Stevie Ray Vaughan - Voodoo Child Live (REACTIONS)

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2024
  • #halflifesistah #sistahandthewolf #stevierayvaughan
    Table of Contents:
    03:25 - Getting to know SRV better
    15:31 - Voodoo Child Live at the El Mocambo (REACTION)
    23:30 - Voodoo Chile Volunteer Jam XIII 1987 (REACTION)
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Комментарии • 544

  • @cParman9
    @cParman9 5 лет назад +141

    He played better behind his back than most guitarists played normally.

    • @artjom9722
      @artjom9722 5 лет назад

      zakk wylde can play both pretty easy. I would say that Zakk Wylde nowadays is the best guitarist.

    • @saschaschneider6355
      @saschaschneider6355 5 лет назад +3

      @@artjom9722 if only Zakk Wylde had a modicum of taste and didn't try to improve everything with adding a metric ton of pinch harmonics... He's a damn good guitarist but he needs someone with taste to reign him in

    • @trixlee5102
      @trixlee5102 4 года назад +2

      @@artjom9722 Stevie has a feel that's just his own, and a lot of his tone comes from his fingers and that heavy gauge piano wire he strung on his guitar. Not too many can bend like that on such heavy strings. There are numerous guitarists out there in the fusion realm who have a greater knowledge of theory than Zakk. Check out most of the Steely Dan guitarists for a taste.

    • @leonotthelion
      @leonotthelion 4 года назад +1

      @@saschaschneider6355 What sets Hendrix&SRV apart is the fact that they are heavily Blues based. You either have the soul to play, or you dont.

    • @edwardrichard2561
      @edwardrichard2561 4 года назад

      99% of gutair players

  • @tackle47
    @tackle47 5 лет назад +70

    Double Trouble is soooooooo underrated as a rhythm section. There play allows SRV to flow wherever his heart desires.

    • @sugoruyo
      @sugoruyo 5 лет назад +6

      Top notch musicians no doubt about that. That groovy bass is a perfect foundation for SRV to make that guitar proud.

    • @redfishradical
      @redfishradical 4 года назад +3

      EXACTLY!!! THANK YOU FOR THAT!!! I've always thought Double Trouble was a criminally underrated rhythm section!

  • @desertrat4453
    @desertrat4453 5 лет назад +10

    He finished that last piece with two broken strings.

    • @HalfLifeSistah
      @HalfLifeSistah  5 лет назад +1

      That's crayzeee!!😄😄😄💖

    • @KimonoSkunk
      @KimonoSkunk 5 лет назад

      That's why he took a bow at the end as he was grinning. Whenever he played behind his back, he would snap strings due to his immense finger strength. He played 12 gauge strings on his guitars, and this particular guitar with the SRV on the face had newer frets put on, the thicker ones originally from a bass. That is how he got that really hard string bends and those notes.
      SRV is an absolute legend, as I listened to him from both his Austin City Limits concerts. Proposed to my wife after showing her the VHS Copy I had after the last song Riviera Paradise, which will leave you speechless.

  • @ArtexHardstyle02
    @ArtexHardstyle02 5 лет назад +5

    Stevie Ray Vaughan - Texas Flood (Live at the El Mocambo) Hands down one of the best solos I have ever heard

  • @adrathemetaloutlaw754
    @adrathemetaloutlaw754 5 лет назад +5

    Original Stevie song---- Riviera Paradise, a soulful instrumental. After a full day of recording material for the album, Stevie asked his producer to leave the tape running and to turn down the lights. All alone, he recorded the guitar track on his Fender Strat. Double Trouble added the backing later, including an organ foundation from Reese Wynans.

  • @DS-1.
    @DS-1. 5 лет назад +66

    Srv - Lenny (El mocambo) she will cry 100%

  • @tigg9226
    @tigg9226 5 лет назад +17

    You need to show your wife the whole concert from El Mocambo, it will blow her mind.I am a blues guitarist my self and it showcases all that SRV is in my opinion.And your wife's reaction I think that's how most of us react(ed) when we hear /heard SRV for the first (or the 500 th) time.R.I.P. Stevie, we still miss you .And you gotta do Lenny it's a must.

  • @jgordon5316
    @jgordon5316 5 лет назад +18

    If she thought the playing behind the back was wild? SRV and his big brother Jimmy did Pipeline on a double necker and Jimmy couldn't see the guitar the entire time. Pure talent.

  • @212x3
    @212x3 5 лет назад +20

    Stevie's voice has been described as honey poured over gravel.

  • @josiahmizzi510
    @josiahmizzi510 5 лет назад +22

    Stevie Ray Vaughan- Life without you, she will cry no doubt

  • @intherabbithole5995
    @intherabbithole5995 5 лет назад +35

    "Pride And Joy", is a Stevie original.

  • @garykelly7422
    @garykelly7422 5 лет назад +7

    Stevie was a true guitar legend. What a tragedy we lost him so early. May he R. I.P.

  • @briansexton1759
    @briansexton1759 5 лет назад +5

    Its ok to cry. I cry everytime i hear and see him play. I miss his music and what could have been had he not been taken from us so soon.

  • @saturnracer156
    @saturnracer156 5 лет назад +5

    The talking and her reactions are why I watch your channel. I pick up tidbits that I missed over the years, or forgot about. I'm a self professed metal head, but I enjoy blues based rock, progressive rock and metal. Pretty well any flavor of Rock. SRV just poured his soul into his guitar.

    • @HalfLifeSistah
      @HalfLifeSistah  5 лет назад +2

      Appreciate you🙃😘🤗💖✊🏾🤘🏾

  • @MosaicRose99
    @MosaicRose99 5 лет назад +7

    Stevie Ray Vaughan and Johnny Copeland live doing Tin Pan Ally. SO INCREDIBLE!

    • @MosaicRose99
      @MosaicRose99 5 лет назад +1

      Just wanted to mention you will really hear Stevie's vocals on that.

  • @thelowe6393
    @thelowe6393 5 лет назад +6

    "Life Without You" (Live) makes me tear up every time I listen to it. Stevie was one in a billion with so much more to give. We were robbed of a tremendous talent and by all accounts, a really terrific person. Gary Moore is a close second, in my opinion but Stevie had him but a full lap.

  • @phillebo
    @phillebo 4 года назад +2

    Makes me emotional too watching perfection. His combination of skill, passion, and showmanship is something we'll probably never see again in this lifetime.

  • @realmusicforever7086
    @realmusicforever7086 5 лет назад +45

    Hello again ,Stevie Ray Vaughn the greatest guitarist ever .And yes Albert King said Stevie is the master of guitar and Albert King was not known to throw kudos to anyone,except Stevie.

    • @50plusguitarbeginner98
      @50plusguitarbeginner98 5 лет назад +4

      Albert on Gary Moore: Gary’s a good player. To me, Gary and Stevie Ray Vaughan were two of our best young players. I was sure hurt when we lost Stevie. I really wanted to see him and Gary hook up together. I wanted to see that concert. I don’t care where it was I would have caught a plane. No doubt about it, both those guys had what it takes to really do it.

  • @kareng4658
    @kareng4658 5 лет назад +7

    We feel his music in our souls

  • @BTAColorado
    @BTAColorado 5 лет назад +27

    Tin Pan Alley with SRV and Johnny Copeland is an amazing one to check out. Great showcase of his purely Blues power.

    • @BarbButler
      @BarbButler 2 года назад +1

      💙💜💙💜💙

  • @RonynLoneWolf
    @RonynLoneWolf 5 лет назад +3

    Seeing Her reaction was worth it all. SRV was a great gift to the world.

  • @rockapejv
    @rockapejv 5 лет назад +26

    You gotta see the live video with SRV and Jeff Healey (another phenominaly good (blind) player) together, playing 'look at Little Sister'
    SRV's voice kills in this one.

    • @djm8771
      @djm8771 5 лет назад +5

      I'm dying for someone to react to Jeff Healey

    • @jimithy47
      @jimithy47 5 лет назад +4

      I so agree. Their collaboration of 'Look at Little Sister' was amazing, somewhere between astronomical and wow. Jeff did many songs that he just killed on, i.e. 'Hoochie Coochie Man' , 'See The Light' (with Dr. John) Sunday Night TV Show 1988. He was 41 when he passed away March 2, 2008. I think he and SRV were 2 musical phenoms, best of the best.

    • @BarbButler
      @BarbButler 2 года назад

      💙💜💙💜💙

  • @saschaschneider6355
    @saschaschneider6355 5 лет назад +4

    SRV doesn't effing miss a single beat while transitioning to and from playing behind his back. He was phenomenal.

  • @russellellis6136
    @russellellis6136 5 лет назад +5

    Love this song! I get my playing style from this! The song just whips! Hope you are taking care of yourselves and each other! Much love to my Sista! 🤘🏽😎

  • @michaelnorman2967
    @michaelnorman2967 5 лет назад +2

    Wolfkain, you know your stuff!! SRV is a great music giant for HalfLifeSistah's musical journey. Glad she likes it. Much, much more to come for her, I'm sure. Thanks so much for this video and good luck on your journey HalfLifeSistah.

  • @cokeman13377331
    @cokeman13377331 5 лет назад +25

    Stevie Ray Vaughan - Lenny at the El Mocambo would be a great choice for an SRV original song ;)

    • @junimeme5626
      @junimeme5626 5 лет назад +2

      El mocambo was one of his greatest shows. Lenny and Tin Pan Alley (dirty pool) are two of the most amazing performances from SRV ever. I hope this channel checks these two out. Tin pan alley almost gave me a religious experience.

  • @mr.smithgnrsmith7808
    @mr.smithgnrsmith7808 5 лет назад +7

    MUST DO JOE BONAMASSA WITH BETH HART, “I’ll Take Care of You “

  • @mikegurney9278
    @mikegurney9278 5 лет назад +14

    Video is a concert in Toronto Canada 🇨🇦 at the El Mocambo best concert for a guitar 🎸God, the GOAT.

  • @connieamos6038
    @connieamos6038 5 лет назад +11

    I personally enjoy the history you give with each reaction. I have learned a lot. I lived the 60's and 70's I thought I knew it all. Thank you! Peace.

    • @dianemccrea3605
      @dianemccrea3605 5 лет назад +1

      Appreciate the background. You did you're homework. Most commentators don't even bother !

    • @BarbButler
      @BarbButler 2 года назад +1

      Same!!! 😎

  • @angelabarazzone7899
    @angelabarazzone7899 5 лет назад +2

    Stevie was slipping into the clubs and playing with Albert King. Albert King was his godfather. “I've said that playing the blues is like having to be black twice. Stevie Ray Vaughan missed on both counts, but I never noticed”. B.B. King
    Eric Clapton said the first time he heard SRV on the radio he was driving and had to pull off on the side of the road.

  • @JennyJohn50
    @JennyJohn50 2 года назад +2

    Great reaction! I LOVE SRV!!! 😍 Thanks for playing that! His show live with Johnny Copeland doing Tin Pan Alley is a blues masterclass if you ever want to melt. It takes you to another time & place.

  • @Pitmaster790
    @Pitmaster790 Год назад +1

    Love to watch your reaction, HalfLifeSistah. You're the first one I've seen that comsumes Stevie Ray Vaughan's blues rhythm with your very essence as well as he did.

  • @rock44664
    @rock44664 5 лет назад +3

    Sistahhh, you are precious. What you feel is felt by us because you connect to us.

    • @HalfLifeSistah
      @HalfLifeSistah  5 лет назад +1

      That is heartwarming😄🙃😀🤗😙💖

  • @brandonlewis9301
    @brandonlewis9301 5 лет назад +6

    steve ray vaughan october 3,1954 august 27,1990 🎸

  • @bloodhound8000
    @bloodhound8000 5 лет назад +3

    The only guitar player that can take a children's nursery rhyme and make a cool song out of it. Listen to " Mary had a little lamb" SRV

  • @juanjosemartinez6757
    @juanjosemartinez6757 4 года назад +1

    Only Steavie Ray can make this amazing beautiful lady cry with his guitar! SRV GOAT.

  • @marcosborne4974
    @marcosborne4974 5 лет назад +3

    I've lived in Austin since the 70s, and he used to go around sitting in with different people to hone his chops. He sat with my brothers band . I saw him at aqua fest after he got cleaned up. He was amazing!

  • @TexasMagnolia
    @TexasMagnolia 5 лет назад +3

    Texas Flood is a behind the back play as well. A great full performance is Bush’s Inauguration Concert with Stevie and Jimmy. Bless you Sister, music makes me cry.
    And, I cry when I watch SRV because I was blessed to follow him when he was alive and miss him so much.

  • @TheDCGuitar13
    @TheDCGuitar13 4 года назад +1

    There’s a generation of people who got to witness Stevie Ray and Garry Moore play in person. Lucky bastards....

  • @hildareynolds231
    @hildareynolds231 5 лет назад +9

    Ain't Gonna Give Up on Love! Original and fabulous!

    • @layde1
      @layde1 5 лет назад +2

      Gorgeous song!

  • @tomaleshire4145
    @tomaleshire4145 4 года назад +1

    Started seeing Stevie Ray in the mid 70s in Austin 🇨🇱! Used to pay a $2.00 cover to see Stevie for 2-3 hours at the Backroom, Antone's, or the One Night! 😁 Saw him last in '85 on the Texas Flood tour. He was and still is our "Pride and Joy". 🤗 Thanks for the laughter 😂 and the tears 😭 Stevie. "Life Without You" will always make me miss you and cry 😢. RIP SRV...your music lives on. 🎸🎶😊

  • @steamyconceptsmail3208
    @steamyconceptsmail3208 5 лет назад +35

    I'm not saying Stevie is the best, but he's light years ahead of whoever #2 is. :-)

  • @joerob3081
    @joerob3081 5 лет назад +3

    Life without you. Great song by Stevie

  • @jefftaunton5550
    @jefftaunton5550 5 лет назад +3

    god damn, the way you two did this was just great 10 out of 10 thanks!!!!!!

    • @HalfLifeSistah
      @HalfLifeSistah  5 лет назад +1

      🤗 Thanks, Jeff. Glad you enjoyed it💖

  • @michaelnorman2967
    @michaelnorman2967 5 лет назад +2

    Jimi would be so mighty proud of Stevie Ray.

  • @tboned5641
    @tboned5641 5 лет назад +2

    A bit of trivia here. This is recorded at the El Macombo in Toronto, Ontario in Canada, and the footage of him and Albert King was recorded at CHCH T.V. studios in Hamilton, Ontario about 30 miles away.

  • @patrickrasmussen2666
    @patrickrasmussen2666 5 лет назад +8

    26:02 "Ok that's crazy! It... it certainly is...but... it still happens." I chocked on my coffee! Fortunately it was the iced variety but well worth it had it been boiling hot.

  • @sasquatchBKP
    @sasquatchBKP 5 лет назад +4

    Thank you for an outstanding reaction and for your commentary before the song I am a big fan of Stevie Ray Vaughan the GOAT his music helped me through the military you guys are awesome new sub

    • @HalfLifeSistah
      @HalfLifeSistah  5 лет назад

      Welcome, love and thank you. I'm glad you enjoyed the reaction😀💖😙✊🏾🤘🏾

    • @KimonoSkunk
      @KimonoSkunk 5 лет назад +1

      Brian, from myself, my wife and daughter, thank you for your service.... you are a true hero... ^~^

  • @patrickrasmussen2666
    @patrickrasmussen2666 5 лет назад +6

    Haha "We're the history channel!" I thought I was done commenting. This was such a fun one!

  • @darrellpugh5599
    @darrellpugh5599 5 лет назад +2

    Hi guys, I'm a mad Stevie Ray fan. I have been seen 1983. I am one of the blessed one to have seen him live in concert in 1985. Absolutely mind blowing.
    Yes you MUST watch TEXAS Flood live at El Mocombo, This is the best Texas Flood video. Plays behind his back again. Also watch Tin Pan Alley with Johnny Copeland. So so soulful. And Life without you. And of course Lenny live at El Mocombo.

  • @ArmchairRizzard
    @ArmchairRizzard 5 лет назад +3

    SRV is such a beautiful soul, and a great musician. It warms my heart when a new person discovers his greatness. I also love how much she feels the music.

  • @angelmeyers1455
    @angelmeyers1455 5 лет назад +4

    Please react to 1) "Ain't Gonna Give Up On Love" , 2) "Life Without You", 3) Riviera Paradise, 3) Tightrope, 4) Lenny, 5) Lovestruck, 6) Pride and Joy, all Stevie's original songs he wrote himself, excluding Tightrope which he co-wrote with Doyle Brammill.

  • @2catgumbo
    @2catgumbo 5 лет назад +3

    Came for the reaction, received an education. I love you guys!

  • @-R.Gray-
    @-R.Gray- 5 лет назад +2

    Don't forget, Hendrix played behind his back, behind his head, with his teeth etc. too. But this has been going on for a long time. If you Google T-Bone Walker, and click on the "Images" tab, and scroll down, you'll see a picture of Walker doing the splits while playing the guitar behind his head. I first saw it in a guitar magazine where he said that all of these guitarists used to busk on the street corners, and they would try to draw the biggest crowds by having the most impressive tricks. Unfortunately, due to the Hendrix family and copyright problems, there isn't a lot of good Hendrix on RUclips. Probably the best is a 2min. b+w clip of part of his "Machine Gun" solo at the Fillmore East 1969, and the section of Woodstock from "Purple Haze" till the end. I think Hendrix was a huge influence on Stevie growing up, and that Stevie must have spent countless hours playing along with Hendrix records. Maybe that's how he was competing with his brother. It's got to be the reason that he tuned his guitar down half a step, the same as Hendrix. Without doing that, trying to play along with a song that involved open strings would be a nightmare. Also, don't forget, Stevie was just 13yrs. old when Hendrix's music came out. Stevie learned the originals and turned them into vehicles for soloing, but many of these solos incorporated Hendrix's original licks. I bet Stevie was paying tribute to Hendrix more than thinking he was competing with him. But after copying Hendrix licks, how could he use them in other songs. This is where using the influences from Clapton, Buddy Guy, Lonnie Mack, and some of Albert King's signature licks rounded out his style. I think S.R.V. incorporated all of these influences into a unique and very aggressive style of his own, but they are not hard to pick out. Especially Albert King. Tuning his guitar down also helped him copy Albert's technique of playing melodies by varying the degrees within a 2 fret or more bend, and doing it on 2 strings simultaneously. The first time I heard S.R.V. was when they played something from David Bowie's "Let's Dance" album on the radio. I thought "How did Bowie get Albert King to play on his album". It's no wonder Albert liked Stevie - he was playing what Albert liked hearing - his own licks. Just watch the whole of that "In Session" TV program you showed a clip of. The early Clapton influence is shown by S.R.V. covering a song from the influential John Mayall's Bluesbreakers with Eric Clapton album on a 1980 radio broadcast (released as "In The Beginning"). When he toured with Jeff Beck, they jammed on "Jeff's Boogie", so like any guitarist, he learned a variety of music. For a more accurate comparison, why not play your wife the album track of "Voodoo Chile.." She might recognize some of the licks that Stevie played. (Not on camera, just for education) Why not the whole album ? Of course listening to Hendrix albums now you don't get to hear how revolutionary he was in his time. I don't think Stevie would agree with all of these people who say Stevie is the greatest, and Hendrix sucks. I think they were just born too late to put it in the proper context. The music came out of Hendrix's head. That has to be worth something. Imagine a modern orchestra doing an updated version of Beethoven's 5th and then saying "Our version is better- check out the guitar solo we added"

  • @michaelnorman2967
    @michaelnorman2967 5 лет назад +1

    I just watched this video for the third time. HalfLifeSistah you are great and so are you Wolf. Keep up the great musical journey. You're going to love it for sure!!

  • @sasquatchBKP
    @sasquatchBKP 5 лет назад +8

    Pride and Joy is an original SRV song and is awesome one of my favorites he wrote for a girlfriend at the time

  • @shanemccormick6072
    @shanemccormick6072 5 лет назад +9

    Jimmy invented Stevie perfected .Stevie Ray Vaughan was just a special musician you have to appreciate them because they don't come around very often and in my humble opinion most of them have already passed away. I too and the Pink Floyd fan Gilmour will always be my favorite guitarist. But he's not the best guitarist. There's just too many of them to pick a best. Stevie Ray Vaughan is my second-favorite but for what he does I think he's the best.

  • @dgreene4234
    @dgreene4234 5 лет назад +2

    Fantastic! You really did some work. Excellent history lesson before your reaction. I have yet to see anyone do that. As usual, the reaction was great. Love that Sistah lets the emotion flow.

    • @HalfLifeSistah
      @HalfLifeSistah  5 лет назад +2

      Hi, sunshine😌
      Thank you so much. Very happy you appreciate our content. Makes me very happy🤗🤗🤗😚💖

  • @bewl2641
    @bewl2641 5 лет назад +3

    If you want a SRV original, please... please watch SRV play "Lenny" (specifically the Live at El Mocambo version). This was the first video of Stevie that I watched, and it was a legitimate spiritual experience for me. I had to know more about him. Years later, I still crave that feeling I got when I watched it for the first time. Stevie wrote the song on the edge of his bed for his then wife, who's name was Lenny. She had mustered some money between her and some of their friends to buy him a guitar he wanted. He is playing that same guitar in the video. You can feel the emotional roller coaster he takes you on with this song. It is a guitar instrumental that needs no human words at all. It's an absolute masterpiece.

  • @bearculb7717
    @bearculb7717 5 лет назад +4

    life without you

  • @jonnno243
    @jonnno243 5 лет назад +2

    And THATS why Stevie Ray Vaughan is regarded as one of the best guitarists ever born.

  • @williamjones362
    @williamjones362 5 лет назад

    Stevie Ray Vaughan was one of the few guitarists that knew where every single note was on a guitar and if he never hit one wrong he had the pure strength to bend the string to the note he wanted . The behind the back trick was a Stevie Ray Vaughan staple. He used it quite a bit when he would break a string, there is a video of him playing “look at little sister” where he breaks a string and transitions to playing behind his back to help facilitate a guitar switch, which happens mid song. He never lost his composure and the only way you could tell what happened was a single sour note as the string snapped much like at the end of this video, he simply switched the string he was playing on and kept going. He was truly a one of a kind showman.

  • @thatsriiight5047
    @thatsriiight5047 5 лет назад +56

    You should react to Texas flood live at Mocambo to hear his voice more..also 'Pride and Joy' is a good Stevie song

  • @GBeret83
    @GBeret83 4 года назад +5

    As a teenager, the great guitarists then were of course Jimi Hendrix as well as the likes of Duane Allman of the Allman Brothers, Alvin Lee of Ten Years After(sorely underrated), Johnny Winter, Eric Clapton, Jimmy Page, etc....I was a young adult in my 20's when guys like Stevie Ray and Eddie Van Halen came along, and I was also listening to a lot of Ted Nugent's live stuff on Double Live Gonzo(another brilliant live picker), but I knew the first time I ever heard any Stevie Ray Vaughan that I was listening to something very different and very special. It was unheard of to see a guitarists with Stevie Ray's ability so heavily influenced by the great blues legends (Albert King, B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Otis Rush, etc., and by Jimi Hendrix too. I've jammed Jimi Hendrix and Stevie Ray Vaughan both for hours at a time over the years and have personally seen and heard friends of mine almost come to blows over debating which of the two was the better guitarists? My personal take on that subject is this............Jimi Hendrix came along at a time when about anything that had been done on an electric guitar to that point with rock, Jimi said, "that ain't shit, watch this," but he would sadly leave us far too soon. Having lived nearly 20 years longer than Hendrix did, Stevie Ray Vaughan with all of that talent came along and made versions of Hendrix's Voodoo Chile' & Little Wing his own, and it was as if he was saying to Jimi, "don't worry man, I got your back. You left us far too soon, but I'm gonna take your songs on to an even further rock from the sun than you got the chance to take them yourself", and I feel like that's exactly what Stevie did. But we sadly lost him far too soon also in a helicopter crash in Wisconsin all those years ago now. My opinion is that Jimi Hendrix was and will forever remain in my mind a legend, but Stevie Ray Vaughan was an absolute freak of nature that the likes of may never be seen again. Eric Clapton once said that he often would have to leave the stage after jamming just a couple of songs with Stevie because he felt so intimidated by his playing that it made him nervous he wouldn't pick up the guitar again. That's a mouthful coming from one of rock's all-time most versatile guitarists who's played with some of rock's greatest bands. We also sadly lost a young virtuoso guitarist in Duane Allman a month shy of his 25th birthday back in 1971 when he was killed in a motorcycle wreck, and in very recent years we've had to morn the passing of two other rock guitar legends in Alvin Lee who died in 2013 and Johnny Winter who died in 2014.

  • @lauramyers7926
    @lauramyers7926 5 лет назад +4

    Original Stevie...Telephone Song is one of my favorites. Off the album Family Style. A collaboration with his brother and released a month after Stevie died.

  • @terrycrouch4053
    @terrycrouch4053 5 лет назад +3

    Pride and joy

  • @theengagedfew
    @theengagedfew 5 лет назад +4

    One thing to know about the blues, is that it was very common for blues musicians to perform and record cover songs. The tradition goes back to its earliest times, when musicians started out putting old plantation and prison work songs to music, and even Leadbelly, legendary as he was, wrote very few of his own songs. Some of the great blues standards have been covered so many times, that it's impossible to tell who wrote them, and many of the songs even pre-date the advent of blues as a genre. An awesome example of this phenomenon is the Eric Clapton album "From The Cradle," which is not only a collection of blues standards, but was even recorded in the old style of having the entire band in the studio, playing together, rather than multi-track recording/mixing. Definitely worth a listen.
    But if you want to get suggestions for original SRV content, you'll get a phone book-sized list thrown at you, with great hits like "Pride and Joy," "Cold Shot," "Crossfire," "Couldn't Stand The Weather," "Look At Little Sister," "Mary Had A Little Lamb," "The Sky Is Crying," and my personal favorite, "Life By The Drop." (Full disclosure: That last song is my favorite, not because it's another demonstration of his virtuosity, but because it shows that he was incredibly talented, even when it was just him and a 12-string.)
    Anyway, I'm glad you discovered Stevie Ray, and I hope his music gives you the experiences that it's given me, lo, these many years.

  • @MaghnusmacanGhabhann
    @MaghnusmacanGhabhann 5 лет назад +12

    I love SRV, always have but take a look at Prince do While my Guitar Gently Weeps. He steeps on everyone but brings the house down.

    • @leonotthelion
      @leonotthelion 4 года назад +2

      Prince is a fucking beast on the guitar

  • @Blazen1212
    @Blazen1212 5 лет назад +2

    I love the talking!! Gives the videos some amazing context and good info. Also Texas Flood live at Mocambo maybe one of SRVs best performances. Cheers!

    • @HalfLifeSistah
      @HalfLifeSistah  5 лет назад

      🤗😘😘💖✊🏾🤘🏾

    • @Blazen1212
      @Blazen1212 5 лет назад +1

      @@HalfLifeSistah If you want hear an original SRV song then try "Lenny" - Live at El Mocambo is by FAR his best song/performance.

  • @petgeek1
    @petgeek1 5 лет назад +1

    You guys are still the best.
    Dude, those "drip-drops" as the ear buds came out. I'm rolling.

  • @matts1523
    @matts1523 5 лет назад +12

    Riviera Paradise, I think it truly captures the essence of SRV. It's an instrumental. If you want something with vocals you have to do Tin Pan Alley.

  • @rullmourn1142
    @rullmourn1142 4 года назад +1

    You dont have to like blues to love Stevie, he lived in my town, Austin, and we loved him well.

  • @SATDOGG
    @SATDOGG 5 лет назад +3

    Great Video!

  • @jeaniebottoms7202
    @jeaniebottoms7202 5 лет назад +2

    Great reaction. SRV is definitely one of the greatest. If you want to hear an original song which he wrote himself, check out either “Lenny “from live at the El Mocambo or “Riviera Paradise “from live in Austin Texas. I highly recommend watching his live performances instead of studio versions. I am looking forward to seeing Sistah’s reaction to “Texas Flood” . The live performance of it, also recorded at the El Mocambo, is not to be missed. Thanks for brightening my day and keep on rockin’!

  • @MaceGill
    @MaceGill 5 лет назад +3

    First recorded blues artist was Mamie Smith "Crazy Blues" 1920.

    • @WolfKain
      @WolfKain 5 лет назад +3

      I think you're right, I should of said first Blues Guitar but I would need to check the dates. Definitely two of earliest for sure.

    • @MaceGill
      @MaceGill 5 лет назад +2

      @@WolfKain here's a bit of info on Blind Lemon Jefferson that fleshes out when he recorded and a couple of folks they know recorded earlier, but it was all really early stuff! Anyway, the first blues superstars were women, known guitarists followed soon after. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blind_Lemon_Jefferson#Beginning_of_recording_career

  • @geovra1976
    @geovra1976 5 лет назад +3

    The greatest guitarist ever lived ...simple as that

  • @CatharticusX
    @CatharticusX 5 лет назад +1

    Blows me away Every F’cking Time. This and Pulse/Comfortably Numb just never get old.

  • @paulsullivan1650
    @paulsullivan1650 5 лет назад +1

    Keep talking you guys. I love listening. The heck with everyone else! Good job you too, and thanks!

  • @ljhookem14
    @ljhookem14 5 лет назад +1

    Did you ever tell her about how SRV plays a heavy gauge (.039 or .058 or .074) string on his guitars that pretty much nobody on this earth before, now, or ever could manipulate the way SRV did?
    The way he bent those heavy strings was something he’s known for and of course always seemingly broke one of them during his shows.
    A saying developed that his strings were “as thick as barbed wire”.
    Love your style Wolfkain in all your videos. I enjoy the content and conversation you bring to the videos. HLS just feels music like nobody else. True music fans and just really glad I found this channel.
    RIP SRV - a Texas Legend and IMO the best guitar player of any time an any genre.

  • @kdolson6852
    @kdolson6852 4 года назад +1

    Love the dialogue. Finally some background to SRV. Keep it going!!

  • @tommyechoes3520
    @tommyechoes3520 5 лет назад +1

    Love the history of the blues, and Stevie and hes brother. Thank you for the reaction!

  • @digu97
    @digu97 5 лет назад +2

    i love you guys!! i love yours reactions!! from CHILE

  • @bgumm9122
    @bgumm9122 5 лет назад +4

    Life after You, SRV live at the Capitol Theater 9- 1985

  • @tylerstattoo
    @tylerstattoo 5 лет назад +16

    SRV playing Lenny live at El Mocambo is one of the most moving experiences you will ever have. And it’s an original piece written by Stevie for his wife at the time. Please listen to it even if you don’t do a reaction to it. You will not be disappointed I promise.

  • @pagevaughn9194
    @pagevaughn9194 4 года назад +1

    What hurts most, he was so creative and talented, all that was lost when he passed. I have all his LPs, I don't just listen to one genre of music. I am kind of well rounded, listening to all kinds of music. I look at Stevie Ray Vaughan as a one of kind, so did BB King!

  • @waynestumbo2408
    @waynestumbo2408 5 лет назад +3

    We love Stevie in Tampa.

  • @grelch
    @grelch 4 года назад +1

    Doyle Bramhall lived just down the street from Stevie too, and they were great friends. Jimmie, Stevie and Doyle on the same street at the same time. Not many neighborhoods can claim that.

  • @d4mdcykey
    @d4mdcykey 5 лет назад +1

    GREAT Reaction. This lady got it, got on it, and got down with it. SRV would be proud.

  • @matthewneely
    @matthewneely 5 лет назад +1

    Beautiful reactions guys. Thanks

  • @KimonoSkunk
    @KimonoSkunk 5 лет назад +2

    You were wondering about his grinning and the bow he takes at the end of that song?
    Whenever he played behind his back, he would snap strings due to his immense finger strength. He played 12 gauge strings on his guitars, and this particular guitar with the SRV on the face had newer frets put on, the thicker ones originally from a bass. That is how he got that really hard string bends and those notes.
    SRV is an absolute legend, as I listened to him from both his Austin City Limits concerts. Proposed to my wife after showing her the VHS Copy I had after the last song Riviera Paradise, which will leave you speechless.
    You both have a great chemistry together, so happy to see a happy couple.
    (I would make this a Patreon request but I can't afford the $10.00, as my minivan's transmission died a month ago and im in a fixed income, im a retired disabled truck driver living on wife's SSI income. Long story, trust me.... )
    And I am overjoyed Sistah got to see Pink Floyd's Pulse Comfortably Numb... I was raised on The Wall album.
    One thing you both should try, is listen to the whole album, completely without stopping, as you don't listen to the album, you 'experience' it. The songs basically flow from one to the next without any breaks.
    My personal favourites are "GoodBye Blue Sky, Another Brick in the wall, part 1, and then part 3 oddly enough. Goodbye Cruel World, and the masterful Comfortably Numb. Only when you hear it from the context of hearing that album you will get the meaning of it.
    Outstanding reactions both of you...
    God Bless both of you...
    Kimono-Gryphon <
    1 Corinthians 15 : 1-4

  • @paulyoung6040
    @paulyoung6040 5 лет назад +6

    Jimmy was guitarist for the "fabulous Thunderbirds"("tuff enough","wrap it up")

  • @kevinhill8340
    @kevinhill8340 5 лет назад +3

    Beautiful reaction to one of the greats if not the greatest

  • @amax1229
    @amax1229 5 лет назад +6

    Stevie, Live at Austin City Limits is my favorite rendition of Voodoo Child.

  • @gmanwaseverywhere2104
    @gmanwaseverywhere2104 4 года назад

    Just came across your channel as I was soaking up more of Stevie Ray, who is one of my all time favorites, and who I consider to be the greatest guitarist of all time. Period. In fact, I lived no more than 20 miles from where he was killed. And I cried like a baby. I wanted to tell you that I was particularly impressed by your knowledge of Stevie's life adventure, Wolfkain. Thank you for that. Very impressed.

  • @mortimerbustos4487
    @mortimerbustos4487 5 лет назад +2

    You didn't mention Stevie playing for Bowie on the smash hit album Let's Dance in 82. That is when double trouble went world wide after that.

  • @PowderedToastMan420
    @PowderedToastMan420 5 лет назад +3

    GOAT PERIOD

  • @sondyhowellweber1474
    @sondyhowellweber1474 5 лет назад +3

    Pride and joy!!

  • @dianewara661
    @dianewara661 5 лет назад +3

    Listen to Riviera Paradise on Austin city limits or Rude Mood Austin city limits guaranteed tears.Also Hendrix and Vaughan in his early days are known for never playing a song the same way twice.

  • @sean_b_drummer
    @sean_b_drummer 5 лет назад +6

    Mary Had a Little Lamb!!!!!!!!!
    🤘🏼🔥🤘🏼🔥🤘🏼🔥🤘🏼🔥

  • @sammybeck7794
    @sammybeck7794 5 лет назад +7

    His name is Clifford Antone. The name of the club is Antone's and since Clifford's death the new owners have been struggling to keep the club open and it will ultimately close soon due to the big Financial boom in Austin. Austin is becoming nothing but skyscrapers in big corporations and they're pushing all the mom and pops out. Property taxes as well as business tax has gone up tremendously and the small clubs and restaurants can't afford to pay the rant much less property taxes which is making them broke so they are one by one closing in this once beautiful city that Stevie Ray Vaughan brought to life. It's sad that Stevie and Clifford are gone. They made Austin what it once was.