I COULDN'T STAND Stevie Ray Vaughan until...

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 293

  • @secondhandlyon2603
    @secondhandlyon2603 Год назад +124

    I discovered SRV in 1985. I'm glad to know that the music is just as powerful today as it was to me as a 16 year old kid.

  • @incompetent000
    @incompetent000 Год назад +59

    It’s comforting to be reminded that it’s ok to not be an immediate fan for a guitar legend

  • @morrelljw
    @morrelljw Год назад +44

    SRV was the #1 reason I wanted to pick up a guitar and have been obsessed for nearly 40 years. I was even able to see him live and he did not disappoint. Another great video sir! 🤗🤗

    • @pepper5128
      @pepper5128 Год назад +3

      That's awesome. I wish I could have heard him live.

  • @eddiesigerexperience9803
    @eddiesigerexperience9803 Год назад +18

    Stevie Ray was my gateway into so many older blues artist it’s unreal. Currently diving deep into Muddy Waters. Electric Mud was a revolutionary album

  • @patramplin6017
    @patramplin6017 Год назад +9

    Watching Live at the El Macombo is what got me hooked. Had that blasting and it’s just an explosion on tone.

  • @MrRukiddin
    @MrRukiddin Год назад +8

    Stevie was that guy you had to see live. A lot of your favorite guitarists/bands will disappoint you live, Stevie let you know what you were missing. Being from central Texas, I was fortunate enough to see his meteoric rise firsthand. His interpretation of the blues is/was unequalled in my ears and eyes.

    • @ed.z.
      @ed.z. Год назад +1

      We traveled 2hours to see Stevie Ray. BB King opened the show. It was epic.

  • @SomeLowerLight
    @SomeLowerLight Год назад +7

    Watching live at El Mocambo still blows my mind every time I listen to it. I don't think I'll ever get Testify down but its still fun trying. Cheers!

    • @landocalrissian1613
      @landocalrissian1613 Год назад

      @Commissar Urias. It was a great show, at the El MoCambo, that night, at least what I remember of it, going back to July of 83'.

  • @luciofontanari3301
    @luciofontanari3301 Год назад +14

    dude i really like this video format you are using. And I really like to see younger guitar players tell who the inspirations are for them when they first started playing. Keep it going!
    Greetings from Argentina!

  • @JesseFuches
    @JesseFuches Год назад +164

    I did my PhD thesis on Einstiens theory of major key relativity, I won't have you slander my work by saying it doesn't exist!

  • @ewetoobblowzdogg8410
    @ewetoobblowzdogg8410 Год назад +1

    I was at his last show at Alpine Valley Wisconsin that fatal night. The ticket was Robert Cray, Stevie Ray & Eric Clapton. Stevie's brother Jimmy (Fabulous Thunderbirds( sat in with Stevie and Buddy Guy sat in wirh Eric. The end of the show was all of them jamming together till past midnight. It was so foggy, we couldn't get out of the parking lot until past 3am.
    The last song Stevie ever played on stage was Sweet Home Chicago. Funny thing is that it was his destination when his chopper went down

  • @tonefarer
    @tonefarer Год назад +20

    Really great perspective on gateways; I was the same way with SRV until I heard Lenny. Or Clapton before I heard the Bluesbreakers album. I've been playing for 20 years and to this day still find myself needing those types of "familiarity gateways". Loving the longer form content dude and I'm amped for more!

  • @alanlamb7062
    @alanlamb7062 Год назад +4

    It’s so wonderful to see and hear your joy when you talk about Stevie Ray, I saw him twice, he changed my life, still can’t believe he’s gone, there continue to be days when I can’t even listen to him

  • @markkasick
    @markkasick Год назад +4

    My first time hearing SRV was live in '85 in Chicago at the Aragon. My jaw was on the ground for the whole show. It was mind blowing. He was on fire.

  • @robertalker652
    @robertalker652 Год назад +5

    Music, like most things, comes down to individual taste. As a listener, I've transitioned to many different musical forms in my life, with my only regret being that I did not diversify my musical interest base far sooner. It's one of the greatest gifts life has to offer. Best of luck, Mike, on your musical journey.

  • @da1op
    @da1op Год назад +51

    You really deserve more recognition. You're amazing Mike!

  • @stevenpipes1555
    @stevenpipes1555 Год назад +5

    My first taste of Stevie Ray was live! He was touring with Jeff Beck, and when we got inside the arena, and i walked up to the railing, i saw this guy with a giant feather in his hat, playing the craziest stuff i had ever heard. I stood at that railing and didn't go find my seats until his set was over. At the end of the night he came back out and he and Beck played Freeway Jam together! That was one of the greatest musical moments ive ever witnessed!

  • @jasonnovo6296
    @jasonnovo6296 Год назад +2

    In one of my guitar classes in college our professor had us play the intro to Chitlins Con Carne by SRV. It was one of the most fun songs we played and it made you feel really cool when playing it!

  • @chesterproudfoot9864
    @chesterproudfoot9864 Год назад +6

    There are so many gateway songs/artists out there, it's just a matter of listening. Could be folk, could be punk, could be blues. It doesn't matter, so long as you're open to something different. For many of us SRV was the latest interpretation of what we'd been missing for too long, and damn, but did he deliver but good. Glad that you discovered SRV, hopefully that opened doors to you to discover Pat Travers, Peter Green, early Clapton, Albert Lee , Elvin Bishop, Walter Trout, Jimmy Thackery .... it's a never-ending rabbit hole, but full of surprises.

  • @localbod
    @localbod Год назад +72

    I have always loved SRV's tone.
    He was a monster player and he had a decent voice.
    Shame he died such a long time ago.

    • @SkyBuck
      @SkyBuck Год назад +8

      I always loved his voice almost as much as his guitar tone... so much soul and he had way more control than say, Hendrix

    • @jasonkeith9317
      @jasonkeith9317 Год назад +3

      Reasonable voice??

    • @MATRIX1999ism
      @MATRIX1999ism Год назад +2

      Reasonable voice?

    • @localbod
      @localbod Год назад +2

      @@MATRIX1999ism Stevie Ray Vaughan could sing no doubt and for some people he sang better than Hendrix. I was always taken by his virtuosity on the guitar and that's why I listened to him.
      My opinion.

    • @MATRIX1999ism
      @MATRIX1999ism Год назад +3

      @@localbod i agree buddy, but it's not a matter of better or worse, it's more about the staleness of the word reasonable to describe such a thing

  • @jimmyginseng
    @jimmyginseng Год назад +5

    i was a huge avenged sevenfold fan and eventually made my way to srv after a brief jump into frank zappa and steve vai. now i love hubert sumlin buddy guy and obviously albert king. your words are definitely true. to understand a musician you need to hear their influences and absorb yourself into the music. its always fun finding those bridges

  • @DarkSide0121
    @DarkSide0121 Год назад +4

    My gateway to SRV were his contributions to Bowie's Let's Dance & China Girl, such great pop songs with pretty great guitar solos

    • @peterlisecki3694
      @peterlisecki3694 8 месяцев назад

      Funny thing about what you are saying is that in the video of those songs, Bowie is simulating playing SRV's guitar work. Kind of silly really, and Bowie really wasn't fooling anyone who knew of SRV.

  • @Belfrahn
    @Belfrahn Год назад +5

    I love this and its so true. I got obsessed with Clapton in the 90's. And did the whole "back to HIS influences" so I got into Robert Johnson, Buddy Guy, then Freddie King, Albert King and doubled back to SRV.

    • @MrDragonkarp
      @MrDragonkarp Год назад

      I started out in my teens going straight to extreme metal and heavy music but doubled back in my 20s starting out wit Jimi Hendrix and Jimmy page then learning who they got it from and so on it's been an interesting journey

  • @joshscus
    @joshscus Год назад +1

    I started playing when I began taking acoustic guitar lessons every Friday evening from age 10 to age 17, which is when I went off to college. I mean EVERY Friday for 7 straight years. I was classically trained, taught music theory and how to read music from Day 1. It was a LOT of classical guitar music. Outside of that I was the worlds BIGGEST Beatles fan by age 10 as well (still am), and so we played some of their songs too at the end of each lesson.
    Right before my 13th birthday I hear Stevie Ray Vaughan for the first time and it touched and awoke this “thing” deep inside my soul. I bought myself “Martin Scorsese Presents the Blues: Stevie Ray Vaughan”, and my life changed FOREVER. For my 13th birthday I received a brand new Squire Strat, and right away when straight to work on how to play this new (to me) music. I found crude tabs of Pride and Joy and Texas Flood online and just get trying and trying. Meanwhile I never told my guitar teacher and kept on taking the classical lessons. But for me, there was no gateway from the beautiful melody Beatle music to SRV and the blues. I dove in head first and I’ve never been the same since.
    Then when I discovered John Mayer, I was already familiar with great songwriting, melody and harmony, and chord voicings from my training and love of the Beatles, but with the Trio record and all of Mayer’s guitar work since that record, he was coming from that same place of SRV and the way he saw the guitar neck was tue same way I did because we both “spoke the same language” of Stevie Ray Vaughan. So here’s Mayer, with the beautiful song craft and melody’s that I was used to from the Beatles, combined with the guitar style of SRV, and again, my life changed forever!!!

  • @voodoochile6796
    @voodoochile6796 Год назад +1

    You're channel is gonna blow up dude. We know it when we see it. Amazing quality videos!

  • @justink8156
    @justink8156 Год назад

    Really vibe w/ the points you're making, especially about needing a "gateway" to get into something out of your wheelhouse. Sometimes we need context to get into something. Can't tell you how many songs that I didn't care for at first became favorites once the layers were peeled back enough for me to step through the door. There are so many possible "gateways" too- listening to a song in the context of the album, hearing a story about that song or it's recording sessions, learning more about the artist, diving deeper into lyrical context, hearing another band in that same genre that can more gently segway you into this band and one of my favorites is when I see a band perform a cut live that I don't really care for and then realizing how awesome it actually is by seeing the live performance and experiencing it differently among other people who are enthusiastic about it.

  • @AngelPerez-lm8uj
    @AngelPerez-lm8uj Год назад +3

    I went on a journey like this during the pandemic, and man did it completely change the way I play. Now I’m definitely racking in good tip money when I play in bars 😂😊

  • @jonathanlindsay2096
    @jonathanlindsay2096 Год назад +2

    “I enjoyed acoustic like Room for squares, I wanted a bigger challenge”
    Neon: “am I a joke to you?”

  • @fraenkiboii
    @fraenkiboii Год назад +5

    I recently found this prog band called Oasis. I was too afraid to admit that I don’t understand their music. But you encouraged me to out myself. They have this really complex song with acoustic guitar. It absolutely blows my mind. I think it’s in 7/4.

  • @mikemarulli7505
    @mikemarulli7505 Год назад

    Congrats on approaching 100k Mike!

  • @albert_chen
    @albert_chen Год назад +1

    Really loving your longer form content. You've proven yourself to offer some much more than a couple passing laughs. Keep it up!

  • @dinosaursr
    @dinosaursr Год назад +1

    Always fun to hear where musicians travelled to get where they are. Once again your presentation excels and entertains.

  • @gregrsvr3947
    @gregrsvr3947 Год назад +2

    Mid ‘70s we were doing the disco at a college gig , a live band was also booked so while we were setting up the band was doing a sound check, the guitarist was incredible, never heard playing like it, they were Be Bop Deluxe and the guitar man was Bill Nelson, they had a big hit here in the U.K. with “Ships in the night”the gig was amazing and their album “Live in the air age” is still one of my favourites.

    • @effsixteenblock50
      @effsixteenblock50 Год назад

      I think Bill Nelson played with Chick Corea before he had Al DiMeola? Yeah - Bill Nelson's phenomonal.

  • @motorbikeray
    @motorbikeray Год назад

    In your future I see you falling in love with the classical guitar and the beauty and texture of classical guitar music.

  • @lincolnfish4021
    @lincolnfish4021 Год назад +1

    You should make more of these longer vids

  • @nesticle
    @nesticle Год назад

    I hope that you post more long videos like this one. The 'meme' videos are great but this really provides a better look at you and I really enjoyed it!

  • @LeftiBassist
    @LeftiBassist Год назад +4

    If you haven’t, check out Rory Gallagher. His - Irish Tour '74 - cd is amazing.
    Keep up the great work, your site is a pleasure.

  • @costaplayss
    @costaplayss Год назад

    i love your content man, learn so much every video!!!

  • @joebikeguy6669
    @joebikeguy6669 Год назад +1

    There are so many great guitarists . . . now and in the past. From Charlie Christian and Wes Montgomery to Tommy Emmanuel, Chet Atkins, Larry Carlton and on and on! Many different styles to learn from. Another YTer you might check out is Lucas Brar. BTW I love SRV, but the best live blues guitarist/entertainer I ever saw was B.B. King, who did not have the chops of SRV, but indicates that sincere feeling can be just as important as technical ability. Good luck with your guitar journey.

  • @patrickmckibben1932
    @patrickmckibben1932 Год назад

    Mike, I really loved your short videos, but I am seriously enjoying your longer videos such as this one.
    “Where are the dominant 7th chords bro?” -thank you for that😂

  • @TheCyberSatyr
    @TheCyberSatyr Год назад +3

    You played an acoustic... but never thought to play blues on it? No judgement, but I just love the acoustic and blues sounds pretty good on acoustic

    • @mikescott3370
      @mikescott3370 Год назад

      I learned everything on my acoustic before my electric lol EVERYTHING

    • @TheCyberSatyr
      @TheCyberSatyr Год назад

      @@mikescott3370 im still low on actual song knowledge, so I've not learned near as much as I would have otherwise... but nothing beats an acoustic, especially the one im rocking. Tangent: Its a prototype Aria Pro II, around 40 or so years old. Only one in the world like it, the guy who made it (forget his name) only made the one. Somehow my grandpa got it and since I actually play, I have it. Hopefully it gets passed down to me.
      Anyways, I cant make the electric sing like I can make acoustics. Its weird, but I'll hear a pipe being played or other instruments in my own. On electrics, I just... don't get that feel unless im improvising to certain types of lofi

    • @mikescott3370
      @mikescott3370 Год назад +1

      @@TheCyberSatyr the acoustic can not be beaten my man, keep killing it🤙 thanks for sharing

  • @robinuter
    @robinuter Год назад

    I'm really enjoying your videos. Thank you.

  • @anthonyderosa7730
    @anthonyderosa7730 Год назад +1

    I was there too. Grew up in the shredder scene. 8 strings crazy legato sweeps tjat nonsense, won best musician in high-school and college. I always disregarded the "overrated" hendrix SRV Clapton John mayer all those names. Til one day. I was handed a vintage strat with an old super reverb. Had almost zero gain. Tons of clean headroom. I was so adapted to hiding behind high gain, I embarrassed myself. Could not play a damn thing like 20 Years went out the window. As of the last 4 Years, sold everything. Now I use a strat and tele. Single coils, modded blues junior. My playing has never been the same.

  • @Cousin_Gregg
    @Cousin_Gregg Год назад

    Love how related these stories are, beginner’s gotta pay attention.

  • @hangaroundrecords4761
    @hangaroundrecords4761 Год назад

    “Learn from their influences” such great advice!!!

  • @guyincognito1423
    @guyincognito1423 Год назад +1

    My first SRV experience was his Soul To Soul album, and while it has blues, it's got some jazz influence as well. His live version of Voodoo Chile on Live Alive is SICK!!!

  • @Liquidhamstermedia
    @Liquidhamstermedia Год назад +2

    I don’t know if you’ve talked about him, but Duane Allman is another guitar legend with a very unique sound who left us way too early

  • @jbrown292
    @jbrown292 Год назад

    I ALWAYS follow artists back to their influences. It's how I end up finding new artists to love.

    • @jbrown292
      @jbrown292 Год назад

      Couldn't stand the weather would definately make you say......this guy must be a massive Hendrix fan. And there's also no way SRV won't take you to Albert King.

  • @dandanbigelow385
    @dandanbigelow385 Год назад

    Dude I love your videos. You are such a positive inspiration to this world. We need more inspiring kind souls like you! ❤

  • @leealexander3507
    @leealexander3507 Год назад +1

    Tin Pan Alley is one of my all time favorites. Especially Johnny Winter's cover.

  • @gardenoftwitty
    @gardenoftwitty Год назад

    Oh wow man. You're jus5 now learning real music 🎶 🎵 what a beautiful time for you. Keep following the blues until it takes you over. Don't be afraid. Everything is from the blues

  • @Impractical_Engineer
    @Impractical_Engineer Год назад

    Love all your videos but blissfully enjoy the longer in depth videos.

  • @chelo6839
    @chelo6839 Месяц назад

    I can relate very much to this, mike. I've been listening to SRV for the better half of a year now and I can easily say he's my favourite blues artist/ artist. I recently learnt and played Texas flood at a local festival and have loved SRV even more ever since. If only my guitar teacher heard that all I do is listen to and play SRV instead of practicing the stuff we are working on currently like Hendrix

  • @What_If_We_Tried
    @What_If_We_Tried Год назад

    MIKE: You are a gifted storyteller / videographer.

  • @christopherchristensen3802
    @christopherchristensen3802 11 месяцев назад

    I really enjoyed this video. A really great way to move your comfort zone snd explore new Music.

  • @krionei
    @krionei Год назад

    I recently discovered SRV on my guitar journey, and hear me out, I had heard the name before. But I had never listened to him or other mainly blues driven music very much. But since the day I first listened to him, I just got it, it just clicked right away. Almost the same way it did with Hendrix. I think blues has just been a genre that resonates with me, so I’m glad to have heard it now. It’s only made my guitar playing better, and I’m going to keep going on that road.
    Edit: I’m also just going to high school so my music taste is only just maturing. And even before I was into a lot of very blues driven music, I listened to similar music like rock and country as that was what my family would play. Along with hip hop obviously

  • @ed.z.
    @ed.z. Год назад +1

    Brilliant thoughts about gateways to unfamiliar forms. Yes, it does go back to Bach. Including Charlie Parker, Miles Davis and Beatles.

  • @ForrestThump
    @ForrestThump Год назад

    So glad I subbed. Love your stuff!

  • @SGTStubble
    @SGTStubble Год назад

    Yo, love these long form videos. Dont stop, cant wait to see the next one!

  • @danmateofficial8775
    @danmateofficial8775 Год назад +1

    Quickly becoming my main go to music tuber hands down

  • @rjohnson1690
    @rjohnson1690 Год назад

    60s-70s guitar rock like Cream, Led Zeppelin etc got me into the blues guys like BB King, Bobby Bland, and Muddy Waters. Those blues guys in turn got me into the early stuff like Robert Johnson. The Grateful Dead got me into Bakersfield sound country music and Western Swing. The blues backdoor’d me into Jazz. 90s hiphop got me into the likes of Isley Brothers, and Parlament. It’s a beautiful rabbit hole.

  • @bobbygrey5859
    @bobbygrey5859 Год назад

    I'm glad you have found SRV and you'll be loving his music. Keep learning and growing. Also check out some of his live music but some of the rare stuff. SRV said he never played any song the same way. I have a lot of his live stuff and he didn't. Come up with your own style and keep jamming.
    Yes, Sweatwater is cool spot for guitars and gear, drove down from Detroit to check it out. 🙏🏽👍🏽

  • @gorzenstein
    @gorzenstein Год назад +1

    you said something in this video that is so painfully true "it is really tough to pick up a new genre as a guitar player" I've been primarily a metal head the entire time i've played guitar. i dabbled a bit in some of classic rock but most stayed with metal. the first song i heard by john mayer was 'your body is a wonderland' and i wrote him off as a just a cheesy 4 chord singer/song writer and didn't pay attention to him for years. and just a few years ago a much more musically mature (but still very much a metal head) me actually sat down and listened to a couple mayer songs and i instantly wanted to learn how to play like that, and while there's a fair bit of cross over between blues and metal, it was still just a completely different and frustrating beast.

  • @rogergeoffrion3723
    @rogergeoffrion3723 Год назад +2

    Mike, great advice for newbies as well as players that are stuck in a particular genre!

  • @colinsexton1929
    @colinsexton1929 Год назад

    Ok.. this is the second video of yours I've watched in a row. (Josh Klinghoffer one first)... your story telling, personality, editing and just overall style is crazy engaging... it keeps my attention... in addition to the "guitar stuff" I came here for your content creation is incredible. You should literally make instructional video on how to create content RIGHT.... amazing... God bless you sir!

  • @leealexander3507
    @leealexander3507 Год назад

    My son's main guitar is the Les Paul I picked up used as a gift when he turned 10 years old. He wanted a 1980 model because he was born that year. He has been playing it for 32 years now,. He played between 8 and 12 hours a day until he started college in his late 20s and started his career as a software developer. He played every spare hour to this day and his playing is to die for. He rivals the best guitar players I've ever heard.

  • @albertjoshuavega4434
    @albertjoshuavega4434 Год назад

    "You hold your horses." lol 😆 ALRIGHT 👁👄👁

  • @Rockmanxpr
    @Rockmanxpr Год назад +1

    For me I love trying to play Cold Shot because it's a groovy shuffle and for the really mellow tunes it has to be Riviera Paradise

  • @shawnbell6392
    @shawnbell6392 Год назад

    Great video and many thanks!

  • @musicantd
    @musicantd Год назад

    Big SRV fan. I play him not infrequently on my college radio show (FM, WWW). Yeah, Couldn't Stand the Weather is awesome. There are some insanely great YT videos of Stevie, people. Been into the blues like my whole life. Rock and Roll came from the blues, in fact most of it is just rocking out with the blues.

  • @effsixteenblock50
    @effsixteenblock50 Год назад

    Your channel is great and you sir have an open mind! Making some amount of commitment to playing a musical instrument has got to be one of the most rewarding these you can do. Apart from Gear Aquisition Syndrome, it really doesn't have to be expensive, it continuously delivers and you'll go down paths you never thought you would.

  • @k-nutl6386
    @k-nutl6386 Год назад

    Positive vibes,nice going

  • @craenor
    @craenor Год назад

    Loving the long form content.

  • @AntarblueGarneau
    @AntarblueGarneau Год назад

    I hated SRV when I first heard him too. I grew up in the 1950s and 60s. In those days the "bridge" that took us to the blues was the Rolling Stones, The Animals and the Yardbirds all from UK. Then the Butterfield Blues Band dropped in about 1966! The 1st Paul Butterfield LP and the 1st John Mayall's Bluesbreakers featuring Eric Clapton dropped like nuclear weapons both in '66: they changed the music completely! I started out as a harmonica player and singer and got into guitar later. My 1st heroes were Brian Jones (Stones), Keith Relf (Yardbirds) and then Butterfield. That led me to their influences: James Cotton, Jr Wells, Little Walter. Albert King's LP "Born Under a Bad Sign" came out a little after the Mayall/Clapton LP. Immediately, we could all hear where Clapton was coming from. Jimi Hendrix was also influenced by Albert King and Buddy Guy. So the bridges were becoming more and more. 1967 was a big year for BB King and he became my hero. In those days I was able to hear all those great blues artists at the Fillmore Auditorium in San Francisco! I heard Albert, BB, Freddie, Buddy Guy and Otis Rush in their prime. I also heard Clapton, Jimi and the Great Peter Green. My first time at the Fillmore I heard the great Mike Bloomfield with Paul Butterfield. The trends at that time were linear unlike today where everything happened at once. The the guitar heroes were: Jeff Beck, Mike Bloomfield, Clapton and then all their influences. I was completely unaware of SRV and his career when some friends played a video for me. SRV was already dead. I just hated it! To me it seemed virtuosic but blatant and grand standing. I have learned to enjoy and respect SRV but I prefer listening to his influences: Albert King. T Bone and Jimi Hendrix.

  • @johnmclaughlin763
    @johnmclaughlin763 Год назад +4

    You may be the most likable person I’ve seen on the internet. My journey with the guitar has been since college almost 40 years ago. I get your gateway approach. I listened to SRV when he was doing it in real time and still can’t get enough. Love your videos.

  • @jeremyhickerson3235
    @jeremyhickerson3235 Год назад

    Lenny was the the SRV song that originally jumped out at me, the one I liked the best, so good point!

  • @rodrigod2917
    @rodrigod2917 Год назад

    Love the Chanel and the authenticity mate… next in the journey should be the golden prog trio: Guthrie Govan, Shawn Lane and Alan Holdsworth…

  • @Larrymh07
    @Larrymh07 Год назад

    I really enjoy your videos.

  • @orlanbro
    @orlanbro Год назад

    I just got into srv a couple years ago and I’ve been playing guitar like 16 years 😳 I missed out a lot.

  • @richardrich8010
    @richardrich8010 Год назад

    Thanks man great video👍👍🤙

  • @Hunterkirksey
    @Hunterkirksey Год назад

    Loving this content, please keep doing videos like this!!

  • @teksay
    @teksay Год назад

    Just had another listen of couldnt stand the weather, I thought the title said “I COULDNT STAND the weather until”

  • @aracron
    @aracron Год назад

    Spot on with the gateway comment, in my opinion. There are a number of genres that I never thought I would enjoy. It was gateway songs that made me want to dig deeper. Thank you for your videos.

  • @himanshugoyal6285
    @himanshugoyal6285 Год назад

    Amazing content, keep it up Mike!

  • @JohnLloydDavis
    @JohnLloydDavis Год назад +2

    You're now ready for Frank Zappa Mike :)

  • @christopherpudney4943
    @christopherpudney4943 Год назад

    I totally agree on this. I don't quite 'get' SRV, but I love to play Lenny.

  • @danielwetzel7777
    @danielwetzel7777 Год назад

    Just started watching your videos ..great personality. I like how you dive into how wrong you can be. And great playing

  • @ErnieJ89
    @ErnieJ89 Год назад

    Honestly totally relate to this one. My mom would play SRV in the car and I genuinely hated it lol, crazy now as I play a lot of blues these days

  • @cawilliams188
    @cawilliams188 Год назад

    I grew up since age 5 on Pink Floyd, ZZ Top, Elvis and Willie Nelson. As a teen I discovered SRV and Hendrix. I think I was lightly into Clapton for a short period too. The older I get the more I respect the intensity of Hendrix and Vaughan. Mayer burst onto the scene as I graduated H.S. he was like a newer version of Hendrix and SRV combined. I wish I had more time to pick up and play but kids and work and life keep getting in the way. I know it's a bunch of excuses but like you said in the beginning of the video I have no real motivation at the moment.

  • @isaiahchand8991
    @isaiahchand8991 Год назад

    this was a amzing video i have had a similar moment when i discroved bb king and buddy guy from mayer and this is just so relatble

  • @Josephcscully
    @Josephcscully Год назад

    Mike, the long form is the way to go! You had my full attention while eating lunch today and I hope Google makes it worth your time! This topic is giving me deja vu… I might have to give the man a try after this!

  • @wadevk3322
    @wadevk3322 Год назад

    love the old stuff!

  • @ChristopherStandardTime
    @ChristopherStandardTime Год назад

    I was a kid when my mom called me into the living room to see this dude on the television; he was stomping his foot to keep time and had this worn out guitar. It would be a few years before I realized how important Stevie Ray Vaughan would become to me as I started learning how to play.
    Stevie moved through a lot of different styles in his relatively brief recording career, so it's somewhat distressing when I hear other players who cite him as an influence but only ever remain comfortable in playing blues. In a weird way, it was because of him that I moved onto Pink Floyd, King Crimson, and parts beyond and back around.
    He meant everything to me when I was growing up back in Texas, and I still stop to see him at Auditorium Shores whenever I return to my alma mater in Austin 🤘🏽🧡🐂

  • @brianlucas3418
    @brianlucas3418 Год назад

    SRV’s crossfire was an obsession in my life for about 3 months after I first heard it.

  • @grimjim1774
    @grimjim1774 Год назад

    even though i find it tragic that you had to discover SRV through that tool John Mayer at least you opened your mind up enough to really discover SRV.
    listen to his playing on the let's dance bowie album i find that to be the best gateway to his stuff.

  • @jamessweetnam1
    @jamessweetnam1 Год назад

    Lenny made me fall in love with SRV!

  • @deadreckoning4132
    @deadreckoning4132 Год назад

    I completely understand. I've been playing for around 25 years. Certain music you don't understand until you can play at that level. There's guitar players that I didn't really appreciate until I got good enough to play their stuff. Then I had a whole new respect for them. Having said that, listen to Chris Cain. He will change your life. He is probably the best blues guitar player that I have ever heard. He never was as popular as some of the other big names but when you try to play his phrasing, it's out of this world.

  • @joshuathomas7345
    @joshuathomas7345 Год назад

    love your videos mike!

  • @illwill9396
    @illwill9396 Год назад +1

    HOLD ON A SECOND! How long have u been playing???

  • @joseflutz2143
    @joseflutz2143 Год назад +1

    And I couldn't stand the weather!

  • @swere1240
    @swere1240 Год назад

    one of the best videos ive seen is a video of joe bonnamassa tommy emmanual and and josh smith playing together live. theres just one point in the video where all three of them are just jammin out so great and you can just tell how much fun they are having on stage and its just a beautiful thing. and if you like polyphia if u havent heard any Manuel Gardner-Fernandes u have to. i saw his band unpocessed open for polyphia a few months ago and hes so good. honestly its hard to admit but it think hes better then tim lol. which i dont say lightly. great video though man. i was lucky enough to have parents that turned me on to blues at a young age. but i listen to and play everything from heavy metal to pop i like all music