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Muff Winwood

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Name
  
Muff Winwood

Nephews
  
Cal Winwood

Siblings
  
Steve Winwood

Parents
  
Lawrence Winwood

Role
  
Songwriter


Muff Winwood

Nieces
  
Mary-Clare Winwood, Eliza Winwood, Lilly Winwood

Similar People
  
Steve Winwood, Spencer Davis, Pete York, Eddie Hardin, Ray Fenwick

Shane talks to muff winwood


Mervyn "Muff" Winwood (born 15 June 1943, Erdington, Birmingham) is an English songwriter and record producer, and the older brother of Steve Winwood. Both were formerly members of the Spencer Davis Group in the 1960s, in which Muff Winwood played bass guitar. He produced the first Dire Straits album, Dire Straits (1978).

Contents

Muff Winwood Muff Winwood Born Mervyn Winwood 15 June 1943 Erdington

Muff winwood at the a r awards 2016


Early life

Muff Winwood httpscdnmbw44bytesnetfiles201609Muffjpg

His father, Lawrence, was a foundryman by trade, who also played tenor saxophone in dance bands and had a collection of jazz and blues records. He attended the Cranbourne Road Primary School and the new Great Barr School (one of the first comprehensive schools) and was a choir boy at St John's Church in the Perry Barr neighborhood of Birmingham. Winwood first became interested in the guitar, then the bass. He was nicknamed "Muff" after the popular 1950's children's TV character Muffin the Mule.

The Spencer Davis Group

Muff was one of the original members of the Spencer Davis Group, but was told by his parents he had to take his kid brother along to gigs to keep him out of trouble. The group started to allow young Stevie to join in on a few numbers and gradually discovered all the young girls screaming at the front of the stage were for Stevie.

Record producer

After leaving the Spencer Davis Group in 1967, Winwood moved within the music industry to a position as A&R man at Island Records. He was there until 1978, when he became an executive at the British office of CBS Records which later became Sony Music until well into the 1990s. Besides Dire Straits, Winwood had earlier produced the hit album, Kimono My House (1974), and accompanying hit singles, "This Town Ain't Big Enough for Both of Us" and "Amateur Hour" for Sparks. He also produced their other 1974 album, Propaganda (which included the "Never Turn Your Back on Mother Earth" single). As part of his A&R duties, Winwood signed Prefab Sprout, Terence Trent D'Arby, Sade, Shakin' Stevens and The Psychedelic Furs amongst others.

His other work included production with The Fabulous Poodles, Marianne Faithfull, Nirvana (the UK band), Sutherland Brothers ("Sailing"), Traffic, Mott the Hoople, Love Affair, Kevin Ayers, Patto, Unicorn, After the Fire and The Noel Redding Band.

References

Muff Winwood Wikipedia


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