Through steady work, Edgar Winter kept himself visible throughout the '90s,
culminating with a pair of solid efforts for Intersound. Those appeared under the radar of popular
consciousness, known only to hard rock and blues-rock fans. For the general public, Winter re-entered
consciousness through a series of television commercials -- usually, they just featured his songs, but
he was the star in a clever Miller campaign that suggested Winter and George Hamilton were twins --
along with a prominent song in the political satire Wag the Dog. All of this led to a contract with
Pyramid Records and Winter Blues, his first large-scale, heavily promoted release in nearly 20 years.
As is customary for any comeback release, Winter Blues is flush with cameos,
but this time around, they make sense -- brother Johnny, Rick Derringer and Leon Russell
have been long-time colleagues of Edgar, while Dr. John and (surprisingly) Eddie Money fit in quite nicely.
Their presence is welcome, since Winter has never been the strongest of frontmen and they never
take away from his guitar playing, which remains the best reason to hear Winter Blues. |