No new picks this week since I'm working on my reviews for the March issue of Blues Bytes, which should be online sometime next week, but I thought I'd take time to highlight a Blast From The Past, just in case you missed it.....
Edgar Winter's White Trash - Roadwork (CBS/Epic Records): I picked this one up a few months back at Discogs. I've always heard about Edgar Winter's White Trash, and actually knew some of his later work. However, I was much more familiar with his brother Johnny Winter, via his Alligator releases in the 80's.I was able to see Johnny Winter one time (1994) and he put on a mesmerizing performance, but I've never seen Edgar perform. When I saw Roadwork, I figured this was a good opportunity to hear what a live performance would be like. I'd always heard about White Trash, especially their lead singer Jerry LaCroix.
My internet friend in Houston also turned me on to LaCroix via his sting with the legendary Lousiana swamp pop/blue-eyed soul group The Boogie Kings (as Jerry "Count" Jackson). Some of the Boogie Kings albums from the 60's are collector's items and LaCroix is a big reason why. He was a major figure on the Louisiana/Gulf Coast music scene.
White Trash was a powerful ensemble who mixed blues, funk, gospel, R&B, and rock n' roll and Winter, who sang and played keyboards and saxophone fronted the group. LaCroix also sang and played saxophone, while Rick Derringer sang and played guitar. Other members included Randy Jo Hobbs (bass), Bobby Ramirez (drums), Jon Smith (tenor sax), and Marshall Cyr, Mike McLellan, and Tilly Lawrence (trumpets).
The album was recorded at the Apollo Theatre and the Academy of Music in NYC and at the Whisky a Go Go club in L.A. and was released in early 1972. It's a really fast-moving set with Winter, LaCroix, and Derringer sharing lead vocals. LaCroix is a monster vocalist, but Winter isn't far behind and Derringer does a fine job as well. The gospel-flavored "Save The Planet" gets the set off to a rousing start and LaCroix shines on "I Can't Turn You Loose," his own "Jive Jive Jive," and the Bobby Bland classic "Turn On Your Love Light."
Winter delivers a powerful, marathon version of "Tobacco Road" that actually took up one LP side (it was originally a two-record release), and Derringer sings "Still Alive And Well" and his future hit, "Rock and Roll, Hoochie Koo" also appears here, but it's sung by the band's special guest star, Johnny Winter, who actually recorded "Still Alive and Well" a few years later. Edgar Winter introduced Johnny with one of the most memorable lines on a rock album....."People keep askin' me.....where's your brother?"
Most of these guys are gone now, Johnny Winter and Jerry LaCroix both passed in 2014, and Derringer died in late May of 2025. Edgar Winter is still going strong as of this writing. White Trash only released three albums, including Roadwork, and all of them are worth a listen if you dig classic blues rock, but this is one of the standout live albums of the 1970's..









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