Kurt Winter

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Kurt Winter (April 2, 1946 - December 14, 1997) was a Canadian guitarist.

Starting his career with the Winnipeg bands the Fifth, Gettysbyrg Address and Brother, Winter joined the Guess Who in May, 1970, along with co-guitarist Greg Leskiw to fill the gigantic shoes of the recently-departed Randy Bachman. As a songwriter, Winter contributed greatly to the Guess Who catalog, penning the hit singles Bus Rider and Hand Me Down World among others. He co-wrote several songs with group leader Burton Cummings, including Winter's personal favorite, Runnin' Back To Saskatoon.

Winter played stunning machine gun style solos on such hit songs as Raindance and Albert Flasher. In spite of the guitar bravado, Cummings was known to have commented that Winter was "not much of a fashion plate," preferring to perform in his trademark sleeveless "Sound by Garnet" sweatshirt.

The Guess Who was constantly in a state of flux and Winter was summarily invited to leave the band (along with guitarist Donnie McDougall) in June, 1974. They were replaced by ex-James Gang boogiemeister, Dom Troiano.

Winter later regrouped with various incarnations of the band under the leadership of bassist Jim Kale, but the music would never be the same. Suffering severe health problems, Winter died December 14, 1997.

[edit] So Long, Bannatyne

The Guess Who's 1971 album and song, So Long, Bannatyne, illustrates a transition in Kurt Winter's life. The front of the album cover for the vinyl LP has the words "So Long, Bannatyne" above a red Chevy with a Manitoba license plate. In the background there is a building labeled "Bannatyne Apartments". On the back of the album cover is the red Chevy again, but in a residential neighborhood. The song lyrics include the line:

So long Bannatyne, hello my Chevrier home.

According to Phil Larson[1], a friend of Kurt who went to school with him, the red Chevy belonged to Kurt, and the Bannatyne Apartments, located on Bannatyne Avenue in Winnipeg, Manitoba, were where he lived with his parents on the second floor while going to junior high school and high school. (The junior high school was across the street to the left of the apartments.) Kurt would practice playing a cherry red Gibson guitar in the apartment, unplugged to avoid the neighbors' complaints. Even at that age, says Phil, "Kurt could play anything he heard on the radio, by ear." When Kurt began earning songwriting money, he bought the house shown on the back of the album cover for his parents, and lived there with them. The house was located on Chevrier Boulevard in the Winnipeg suburbs.

[edit] Winter's Guess Who Discography

  • 1970] Share The Land
  • 1971 Best of The Guess Who
  • 1971 So Long, Bannatyne
  • 1971 Live at the Paramount
  • 1972 Rockin'
  • 1973 Best of the Guess Who Volume 2
  • 1973 Artificial Paradise
  • 1973 #10
  • 1974 Road Food
  • 1978 Guess Who's Back?
  • 1979 All This For a Song
  • 1988 Track Record: The Guess Who Collection
  • 1997 The Guess Who: The Ultimate Collection
  • 1999 The Guess Who: Greatest Hits
  • 2000 Live at the Paramount (re-mastered)
  • 2000 Share the Land (re-mastered)
  • 2003 Platinum & Gold Collection: The Guess Who
  • 2004 Wheatfield Soul / Artificial Paradise (re-mastered)
  • 2004 So Long Bannatyne / #10 (re-mastered)
  • 2004 Rockin' / Flavours (re-mastered)
  • 2004 Road Food / Power in the Music (re-mastered)
  • 2006 Bachman Cummings Song Book
  1. ^ Private e-mail dated March 6, 2006, from Phil Larson to Wayne Farmer