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Purchase tickets
online for some of the Northeast's leading music
concerts
and shows.
Seating
+
Standing
Tickets available on the door from
7.00pm
- If you have any queries, please call 07760 400
226
Doors 7.00pm
Paul Lamb + Johnny Dickinson
7,45pm
Johnny Winter 9.15pm
Close 11.00pm
Times approx.
Please note on the order form
there is an option for standing and seating.

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After the gig ....
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+ Paul Lamb & Johnny
Dickinson
It is a long
time since Johnny
Winter toured the UK and we are
delighted to confirm that one of the greatest
guitarists of all time is to kick-off his 2007
UK Tour with CannyGigs at the Newcastle Carling
Academy. If you are going to see one gig in
2007, this is the one!
A brief blog ....
For over 30 years,
Johnny Winter has been a guitar hero
without equal. Signing to Columbia records in
1969, Johnny immediately laid out the blueprint
for his fresh take on classic blues a prime
combination for the legions of fans just
discovering the blues via the likes of Jimmy
Page and Eric Clapton. Constantly shifting
between simple country blues in the vein of
Robert Johnson, to all-out electric slide guitar
blues-rock, - Johnny has always been one of the
most respected singers and guitar players in
rock and the clear link between British
blues-rock and American Southern rock (a la the
Allman Brothers and Lynyrd Skynyrd.) Throughout
the '70s and '80s, Johnny was the unofficial
torch-bearer for the blues, championing and
aiding the careers of his idols like Muddy
Waters and John Lee Hooker.
His recent Grammy nominated "I'm A Bluesman"
disc Virgin/EMI, has only added to his
Texas-sized reputation.
For this release, Johnny has again paired with
his long-time producer Dick Shurman (Robert
Cray, Wayne June Albert Collins, Roy Buchanan),
as well as Tom Hambridge (Susan Tedeschi, George
Thorogood). Backing him on this CD is his
road-tested touring band of guitarist Paul
Nelson, bassist Scott Spray, drummer Wayne June
with guest appearances by such friends as
keyboardist Reese Wynans (from Stevie Ray
Vaughan's celebrated backing group Double
Trouble) and ace harmonica man James Montgomery
among others.
"I'm A Bluesman" was a question of finding the
time and right material, he says. The 13-track
collection includes three tunes by his friend
and 2nd guitarist Paul Nelson, who writes with
Winter's bassist Scott Spray. They collaborated
on the prison-themed "Shakedown", a
relationship-gone-bad song titled "Pack Your
Bags" and the album's title track, which Nelson
describes as a Johnny Winter biography set to
music. "I wanted to write a song about his life,
who he is, and what he represents to other
musicians. I'm really proud that when he heard
the song he said I'd gotten it right."
Winter also opted to record two new songs by
producer, Hambridge, "Cheatin' Blues" and the
first album single, Lone Wolf." Johnny and his
players cut the tracks for "I'm A Bluesman" at
several studios in New England, where Winter
makes his home these days. But Winter remains a
native Texan, born and bred in Beaumont, the
town where the famous Spindletop gusher came in
to kick off the "black gold" rush in 1901.
Growing up in rough-and-tumble town populated by
oilfield wildcatters and shipyard workers, he
spent long hours listening to a local deejay
named J.P. Richardson - The Big Bopper of
"Chantilly Lace" fame - and became hooked on
50's rock & roll. He formed his first band,
Johnny and the Jammers, in 1959 at the age of
15, with his 12-year-old brother Edgar on
keyboards.
Racial tensions in Beaumont were still high in
those days. The town had been side to one of the
worst race riots in Texas history just nine
months before Johnny's birth. Mobs wandered the
streets, businesses burned, martial law went
into effect, and more than 2,000 uniformed
National Guardsmen and Texas Rangers sealed off
the town from the rest of the world until
tempers cooled. Despite the brutal legacy,
Johnny remembers never hesitating as a kid to
venture into black neighborhoods to hear and
play music.
Looking back, he believes people in the black
community knew that he was sincere, that he was
genuinely possessed by the blues. "Nothing ever
happened tome. I went to black clubs all the
time, and nobody ever bothered me. I always felt
welcome." He also became friends with Clarence
Garlow, a deejay at the black radio station KJET
in Beaumont. Who opened Winter's eye's and ears
to rural blues and Cajun music. Clarence, who
recorded for the swamp boogie specialty label
Goldband, KRCO, Frolic, Diamond, Moon-Lite,
Hall-Way and other regional labels.
There's a famous story about a time in 1962 when
Johnny and his brother went to see B.B. King at
a Beaumont club called the Raven. The only
whites in the crowd, they no doubt stood out.
But Johnny already had his chops down and wanted
to play with the revered B.B."I was about 17,"
Johnny remembers, "and B.B. didn't want to let
me on stage at first. He asked me for a union
card, and I had one. Also I kept sending people
over to ask him to let me play. Finally, he
decided that there enough people who wanted to
hear me that, no matter if I was good or not, it
would be worth it to let me on stage. He gave me
his guitar and let me play. I got standing
ovation, and he took his guitar back!"
Winter's big breakthrough came a few years later
in 1968 when Rolling Stone writers Larry
Sepulvado and John Burks featured him in a piece
on the Texas Music scene, which prompted a
bidding war among labels that Columbia
eventually won.
Johnny's self-titled 1969 disc announced loudly
that there was a new guitar-slinger on the new
national scene. The disc included audacious
covers such blues classics as B.B. King's "Be
Careful with a Fool," Sonny Boy Williamson II's
"Good Morning Little School Girl," Robert
Johnson's "When You Got a Good Friend" and
fellow Texan Lightin' Hopkins' "Back Door
Friend." It also featured two prime original
Winter songs, "Dallas"and the controversial "I'm
Yours and I'm Hers," that went into heavy
rotation on FM underground radio.
The album peaked at No.24 on the billboard chart
and was promptly followed by Second Winter later
that same year. Looking back, writer Cub Koda
described the period as one when "Straight out
of Texas with a hot trio, Winter made blues-rock
music for the angels." That trio, by the way,
included bassist Tommy Shannon who would go on
to be part of SRV's Double Trouble and drummer
Uncle John Turner.
Winter stayed with Columbia and it's boutique
Blue Sky label for more than a decade, turning
out such well-received platters as "Johnny
Winter And" (1970), "Still Alive and Well"
(1973) and "John Dawson Winter III" (1974). He
also helped to introduce blues giant Muddy
Waters to another generation of listeners by
producing and playing guitar on the
Grammy-winning "Hard Again" (1977), as well as
the Grammy-nominated "I'm Ready" (1978), Muddy
"Mississippi Waters Live" (1979) and "King Bee"
(1981). The collaborations were so successful
that Waters took to referring to Johnny as his
"adopted son"!
http://johnnywinter.net/welcome/
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We are delighted
to confirm that Paul Lamb and
Johnny Dickinson
have accepted our invitation to support the legendary
Johnny Winter. |