
Steve Winwood
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Steve Winwood Biography
As a solo artist, Steve Winwood is primarily associated with
the highly polished blue-eyed soul-pop that made him a star in the
'80s. Yet his turn as a slick, upscale mainstay of adult contemporary
radio was simply the latest phase of a long and varied career, one
that's seen the former teenage R&B shouter move through jazz,
psychedelia, blues-rock, and progressive rock. Possessed of a powerful,
utterly distinctive voice, Winwood was also an excellent keyboardist
who remained an in-demand session musician for most of his career, even
while busy with high-profile projects. That background wasn't
necessarily apparent on his solo records, which established a viable
commercial formula that was tremendously effective as long as it was
executed with commitment.
Stephen Lawrence Winwood was born May 12, 1948, in the Handsworth area
of Birmingham, England. First interested in swing and Dixieland jazz,
he began playing drums, guitar, and piano as a child, and first
performed with his father and older brother Muff in the Ron Atkinson
Band at the age of eight. During the early '60s, Muff led a locally
popular group called the Muff Woody Jazz Band, and allowed young Steve
to join; eventually they began to add R&B numbers to their
repertoire, and in 1963 the brothers chose to pursue that music
full-time, joining guitarist Spencer Davis to form the Spencer Davis
Group. Although he was only 15, Steve's vocals were astoundingly
soulful and mature, and his skills at the piano were also advanced
beyond his years. Within a year, he'd played with numerous American
blues legends both in concert and in the studio; in 1965, he also
recorded the solo single Incense as the Anglos, crediting himself as
Stevie Anglo. Meanwhile, the Spencer Davis Group released a handful of
classic R&B-styled singles, including Keep on Running, I'm a
Man, and the monumental Gimme Some Lovin', which stood with any of
the gritty hardcore soul music coming out of the American South.
Winwood eventually tired of the tight pop-single format; by the
mid-'60s, the cutting edge of rock & roll often involved stretching
out instrumentally, and with his roots in jazz, Winwood wanted the same
opportunity. Accordingly, he left the Spencer Davis Group in 1967 to
form Traffic with guitarist Dave Mason, horn player Chris Wood, and
drummer Jim Capaldi, all of whom had played on Gimme Some Lovin'. The
quartet retired to a small cottage in the Berkshire countryside, where
they could work out their sound -- a unique blend of R&B,
Beatlesque pop, psychedelia, jazz, and British folk -- and jam long
into the night without angering neighbors. Traffic debuted in the U.K.
with the single Paper Sun in May 1967, and soon issued their debut
album Mr. Fantasy (retitled Heaven Is in Your Mind in the U.S.); it was
followed by the jazzy psychedelic classic Traffic in 1968. However,
conflicts had arisen between Winwood and Mason over the latter's
tightly constructed folk-pop songs, which didn't fit into Winwood's
expansive, jam-oriented conception of the band. Mason left, returned,
and was fired again, and Winwood broke up the band at the beginning of
1969. Even so, by that time, he had become the unofficial in-house
keyboardist for Traffic's label Island, playing at numerous recording
sessions.
Winwood subsequently hooked up with old friend Eric Clapton, who'd
recently parted ways with Cream. The two began jamming and found that
they enjoyed working together, and rumors of their collaboration spread
like wildfire; the enormous anticipation only grew when ex-Cream
drummer Ginger Baker signed on, despite Clapton's misgivings over the
expectations that would create. Concert promoters rushed to book the
band before any material had been completed (hence the band's eventual
name, Blind Faith), and offered too much money for them to refuse,
despite their lack of rehearsal time. Their self-titled debut, released
in the summer of 1969, was a hit, but the extreme pressure on the group
led to their breakup even before the end of the year. Winwood joined
Baker in a large, eclectic new supergroup called Ginger Baker's Air
Force, but Winwood still had contract obligations to Island, and he
left not long after Air Force's debut performance at the Royal Albert
Hall in early 1970.
Winwood began work on what was slated to be his first solo LP, but he
gradually brought in more ex-Traffic members to help him out, to the
point where the album simply became a band reunion. John Barleycorn
Must Die was released later in 1970, showcasing the sort of jam-happy
jazz-rock sound that Winwood had in mind for the group from the start.
Several more albums in that vein followed, including 1971's The Low
Spark of High-Heeled Boys, which brought Traffic to the peak of their
commercial popularity in America. The run was briefly interrupted by
Winwood's bout with peritonitis around 1972, but he'd recovered enough
to play a major role in Eric Clapton's early-1973 comeback concerts at
the Rainbow Theatre. Traffic broke up in 1974, but instead of going
solo right away, an exhausted Winwood spent the next few years as a
session musician, relaxing on his Gloucestershire farm during his spare
time. He also featured prominently as a collaborator with Japanese
percussionist Stomu Yamash'ta, appearing on his hit jazz fusion LP, Go,
in 1976.
When Winwood finally returned with his self-titled solo debut in 1977,
Britain was in the midst of the punk revolution, and the music itself
was somewhat disappointing even to Winwood himself. Dismayed, he
returned to Gloucestershire and all but disappeared from music. He
returned in late 1980 with the little-heralded Arc of a Diver, a much
stronger effort on which he played every instrument himself.
Modernizing Winwood's sound with more synthesizers and electronic
percussion, Arc of a Diver was a platinum-selling hit in the U.S.,
helped by the hit single While You See a Chance ; it received highly
positive reviews as well, most hailing the freshness of Winwood's newly
contemporary sound. The extremely similar 1982 follow-up Talking Back
to the Night sounded rushed to some reviewers, and it wasn't nearly as
big a hit, with none of its singles reaching the Top 40. Unhappy with
the record, Winwood even considered retiring to become a producer
(though his brother talked him out of it).
Taking more time to craft his next album, Winwood didn't return until
1986, with an album of slickly crafted, sophisticated pop called Back
in the High Life, which was his first '80s album to feature outside
session musicians. It was a smash hit, selling over three-million
copies and producing Winwood's first number one single in Higher
Love, which also won a Grammy for Record of the Year. In 1987, Virgin
offered Winwood a substantial sum of money and successfully pried him
away from Island; a remixed version of Talking Back to the Night's
Valerie, featured on the Island-greatest-hits compilation Chronicles,
became a Top Ten hit later that year. Winwood's hot streak continued
with his first album for Virgin, 1988's Roll With It. The title track
became his second number one and his biggest hit ever, and the album
topped the charts as well; plus, the smoky ballad Don't You Know What
the Night Can Do? was featured in a prominent TV ad campaign. Winwood
had by now established a large, mostly adult fan base, but that support
began to slip with his next album, 1990's Refugees of the Heart.
Refugees repeated the slick blue-eyed soul updates of its predecessor,
but according to most reviewers it simply wasn't performed with the
same passion, save for the lead single One and Only Man, a
collaboration with Traffic mate Jim Capaldi.
Afterward, Winwood continued his pattern of following disappointments
with periods of inactivity; he next resurfaced in 1994 as part of a
Traffic reunion with Capaldi. Together they released the new album, Far
From Home, and toured the world. Winwood subsequently returned to his
solo career and spent two years working on Junction Seven, which
finally appeared in 1997 and was co-produced by Narada Michael Walden.
However, his momentum had stalled, and the album -- which received
mixed reviews -- failed to sell well. The following year, Winwood
toured with his new project Latin Crossings, a jazz group that also
featured Tito Puente and Arturo Sandoval (though they never recorded).
He subsequently parted ways with Virgin. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Written by Steve Huey