News

  1. Steve Winwood Receives Jammy's Lifetime Achievement Award

    Steve Winwood was on site at the Theatre at Madison Square Garden for the 2004 Jammy Awards. Winwood was the recipient of this year's Lifetime Achievement Award. Chris Robinson presented the award. In his brief acceptance speech, Winwood exclaimed, "It's nice to know I've been jamming for the past forty years!" Winwood and his band performed the event's final set, offering up favorites from every decade in his career, including "Gimme Some Lovin'," "Dear Mr. Fantasy", "Back in the High Life", and "Different Light".

  2. Traffic Remasters
    March 1, 2002

    Traffic Remasters

    LOS ANGELES -- The reissue series featuring Traffic, one of classic rock's most influential, adventurous, critically lauded and remarkable bands, continues with two albums that celebrated their 30th anniversaries last year, the live "Welcome To The Canteen" (Island/UME) and the studio "The Low Sparks Of High Heeled Boys" (Island/UME), both released March 19, 2002. Each has been digitally remastered from the original analog master tapes, and the latter includes a special bonus track.

  3. Blind Faith Deluxe Edition
    January 15, 2001

    Blind Faith Deluxe Edition

    It began under the radar, just a few rock-star friends looking for kicks.

    They gathered to jam at Eric Clapton's house in Surrey on a February afternoon in 1969, and judging from tapes made shortly afterward, the union that came to be called Blind Faith was magic. Steve Winwood, stuck too long in Traffic, was there. So was Clapton and his longtime compatriot in the curdled power-trio Cream, drummer Ginger Baker. In a few weeks, bassist Rick Grech, of the hot UK act the Family, would be invited in.

  4. "True Brit", In Style, October 1997

    Standing in a spectacular amphitheater, Steve Winwood awaits his cue while several background singers finish belting out some saucy two-part harmony. "Talk about great pipes!" says the 49-year-old rock singer, whose stage companions break occasionally to nibble on hay and cut grass. A chorus of moos and baas resonate in the vanishing winds; held motionless against the breeze, a flock of rooks call overhead. "When you live in such a spiritual place," says Winwood, "you can't help appreciating all the natural music in the air."