Edgar Winter - Entrance (Expanded Edition) (1970)

Artist: Edgar Winter
Title: Entrance (Expanded Edition)
Year Of Release: 1970
Label: Epic - Legacy
Genre: Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 55:41
Total Size: 342 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Entrance (Expanded Edition)
Year Of Release: 1970
Label: Epic - Legacy
Genre: Rock, Blues Rock
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 55:41
Total Size: 342 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Entrance (03:29)
2. Where Have You Gone (02:40)
3. Rise to Fall (04:04)
4. Fire and Ice (07:04)
5. Hung Up (03:00)
6. Back In the Blues (02:18)
7. Re-Entrance (02:28)
8. Tobacco Road (04:05)
9. Jump Right Out (04:20)
10. Peace Pipe (04:40)
11. A Different Game (05:02)
12. Jimmy's Gospel (04:41)
13. Now Is The Time (03:43)
14. Tobacco Road (Mono Edit) (04:06)
Review by Michael B. Smith
Edgar Winter came out of the chute kicking with this remarkable record filled with jazz, blues, and a little old-fashioned rock & roll. The record follows an established theme throughout its first side, stringing the songs together without breaks, highlighted by dreamy keyboard and sax work, plus Winter's smooth vocalizations. But jazz isn't the only thing Winter brings to the party. His first recorded version of the old J.D. Loudermilk tune "Tobacco Road" throws a few nice punches (although the live version with White Trash a few years later would prove the definitive one). "Jimmy's Gospel" plays on his early church influences, while "Jump Right Out" is the predecessor of half-a-dozen "jump up and dance" numbers Winter would pepper his records with in the years to come.
Edgar Winter came out of the chute kicking with this remarkable record filled with jazz, blues, and a little old-fashioned rock & roll. The record follows an established theme throughout its first side, stringing the songs together without breaks, highlighted by dreamy keyboard and sax work, plus Winter's smooth vocalizations. But jazz isn't the only thing Winter brings to the party. His first recorded version of the old J.D. Loudermilk tune "Tobacco Road" throws a few nice punches (although the live version with White Trash a few years later would prove the definitive one). "Jimmy's Gospel" plays on his early church influences, while "Jump Right Out" is the predecessor of half-a-dozen "jump up and dance" numbers Winter would pepper his records with in the years to come.