Turntable Tuesday! Edgar Winter’s White Trash “Roadwork”

It’s Turntable Tuesday…because life is too short not to listen to great music! Turn that TV OFF and listen to some music on your local speaker! You need to heal that soul! You need to feel that groove! You need to feel the beat! You need to read those lyrics! You need to dance! Come on get up off your feet and crank up the volume! It’s Turntable Tuesday Ya’ll!

It’s on the piano stool that will outlive us all! The cover of the Edgar Winter’s White Trash “Roadwork” vinyl is captured above. I did not have this record until a week ago when my music brother Jeff Boehlert gave me this album, a box full of vinyl, and other very cool music related things to me as we met for lunch in Durham, North Carolina at “Tobacco Road.”

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The back cover of this first press double album. Rick Derringer and Johnny Winter ROCKING the Gibson guitars on this album. My Harrison Holmes prototype amp that was hand-built by my best friend David Shaw in Greenwood, Mississippi found a way to make this photo randomly.
The late Jerry LaCroix in the top photo from the album sleeve. He was very instrumental in this album and a player on so many tracks you have heard from many others including Blood, Sweat, and Tears as well as Rare Earth. The late Bobby Ramirez played drums on all these tracks and tragically died not long later.

This story starts in Meridian, Mississippi. I was in fifth grade and living on 52nd Avenue not too far from the Junior College and Highland Park where the Jimmie Rodgers memorial is which is something I will talk about in another post with the right guest on my podcast. Back in the early 1970’s I lived two houses over from the Holloway family. Their Dad had this really classic green Pontiac that belched clouds of blue exhaust warming up on the “freezing” 45 degree winter mornings when he took us to school in the carpool. Mr. Holloway as I called him had three children which were two girls and one older boy. I rode with them to school each morning and visited them on Friday night to watch “The Midnight Special” on their TV as one of the neighborhood kids. I learned a lot about music watching that TV on Friday night. I also would hear Jeff Holloway playing vinyl records in his room. He would open the back bedroom window and play music on his turntable as he hit a Wiffle ball relentlessly from chain link fence to chain link fence as the music played. I could hear that music from my backyard patio. There were many days we had Wiffle ball games on the street with teams made up from all the kids in the neighborhood. We would take a plain white t-shirt and a black marker and put our team name on the back. The teams were the “Trash Cans” and the “Buzzards.” But back to the story. Jeff Holloway had a copies of both Edgar and Johnny Winter albums in his collection. This is where I first heard this music. Right from his window into the yard. I had to own this music one day. It was so good.

A gift from my friend Jeff Boehlert “Rock and Roll Hoochie Koo” lyrics signed by Rick Derringer. It is now hanging on my studio wall. I say that line all the time… “Rock and Roll Hoochie Koo.”
“Tobacco Road” as I call it. The heavily renovated tons of brick American Tobacco complex in Durham, North Carolina adjacent to the Durham Bulls Baseball Stadium where I have spent many days having dinner before a show at the Durham Performing Arts Center or the Blue Note. Many years ago the “Bull Durham Blues Festival” would be held on the baseball field. I remember seeing Clarence Carter, Irma Thomas, Wilson Pickett, and the likes of Dr. John over there. Jeff and I had lunch here at this complex on the day he brought me this album. This has been a place we met for many shows to grab a quick bite and a local craft beer before many a live concert. Photo on a November 2020 afternoon by Andrew Talbert.
Here are some of the credits from inside the double album. This is how you enjoy vinyl. Go see who played on what track, how long the songs are, who wrote the songs, and all kinds of details that embellish the listening experience.

So on to the next chapter of this story. Years ago I met my friend Jeff Boehlert at a Daryl Hall and John Oates show. We were sitting on the second row center or maybe it was the front row but it was real close. Most of time I sit real close to the stage or prefer to stand in a pit in front of the stage. It is much easier to connect with the music there. Honestly if I am 20 rows back it is not the same show. It is better for me to see who is playing what guitar down to the year, make, and model, or amp, or the layout of the sound gear. It is also easier to get under the main PA system and hear the sounds coming from the amplification on stage. I have been called a seat snob but I smile and say maybe but you won’t likely understand why I need to be close to feel the music and watch the magic happen on a live stage. It is about eye contact and telepathy you can feel when you are close to a band. Passion, that is what it is. I live for the momentary experience. When you love music the live version electrifies your soul and a really good show will make those tiny hairs on the back of your neck stand up. Meanwhile watch out for that ADHD squirrel as I keep typing.

There are all kinds of people in the pit or gold circle at a show. Sometimes you see famous people, sometimes you see people who go to see one concert a year, and many times you see people you know but the best times are when you meet someone who loves music as much as you do. On this night I met another musical brother sitting right next to me. In the minutes leading up to the show this guy from New York state was talking to me about everything from New Orleans funk to Rock and Roll. We were both trading stories faster than lightning and it was such a great night. The show was excellent. I exchanged phone numbers with Jeff after the show and we made plans to go on another musical adventure soon and we did many times. That was a while ago. Now we have the pandemic and a call from my friend telling that he is moving to Portugal. I didn’t have that on my 2020 bingo card. He asked me if I wanted any of his extensive vinyl collection which he had detailed in a huge database he emailed. I picked out a dozen albums I “needed” to round out my collection and so tonight you have this album on Turntable Tuesday. This record is in great shape other than the yellowing of the vinyl inserts from age. The music stands the test of time. It is awesome and so are good friends.

Rick Derringer and Edgar Winter join Ringo Starr on tour. I saw this tour and was not allowed to photograph the show which is ok but I would have loved to have shared a photo. The show was amazing. I saw Edgar play “Frankenstein” with his signature keyboard strap around his neck, his saxophone, and his timbales all on one stage playing all the sections of the song with a band. Edgar was awesome. Rick smoked a solo and Ringo well he was Ringo and it was good to be in the room with him. Did I mention Gary Wright singing “Dream Weaver” on that bill? There were others! What a band. What a night.
“Tobacco Road” from the Beaumont, Texas brothers…One night I will tell you all about meeting Johnny Winter and the times I saw him perform. Originally framed as a folk song, “Tobacco Road” was written by John D. Loudermilk and was a semi-autobiographical tale of growing up in Durham, North Carolina.


1973. It was a great year. This blurry video relic captures the original feel of the moment in time. Check out Edgar with his keyboard and the late Dan Hartman on bass.

So I will talk through the tracks a bit on my podcast and tell you a story if I encounter one of my “oh look a squirrel moments.” This “Roadwork” vinyl is a great album and a personal treasure for me. Jeff gave it to me with a smile in the warm fall Carolina afternoon sunlight and said go crank it up and enjoy it. Damn right I did. Good friends are hard to find.

Until next time. I’ll see you. Down the Road.