Features

In Memory Of Blues Great Johnny Winter: 5 Must-Listen to Collabs With Jimi Hendrix & More

Had he lived, blues great Johnny Winter would have celebrated his 80th birthday on Friday, February 23. The Texas-born slide-guitar master passed away on July 16, 2014, at age 70 from emphysema combined with pneumonia.

Winter was renowned for his fiery slide-guitar skills, and was respected and admired by blues aficionados and his musical peers, alike, as well as his own heroes.

Videos by American Songwriter

[RELATED: Ringo Starr, ZZ Top, Joe Walsh, and More Contribute to Johnny Winter Tribute Album]

While Winter amassed an impressive body of solo work, he also collaborated with many well-known artists. In honor of Winterโ€™s milestone birthday, weโ€™ve selected five interesting collaborations he recorded during his long career.

Jimi Hendrix โ€“ โ€œThings I Used to Doโ€ (1969, released 2018)

In May 1969, Winter headed into the New York City studio the Record Plant to record a version of the 1953 Guitar Slim tune โ€œThings I Used to Doโ€ with none other than Jimi Hendrix.

As great a guitarist as Hendrix was, Winterโ€™s fluid slide playing truly shines through on the recording. A few months later, in August 1969, both Hendrix and Winter would play, separately, at the historic Woodstock festival.

The full version of โ€œThings I Used to Doโ€ wasnโ€™t released until 2018, on the posthumous Hendrix compilation Both Sides of the Sky.

Gregg Allman โ€“ โ€œWasted Wordsโ€ (1973, released in 2019)

In 1973, Winter took part in a recording session with Gregg Allman, playing impressive guitar on a version of Allmanโ€™s โ€œWasted Words.โ€ The session also featured Allman Brothers Band bassist Berry Oakley and Band of Gypsys drummer Buddy Miles. The Allman Brothersโ€™ own version โ€œWasted Wordsโ€ appeared on the groupโ€™s hit 1973 album Brothers and Sisters.

The version featuring Winter, however, didnโ€™t see official light of day until 2019, when it was included on a deluxe reissue of Greggโ€™s 1973 solo debut, Laid Back.

Muddy Waters โ€“ โ€œMannish Boyโ€ (1977)

In the late 1970s, Winter began a collaboration with blues legend Muddy Waters, whom heโ€™d become friends with a few years earlier. Winter produced three albums for Watersโ€”Hard Again (1977), Iโ€™m Ready (1978), and Muddy “Mississippi” Waters โ€“ Live (1979). He also contributed his guitar skills to the records, which all won Grammys in the Best Ethnic or Traditional Folk Recording category.

Hard Again kicks off with an inspired rendition of Watersโ€™ classic 1955 song โ€œMannish Boy.โ€ Winter plays some greasy guitar licks on the track, and can also be heard screaming in encouragement to Waters as he belts out the song.

John Lee Hooker โ€“ โ€œSusieโ€ (1991)

Winter was among a variety of guest artists featured on blues greatโ€™s 1991 album Mr. Lucky. โ€œSusieโ€ is an original tune by Hooker that features Winter going to town with a rolling and rollicking solo.

Leslie West โ€“ โ€œBusted, Dusted or Deadโ€ (2013)

Late in his career, Winter tears it up again on โ€œBusted, Dusted or Dead,โ€ a song from ex-Mountain singer/guitarist Leslie Westโ€™s 2013 album Still Climbing. Johnnyโ€™s muscular slide riffs are a major highlight of the Southern rock-flavored tune, as are Westโ€™s gritty vocals.

Still Climbing wound up topping the Billboard Blues Albums chart.