The West Side Winders

The Buzz

What are the critics saying? Here are some actual reviews.

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Music Matters - ThePlanetWeekly.com

Wednesday, January 17th, 2007

Also on CDBaby.com is The West Side Winders (formerly The Sidewinders) with their latest release "Snaken Not Stirred". This is mostly Rockabilly and is one of the best I have heard since Alvin Lee's "In Tennessee" which included Elvis backups Scotty Moore and D.J. Fontana. The West Side Winders are really hot.

- Reviewed by Jerry Henry
www.theplanetweekly.com

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About: Country Music

January 15th, 2007

Oh, wow! What is it? Retro? Rockabilly? Souped-up lounge music? Hot blues? Crispy-fried country-rock? Or, hell, just plain Americana? Yeah! I don't care what you call it. Spin it and get yourself out on the dance floor with whoever you like to swing with, these three guys can rock it in an old-style roots fashion that transcends time and space. You don't need to do anything but enjoy it, so forget about what you wanna tag it - the band themselves call it "surfabilly." Say what you will. It's hot.

Take three guys - Dan Peters on a smokin' lead guitar and shining vocals, Greg Marsh pounding the hell out of the drums, and Derek Brand on a steady bass, and apparently that's all you need to really entertain. The only guest joining the guys is Randy Riley's vocals on "Slick Black Cadillac Daddy," which features some awesome screaming guitar work, as well. Not to overuse a phrase, but Dan Peters plays the heck out of that guitar. He's one of those guitarists you can just sit back and be in awe of, his steady pulse all the music that's needed with his drum-and-bass line; he positively shines on "Your Love Is Evil," a showcase for his fingers' skills, and like all great guitarists, he has to show off with a cover of "Little Sister," a song that was never really meant for the vocalist (even if Elvis and Dwight Yoakam both did it, it was always for the guitarist), as is the self-penned instrumental "Little Doggies," one of the standout tracks on the disc. Peters wrote most of the music on Snaken Not Stirred, except for Arthur Crudup's "That's All Right," the aforementioned "Little Sister," and "My Baby," written by Leroy Kirkland and R. Luke.

Now, the West Side Winders started life in Chicago as "The Sidewinders," with their first album Come and Get It (also available at their website, through CD Baby), but changed their name in the spring of 2006 as explained on their My Space page for no other reason than to avoid possible trademark infringement as "Sidewinder" was already in use by other bands. I actually like the new name better, since it not only shows where they come from, it's more distinctive. As they said, there's other groups using the term "Sidewinder." They still have the snake in their trademark, and as an Arizonan, I certainly know what it means when I see it, so knowing they're 'winders from the west side, it works for me. I'm thinking they've come through Phoenix once or twice, I think I've seen their name in the little live music dives I frequent. If not, I'd love to see 'em trek down here and rock the Yucca Tap Room. The dancers there would sure love 'em! And I always love to bask in the glow of a great guitarist in a nice, intimate setting like the Tap Room offers. In any case, live or otherwise, this is the disc for anyone who likes their roots music to ROCK. Take a little country, a little blues, a little jazz, and a lot of spice, and you get the West Side Winders.

- Reviewed by Kathy Coleman
www.countrymusic.about.com

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Americana UK

January 4th, 2007

Rockabilly. Hard!

With inspirations ranging from Led Zeppelin, Van Halen, Black Sabbath, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Bob Marley, The Beatles, Brad Paisley, Elvis Presley and Joe Satriani plus Jazz this band promise a great deal. Kicking off with a powering version of "That's All Right" they chuck in some mean guitar licks and you can see where the heavy rock influences have taken them. They're really guitar gods underneath it all. Eddie Van Halen has a lot to answer to.

"Keep It In The Family" brings it back to what's stated on the tin. Rockabilly and swing. That big Gretsch pumps out an awesome sound. Keeping the Van Halen momentum going on the intro to "Slick Black Cadillac Daddy" these rockabillies then introduce shades of Brian Setzer, particularly during his full on rock years.

This album has it all. Swing, surf, country & western, rock'n'roll, jazz and blues all packed into one titchy cd and often in the same song - primarily on their cover of "Little Sister". "Little Doggies", "500 Miles" and "Can't Get A Break" go back to Rockabilly/rock'n'roll whilst the instrumental "Scary Harry" finishes the album with their trademark guitar solo's and verges on hard rock again; like Dick Dale's "Misirlou" in "Pulp Fiction".

Play loud. Quiet ain't no good.

- Reviewer: Phil Edwards
Reviewers Rating: 7 out of 10 stars

www.americana-uk.com

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Country Standard Time

December, 2006

How can you take seriously a man who sings ("Keep It in the Family") about expanding his love circle to include not only girlfriend, but her exhibitionist mama, flirtatious little sister and halter-and-thong-worthy (presumably) grandma? But lead singer/guitarist/song writer Dan Peters is serious - about his musical ambitions, anyway.

Interspersing a couple of Elvis hits ("Little Sister," "That's All Right") with an impressive batch of originals, the West Side Winders (formerly the Sidewinders) make clear their reverence for tradition with a sound rich in rockabilly, surf and good ol' rock and roll. But Peters and company are intent on carving out their own identity. A tight, heavily percussive sound that also features Greg Marsh on drums and Derek Brand on bass is abetted by Peters' clever lyrics and lively guitar, which occasionally veers toward Hendrix. A dark edge shows through on "Your Love Is Evil" and a mellow sides sneaks in on a third cover tune, "My Baby."

But it's all about fun on this confident disc by the Chicago natives. The originality clusters in the execution, but this is an homage, not a chestnut.

- Reviewed by Don Armstrong
www.countrystandardtime.com

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Rockabilly Magazine

March/April 2007

Guitarist Dan Peters adds hearty vocals and pens all originals, wisely expanding soloing beyond the familiar Sun vocabulary and instilling remarkable, blast-force trio neo-rockabilly with modern sensibility. A whimsicality looms at times, a jutted jaw at others.

Recommended Tracks "Little Doggies," "Keep It In The Family"

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Illinois Entertainer

2003

The Sidewinders CD showcases a robust rockabilly/jump blues/surf power trio blazing forth on an effort that puts the spotlight on guitarist and vocalist Dan Peters' extensive skills. The disc contains originals that feature his full baritone and big guitar sound (especially on the wild and wicked instrumental "The Spooky Surfer") along with a hot cover of Lieber and Stollers "Yeah, Yeah, Yeah." Overall, The Sidewinders are able to perform a mean trick: make vibrant modern music from several retro forms.
- Reviewed by Kevin Toelle

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www.freighttrainboogie.com

August, 2003

When the swing and ska fads died off in the mid 90's, rockabilly was left much better for it and The Sidewinders' new CD, Come And Get It is the perfect example. The Sidewinders pull in influences from punk, rockabilly, surf, swing, and supercharge them with the guitar pyrotechnics of former swing-band guitarist Dan Peters. His playing is like Steve Vai meeting Brian Setzer for a triple Everclear shot -- intense. The songs are just as fun as the musicianship, obviously written to get people up and dancing. The two instrumentals do a wonderful job of showing off the trio's chops, and all of the songs give the guitar and vocals plenty of space. The production and mixing on the CD are just as good as the rest of the work. All the parts come through nicely, especially that intangible part: excitement. The Sidewinders are just another example of the fantastic music coming out of Chicago these days, and this CD is going to get played a lot.
- Reviewed by Clint Weathers