News

  1. In The News: Press Quotes
    October 1, 2003

    In The News: Press Quotes

    Washington Times --“Mr. Winwood kept the rug firmly planted beneath his feet while demonstrating why he remains one of rock's bona fide legends.”

    Philadelphia Inquirer --“…after several tunes, the worshipful, near-capacity crowd rewarded Winwood and his crew with standing ovations…”

    Washington Post --“[Winwood] was bent over the neck of his guitar and wailing with the abandon of a kid in a music store, a performance that had grown men stomping their feet and screaming as if their team had just scored a touchdown.”

    NY Times --“For a couple of hours on Thursday night at the Beacon Theater, Steve Winwood allowed his fans to imagine they lived in a gentler, more joyful world.”

  2. Transcript: NPR September 14, 2003

    "I wanted to go as far as possible back to traditional recording techniques. You know, no loops or overdubs. And when I started to do it, you know, of course, I realized it gave the music a life and vibrancy; also, I was keen to combine different ethnic styles. Well, I've always been interested in combining different ethnic styles, but perhaps with this record I took it a step further by adding Brazilian elements and Afro-Cuban elements, all of which are rooted in African rhythms, but also contain a lot of European harmonic elements. And in addition to that, I tried to maintain a rock basis for the album, combined with the usual folk and jazz flavors."

  3. Steve Winwood Shines A Different Light

    With these words, a low spark sung in a true and beautiful voice, Steve Winwood snared many of us a long time ago. Hindsight and an honest appraisal of their catalog reveal Traffic as the blueprint for much of what’s now known as "jam music." A series of stunning recordings showed an embrace of modal structures and a stylistic spread that embraced everything from English folk forms to psychedelic rawness to swinging, complex jazz figures. Building on the punishing blue pop of his work as a teen in the Spencer Davis Group, the group pursued its own road while still managing to connect with a mass audience. Rare is the person who’s never encountered a band laying into “Dear Mr. Fantasy” or “Gimme Some Lovin’.” Winwood's diverse, exploratory career includes the glimmering moment of Blind Faith, sessions with Hendrix and Muddy Waters, space flights with Stomu Yamash'ta and his smoother, listener friendly solo material of the '80s and '90s.

  4. About Time Review: May 1, 2003

    "Record companies put pressure on artists through A&R and production to make a kind of album that fits in with their idea of how they can market it," Winwood said recently from London. "I have to admit that I was probably influenced, and to some degree, fell foul of that through the '80s and '90s. So now, I'm definitely trying to distance myself from that."