Jesse Winchester
15 articles
Audio interviews
Interview by John Tobler, Rock's Backpages audio, June 1976
The songwriter-in-exile talks about his religious background; his stay in Munich; getting his draft notice and moving to Montreal; meeting Robbie Robertson and signing to Ampex; being managed by Albert Grossman and joining Bearsville; his recorded output; favourite covers of his songs; being supported by Joan Baez, and still not being allowed back into the USA.
File format: mp3; file size: 40.6mb, interview length: 42' 16" sound quality: **
List of articles in the library
Jesse Winchester: Learn To Love It
Review by Bud Scoppa, Rolling Stone, 10 October 1974
ON JESSE WINCHESTER'S first two albums, Jesse Winchester and Third Down, 110 To Go, the fine balance struck between conviction and melodiousness, simplicity and eloquence ...
Approximately 286 Reasons Why You Should Listen To Jesse Winchester
Overview by Giovanni Dadomo, ZigZag, December 1974
IF YOU'VE BEEN a reader of Zigzag for as long as I have, i.e., since very early on, you'll recall how at the start there ...
Jesse Winchester: Learn To Love It (Bearsville K55506) 30 min *****
Review by Giovanni Dadomo, Sounds, 13 March 1976
The holy rock 'n' roller ...
Jesse Winchester: Learn To Love It
Review by Max Bell, New Musical Express, 15 May 1976
THIS IS BOTH Jesse Winchester's third album and his third good album. ...
Jesse Winchester: Winchester '76
Interview by Rob Partridge, Melody Maker, 29 May 1976
JESSE WINCHESTER is diffident, reluctant to elaborate on the bare essentials of his biography. He was born in Louisiana, brought up in Memphis, studied in ...
Profile and Interview by John Tobler, New Musical Express, 5 June 1976
CERTAIN QUALITIES seem to be needed for a musician to become a hero to the man in the street who buys a lot of records ...
Jesse Winchester: Exile on Main Street
Profile and Interview by Giovanni Dadomo, Sounds, 5 June 1976
Giovanni Dadomo releases his frustrations to tell you all about Jesse Winchester ...
Jesse Winchester: New Victoria, London
Live Review by David Hepworth, New Musical Express, 17 July 1976
JESSE WINCHESTER certainly didn't have things easy for his British concert debut last week. For a start, the combination of heatwave and Bonnie And Clyde ...
Jesse Winchester: The Only Fools On The Road Tonight Are The Fools On The Midnight Bus
Interview by Andy Childs, ZigZag, November 1976
"THE NEXT NUMBER is by a songwriter who we really like... his name's Jesse Winchester". (A liberal smattering of applause). "Great... you like him too!" ...
Jesse Winchester: Studio Six Concert, Montreal, Quebec
Live Review by John Swenson, Rolling Stone, 16 December 1976
THE ATMOSPHERE AT the small Montreal studio was so much like a living room's that it was hard to believe it was anything more than ...
Winchester '77: Jesse Trades His Burden For A Breeze
Interview by Fred Schruers, Crawdaddy!, July 1977
MONTREAL— Hands jammed into his back pockets, Jesse Winchester stands at the window staring holes through the spring snowstorm. Birch logs spit and crack reassuringly ...
The quiet and low-key Jesse Winchester
Interview by Jim Sullivan, The Boston Globe, 12 July 1982
THE SPOTLIGHT of the news media shone brightest on Jesse Winchester in 1977. Jesse Winchester squirmed. ...
Jesse Winchester: Taking Another Shot
Profile and Interview by j. poet, San Francisco Chronicle, 21 January 2001
Eclectic singer-songwriter Jesse Winchester cuts his first new album in 11 years ...
Jesse Winchester: Seems Like Only Yesterday: Live in Montreal 1976
Sleeve notes by Gene Sculatti, Real Gone Music , February 2015
AMONG THE more effective pieces of ordnance most writers keep close at hand is a gift for understatement. Jesse Winchester's arsenal has always been well-stocked. ...
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