin'

  •  
    Sloppy Drunk

  •  
    Slow Blues

  •  
    So Much Love

  •  
    Somethin' Goin' On Wrong

  •  
    Somthin' Goin' on Wrong

  •  
    Soul Man

  •  
    Sound the Bell

  •  
    Spoonful

  •  
    Stay by My Side

  •  
    Still Alive & Well

  •  
    Still Alive and Well

  •  
    Stone County

  •  
    Stones in My Passway

  •  
    Stranger

  •  
    Stranger Blues

  •  
    Stray Cat Blues

  •  
    Sugar Coated Love

  •  
    Sugaree

  •  
    Suicide Won't Satisfy

  •  
    Sweet Little Baby

  •  
    Sweet Love and Evil Woman

  •  
    Sweet Love and Evil Women

  •  
    Sweet Papa John

  •  
    Sweet Sixteen (with The Blues Brothers Horns & Joe Bonamassa)

  •  
    Take a Chance on My Love

  •  
    Take My Chance (Studio)

  •  
    Take My Choice

  •  
    Talk Is Cheap

  •  
    Tell the Truth

  •  
    Tell the Truth (instrumental)

  •  
    Tell the Truth (with Edgar Winter)

  •  
    That Wouldn't Satisfy

  •  
    That's What Love Does

  •  
    The Crawl

  •  
    The Good Love

  •  
    The Guy You Left Behind

  •  
    The Mistress

  •  
    The Monkey Song

  •  
    The Sky Is Crying

  •  
    The Sun Is Shining

  •  
    The World Turns All Around Her

  •  
    They Call Me Loudmouth

  •  
    Third Degree

  •  
    Thirty Days

  •  
    Thirty Eight Special Blues

  •  
    Thirty-Two, Twenty Blues

  •  
    Tin Pan Alley


Comments