In 1968 Johnny
Winter crashed the Austin music scene with his electrifying brand
of southern blues. At 24, Johnny was already a seasoned veteran
of the roadhouse, honky tonk, bar, and dive circuit and was well
on his way to major auditoriums, like the Fillmore East in New
York, where he performed in January '69. Based in Houston, Johnny's
band toured from an old black hearse, making an indelible impression
wherever they performed -- three white guys playing traditionally
Black music with a vengeance. The band -- Johnny on guitars,
mouth harp, and
vocals, Uncle John "Red" Turner on drums, and Tommy
Shannon on bass -- stormed Austin's hottest music venue, the
Vulcan
Gas Company on Congress Avenue,
with a series
of performances that left the audience of both hippies and hip
college students stunned... and screaming for more.
At the time,
Austin-based Sonobeat Records was recording Vulcan Gas Company
regulars, The Conqueroo.
There, one afternoon during Winter's rehearsals at the Vulcan,
Sonobeat
owners
Bill Josey Sr. and Rim Kelley (Bill Josey Jr.) listened in awe,
then met Johnny, Red, and Tommy. Johnny had no other recording
deal and, as they say, the rest is history.
A master tape from the Sonobeat
Winter sessions
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To capture Johnny's "guttural,
edgy" sound (as CREEM magazine writer Lester Bangs described
it), Sonobeat recorded the trio at the Vulcan, where they could
play at full throttle. Although the resulting tracks have a distinctive
live sound, raw and primal, they were recorded during daylight
hours without an audience. The band set
up
in a tight
cluster,
almost
as if
under
a single
spotlight, in the center of the Vulcan's raised stage and was
covered with only half a dozen dynamic and condenser microphones.
An additional mike, set up at the back of the
hall, captured the Vulcan's cavernous acoustics, in part due
to the fact that the Vulcan was built over a large cistern that
created deep echoes. Although the Vulcan sessions were not recorded
before a live audience, they were mixed "live", meaning
the vocals were recorded at the same time as the instrumental
performance, to a 2-track Ampex 354 recorder through Sonobeat's
custom recording console. The Vulcan sessions yielded eight electrified
and electrifying tracks.
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Johnny
visits with Jack Josey (righ) at the Sonobeat studios
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Two
acoustic tracks -- featuring Johnny alone -- were recorded in the cozy comfort
of the living room at the Josey family home on Western Hills Drive in Northwest
Austin.
Johnny
multi-tracked National steel standard guitar, mandolin, mouth harp, and
vocals on Sonobeat's then-brand new half-inch 4-track Scully 280 recorder,
which had been delivered to the Joseys too late for the Vulcan sessions.
There's noticeably greater
clarity in the acoustic recordings, and, for a more intimate effect, they
were mixed
with shallow reverb.

The
Sonobeat single sleeve
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Initially, Sonobeat
released a Winter single in a black and white picture sleeve
designed by producer Rim Kelley and featuring a close-up of Johnny
shot by famed Austin photographer Burton Wilson. The single featured
a high energy performance of McKinley Morgenfield's Rollin'
and Tumblin' ("A"
side) and the guitar tour de force Mean Town Blues ("B"
side), written by Johnny. Incidentally, the Winter sleeve marked
the first appearance of Sonobeat's stylized "S" logo.
An alternate, two-sided sleeve featuring film strips from Burton
Wilson's photo shoot with Winter on the backside, makes the odd
appearance among collectors, although Rim has no recollection
of designing it.
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Sonobeat's
advance pressing album cover
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Shortly after
releasing Winter's single, Sonobeat issued a limited non-commercial "advance" pressing
of the 10-track album The
Progressive Blues Experiment, featuring five original
Winter compositions and five covers. Sonobeat's
advance pressings were used to get early radio airplay and reviews
and to market
its recordings
to larger national labels. On the heels of a Rolling Stone article
proclaiming Johnny one of the hottest performers out of Texas,
Johnny signed a multi-million dollar contract
with Columbia Records, who rushed him
into
its Nashville
studios to cut an album.
The commercial release
album cover
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Meanwhile, at the end of '68 Sonobeat
sold The Progressive Blues Experiment to Liberty
Records and ceased distribution of the single. In May '69, Liberty
released the Sonobeat album (LP-12431) on its Imperial
label, beating Johnny's Columbia debut album
to market
by two weeks. Thus, the Sonobeat album holds the distinction
of being both the first Winter album recorded -- although Johnny
had previously recorded on several singles for other small labels
-- and released. Johnny's
reflection in his National
steel standard guitar
--
another
stunning
Burton
Wilson photo -- graces the Imperial release's original cover. Rollin'
and Tumblin' and Mean
Town Blues were the "A" and "B" sides,
respectively, of Johnny's first Imperial single pulled from
the album.
The tracks on The Progressive Blues Experiment
were culled from dozens of alternate takes and false starts.
Below we present clips from three of those alternate takes, which
have been tucked away in Sonobeat's vaults for 40 years.
Notably, the unfinished alternate take of Broke
Down Engine,
recorded in the Josey family living room rather than at the Vulcan,
is a stripped down version -- just Johnny and his
National steel standard guitar. The version that appears
on the Imperial album features mouth harp and mandolin overdubs
along with a light amount of reverb.
Sonobeat
owners Bill Josey Sr. (right) and Rim Kelley (Bill
Jr.) review the Liberty Records contract
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Liberty Records
merged with United Artists Records in late '69, and, in 1973, The
Progressive Blues Experiment was
re-mastered and re-issued on the UA label under the title Austin,
Texas. There have been several re-issues on CD, including
a sort of 30th anniversary edition released in 1999 on the Razor & Tie
label;l that release reinstated both original title and
cover design. Capitol Records created a 24-bit digital master
for a spectacular 2005 CD re-release. The
Progressive Blues Experiment is
now available from Apple's iTunes Store as a high quality download.
Producer
Bill Josey Sr. summarized in his album liner notes precisely
what made Johnny's The
Progressive Blues Experiment a seminal work that would
become as legendary as the great albino bluesman himself: "Winter
is hard and heavy in his hypnotic blues bag. Before the recording
session, there was Johnny Winter
and his guitar. During the session, Johnny became the guitar." To
this day, The Progressive Blues Experiment is considered
by blues aficionados and critics alike as one of Winter's finest
works.
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The
Progressive Blues Experiment has earned some great reviews
over the years:
"There's
an urgency and bite to every track... As an electric guitarist,
Winter is explosive, fluid, percussive, and driving..."
-- Rolling Stone (1969)
"The Progressive Blues Experiment is a dense,
rocking, concentrated barrage of kamikaze exercises in rocking blues
and bluesy
rock. The Progressive Blues Experiment was actually
a better album than Johnny Winter [Johnny's first
Columbia album]."
-- New Music Express (1974)
"A true classic, this is one dirty, dangerous, and visionary
album."
-- All Music Guide
"This is killer white boy blues beyond compare."
-- Music Dish (2005)
"More than three decades after its release, The Progressive
Blues Experiment remains one of Johnny Winter's most innovative
albums. Although he has achieved great success throughout
his career, The Progressive Blues Experiment will continue
to be remembered as one of Winter's most memorable accomplishments."
-- The Western Courier (2006) |
Uncle John "Red" Turner succumbed
on July 26, 2007, to complications relating to hepatitis C.
Not just the solid timekeeper on Johnny Winter's first
three albums, including Sonobeat's The Progressive Blues
Experiment,
Uncle John formed seminal Austin band Krackerjack with former
Winter bandmate Tommy Shannon and then-newcomer Stevie Ray Vaughn.
Uncle John remained a major force in Austin's blues scene for
40 years.
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