One of my favorite artists
ever is Edgar Winter, and one of a very few alto
sax players that inspired my playing as a tenor saxophonist. He's
one of those guys that got a really good, big raunchy rock &
roll sound on the alto sax. When people talk about rock & roll
sax it's almost always referring to a tenor player, but Edgar just
screams and wails as bad as any rockin' tenor.
I've talked to people that knew of Edgar Winter and didn't even
realize he was a saxophonist. Truth is he's so multi talented he
doesn't even need to pick up his horn. The guy sings and plays keyboards
just as well. Some of his big hit songs from the 70's like "Free
Ride" and "Just Hangin Around"
didn't even have sax in them so it's understandable how that could
get by the casual fan.
Remember his big hit "Frankenstein"?
Didn't sing in this instrumental but displayed his amazing talents
on the timbale solo, synthesizer solo, and sax section solo. Here's
something interesting... check out the short clips, first Frankenstein,
just to refresh your memory of it, then give a listen to the next
one. Big
difference in the style of music, recording, etc but it's all Edgar
Winter. This recording is from the mid 60's which would make
him only 19 or 20 years old.
Frankenstein
Harlem Nocturne
The
same year Frankenstein came out Edgar Winter & The White
Trash put out a live album called Roadwork.
This album is great on so many levels. Besides the band leader on
vocals, piano, and alto sax, there was another great singer named
Jerry Lacroix who also played sax (tenor) and Jon
Smith who played most of the rockin' tenor sax solos...
Jive, Jive, Jive
While the Frankenstein record was being played on all FM radio stations
in North America the Roadwork album came out and was completely
different. White Trash played R&B, rootsy rock & roll, gospel,
and funk flavored tunes. You couldn't pigeon hole these guys like
you could every other artist that was on the radio in those days,
I guess thats why I like them so much, they really were different.
A little later in 1974 The Edgar Winter Group released
"Shocktreatment", a rockin album full
of great pop songs. Here's an audio clip from a great Dan
Hartman song "Easy Street".Hartman
was a talented songwriter and the bass player in this group's line
up. This Edgar Winter alto sax solo is nothing short of perfect!
Easy Street
Watch The Edgar Winter Group perform Frankenstein
live in a studio:
|
Big Band Swing
The guys who really got it started.
Big
Band Swing & the Lindy Hop
The music & the dancers; how it all started.
Fado
Portuguese fado; Do you know about this soulful music?
King Curtis
King of the rock & roll sax!
Louis Jordan
One of the biggest influences in rock & roll.
Louis Prima
The Wildest!
The Saxophone-part
1&2
Early history and players who got it going.
The saxophone-part
3
The tenor is king of swing.
The
Saxophone-part 4
Fuelling the new music called rock & roll.
|