First Time Watching Stevie Ray Vaughan Live - Voodoo Chile 1989

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 282

  • @joshbillings7290
    @joshbillings7290 Год назад +132

    One of the most humble, soft spoken, generous, authentic and incredibly amazing generational talents. Texas Flood live at the ElMocambo is required watching.

    • @DJDOGG31
      @DJDOGG31 Год назад +7

      Agree 100%. When you delve into SRV that concert must be viewed.

    • @carterhunt1155
      @carterhunt1155 Год назад +3

      110% agree

    • @socalnitro
      @socalnitro Год назад +2

      Riviera Paradise

    • @marksims6425
      @marksims6425 Год назад +2

      Yeah buddy !!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @DogFish-NZ
      @DogFish-NZ Год назад

      so god damn sad 😥

  • @a.bevdfray6625
    @a.bevdfray6625 Год назад +70

    Texas Flood Live at El Mocambo--hands down the best live performance ever.

  • @jubehaney7338
    @jubehaney7338 Год назад +19

    Live from El Mocambo may be his best. Texas flood is the song

  • @jons3808
    @jons3808 Год назад +56

    GOAT. There never has been or will be another like him.

  • @kevenbridges9433
    @kevenbridges9433 Год назад +5

    The best there ever was. RIP Stevie We miss you.

  • @patticriss2238
    @patticriss2238 Год назад +4

    I really love listening to the old blues MASTERS talk about Stevie. They adored him. In all ways. Good dude.

  • @sabralocke4904
    @sabralocke4904 Год назад +26

    There will never be another stevie - I've watched this 100s of times and never gets old

  • @karenford7510
    @karenford7510 Год назад +18

    RIP Stevie.....he was the GOAT! You are loved and missed.

  • @jimandnicki
    @jimandnicki Год назад +4

    I’ve always described SRV’s playing as “Effortless Brilliance.” Guy was amazing

  • @sallysharp3845
    @sallysharp3845 Год назад +20

    SRV was the Master. I was lucky enough to see him live back in the day.

  • @beverlyoyarzun3326
    @beverlyoyarzun3326 Год назад +5

    I’m sure someone has mentioned it BUT! This is the show where he shows his absolute stone cold cool: he breaks a string while playing “Little Sister”- you have to watch it✌🏻🤟🏻🤘🏻

  • @midnitesunblues
    @midnitesunblues Год назад +13

    Bass player is the legendary Tommy Shannon. He could follow Stevie anywhere and not miss a heartbeat. Chris Layton is equally legendary on drums. yes, Stevie oozes charisma. Everyone liked Stevie and most just loved him. R.I.P. beautiful man.

  • @stratfanstl
    @stratfanstl Год назад +30

    As you stated, there's no "posing" with his performances. I saw him live five times between May 1984 and November 1989 and every time I came away amazed out how what I heard just FLOWED. Ignore the occasional "stank face" and just watch his HANDS. Not a wasted motion, they flow to exactly where they need to be for whatever he was trying to do. Granted, what you hear is built up from dozens / hundreds of smaller "rudiments" he had played continuously since high school but the final combination was unique every performance. And the drumming and bass are EXACTLY what are needed for him to do his thing. Nothing more, but nothing less either.

  • @marymargaretmoore9034
    @marymargaretmoore9034 Год назад +39

    Stevie and Tommy Shannon (bassist) were best friends. He had very strong hands, being able to bend the thickest strings (13 gauge) made. Even though he was super cool, he was a very humble person which is an admirable trait. He changes the tone using the wah pedals (he had one of Jimi Hendrix's given to him).

    • @armadillotoe
      @armadillotoe Год назад +3

      Tommy Shannon previously played with Johnnie Winter, another Texas blues guitar player.

    • @trentc7329
      @trentc7329 Год назад

      Know how he bent those thick strings? Cocaine. Lots of cocaine for years of club gigging in the 70' and 80's. Makes you grind your teeth down and everything bristles with electricity.

    • @marymargaretmoore9034
      @marymargaretmoore9034 Год назад +2

      @@trentc7329 He wasn't doing coke in '89; he was a recovering addict by then.

    • @marymargaretmoore9034
      @marymargaretmoore9034 Год назад +1

      @@armadillotoe Yes, he played with the best!

    • @daveman_50
      @daveman_50 Год назад

      @@armadillotoe Yes, check out Johnny Winter's first album "Progressive Blues Experiment" (1968) with Tommy on bass. Great album recorded at the legendary, long-gone club Vulcan Gas Co. in Austin.

  • @Champaign1117
    @Champaign1117 Год назад +6

    Stevie didn't play the guitar, the guitar played him. RIP Stevie

  • @barbarabonanni6209
    @barbarabonanni6209 Год назад +14

    Need to listen to Texas Flood live from the El Mocambo. It is literally the best live blues performance ever recorded.

  • @benhinds2971
    @benhinds2971 Год назад +8

    I've been playing 35yrs. Never heard anyone describe it the way you did. It's spot on. He doesnt just bend the notes. He twists them. Bend and twist. It's 3 dimentional. There are reasons why it sounds like that. But a perfect description. I'm stealing it. I mean I'm doing a cover of it.

  • @sharonlahaye5803
    @sharonlahaye5803 Год назад +8

    One of the best blues guitarist of all time! RIP Stevie Ray.

  • @adamdunbar8260
    @adamdunbar8260 Год назад +26

    Tommy Shannon is one of the best and most underappreciated bass players ever. His runs in this performance are outstanding.

    • @juanmendoza2993
      @juanmendoza2993 Год назад +2

      He is my favorite bassist ever.
      Along with Les Claypool on 2nd place, and Dusty Hill and Felix Pappalardi in 3rd place

    • @karenscigliano9787
      @karenscigliano9787 Год назад +1

      Right on...! and SRV knew that about TS,,,of course😇❤️‍🔥

  • @stuartevins613
    @stuartevins613 Год назад +1

    Austin Texas, live music capital of the world! Stevie Brings it!

  • @SueProst
    @SueProst Год назад +4

    Life Without You at the Capitol theatre in in Passaic NJ written for his friend Charley Wirz who was a mentor and helped Stevie in how he designed his guitars and who died of a heart attack. Best vocal, great solo and beautiful message.

  • @minigirl6839
    @minigirl6839 Год назад +9

    Two MUST watch performances by this Texas demi god- "Texas Flood"-Live at El Mocambo . Then, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jeff Healey "Look at Little Sister ". Jeff was blind and Stevie Ray let Jeff shine in that performance. Those two performances will change your life. 👌 💯

  • @theresamillaway6398
    @theresamillaway6398 Год назад +8

    A gifted man...fought his demons...got sober AND IS THE GOAT!!! Died so young ! RIP SRV!

  • @gregcarlson6342
    @gregcarlson6342 Год назад +3

    Glad you mentioned the Bass player. I think he is one of the best. He will never be in the unemployment line. 😄

  • @forresthouser5807
    @forresthouser5807 Год назад +2

    ALSO from this performance - you MUST see "Couldn't Stand the Weather"....He showcases each member of the band, and it is AWESOME (the very definition thereof...)

  • @goodbyedemocracy5678
    @goodbyedemocracy5678 Год назад +5

    Bingo. I discovered SRV when he opened for the Pretenders in '84. I could not believe my eyes or ears. I was lucky enough to see him again headlining in a small hall in '85. And then we lost him.

    • @maninthemiddle55
      @maninthemiddle55 Год назад

      I saw SRV three times, first in '86. I saw the Pretenders on that '84 tour also but Stevie didn't open for that, still it was one of the best rock shows I've ever seen. The Pretenders did so many encores they ran outta songs to play, had to resort to Johnny B Goode. Where were those SRV shows you saw?

    • @goodbyedemocracy5678
      @goodbyedemocracy5678 Год назад

      @@maninthemiddle55 I recall it was William and Mary college? I could be wrong, but it was definitely in Virginia...like April '84

    • @maninthemiddle55
      @maninthemiddle55 Год назад

      @@goodbyedemocracy5678 Damn, The Pretenders and SRV at William & Mary! That must’ve been pretty cool.

  • @jeffreychase1222
    @jeffreychase1222 Год назад +1

    He bends and changes his notes by the dials on his guitar, the bar and pedals create the wa wa. He bends down to pick up new picks on the floor. He was by far the best guitar player ever!

  • @gramps6334
    @gramps6334 Год назад +7

    Tommy Shannon was the bassist for Johnny Winter before Double Trouble. He and Chris Layton were magical keeping the beat and flexing with Stevie when live. SRV=GOAT

  • @robertkramer41
    @robertkramer41 Год назад +1

    Saw him at Mesker Amphitheater Evansville IN before the accident.
    Blew us away.
    He opened doors for us that went, then we saw the Grateful Dead at Deer Creek 6/28/92, they blw all the walls down.
    I was a metal dude, SRV and his band Double Trouble were an assault on the senses, the band was killer, they toured hard, telepathy was solid, common in the best bands.
    Blew me away, Jerry Garcia...the Deadheads...that first set 6/28/92 was killer and opened me upto so much.
    Music, I'll give it all a try
    The Grateful are my ride or die but SRV opened my eyes, what a tragic loss, blessed to hvseen him live.

  • @Gort-Marvin0Martian
    @Gort-Marvin0Martian Год назад +5

    I've heard other guitarists who knew him say that his strings were soooo tight it would have bloodied their fingers to play it.
    G.O.A.T without doubt.
    Be safe

  • @donnalovell4199
    @donnalovell4199 Год назад

    Oh there will never be another Stevie. He live down the street from my grandmother in Dallas. We miss him so much! RIP Stevie❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @joycewinn1960
    @joycewinn1960 Год назад +17

    Stevie Ray Vaughan was incredible! He was one with his guitar and quite a cool dude. I've loved him since wandering into The Rome Inn in Austin, Texas, and being blown away by his talent. It's always interesting to see what he was wearing. He had a style all his own. If you want your mind blown by another stellar live performance, check out Texas Flood from Live at El Mocambo. The most impressive live performance I've ever seen. Every time someone reacts to it, I can't help but watch it again.

  • @claireburling8547
    @claireburling8547 Год назад +1

    First word. WOW. And that says it all. I love this performance, Stevie is the king of cool. He looks like Black Magic doin Voodoo Chile in that outfit. You ought to check out Voodoo Chile live in Nashville. Looses a string, who cares. He's got 5 more. Something else you said to the effect of the guitar being an extension of his body, heard that so many times, and so true. He couldn't have played a song the same way twice, how could you feel the same way each time? Tommy on bass and Chris on those voodoo drums, phenomenal. One amazing band to be so together backing up a guy like Stevie Ray. RIP, King SRV. ☮️to all. P.S. Treat us to Texas Flood at the El Macombo! Everybody wants you to.

  • @arnoldcox9128
    @arnoldcox9128 Год назад +3

    Stevie makes me sweat every time I hear his performances, the amazing thing is that he played with heavy gutair strings which he would often break and keep going like it's no big deal...incredible

  • @jokervienna6433
    @jokervienna6433 Год назад +3

    One of the few guitarrists that even could/can play this song and get away with, WITH the highest honour. Hat off for SRV. Otherwise you are totally right - he was brilliant in the studio. Live - he was devastating. Not many musicians are better live than in the studio, but SRV was surely one of them.

  • @fenderfox5080
    @fenderfox5080 Год назад +7

    God dam Stevie was so good, just effortless

  • @dreww1609
    @dreww1609 Год назад +19

    Really excited to see your journey with Stevie! "Texas Flood" Live at the El Mocambo is the most legendary - one of the most of any artist/guitar player - ever. There are dozens more every song different and amazing but that one will knock you off your chair and set the tone for why SRV is revered as he is (amongst many other reasons beyond his guitar playing.) I am subbing up!

    • @dreww1609
      @dreww1609 Год назад +2

      Real quick technical follow-up - you mentioned the tone changes - this vid is an excellent one with lots of guitar close-ups; if you watch his picking hand, he is constantly adjusting his tone and volume knobs as well as the pickup switch which changes the tone a lot, as well as using his Wah pedal quite a bit (honor to Jimi) - doing all this seamlessly mid stream is part of being a master.

    • @raddison6084
      @raddison6084 Год назад +3

      Texas Flood, live, El Mocambo.

    • @storbokki371
      @storbokki371 Год назад

      RUclips channel: Stevie Ray Vaughan
      Video title: "Stevie Ray Vaughan - Texas Flood (from Live at the El Mocambo)"
      ruclips.net/video/KC5H9P4F5Uk/видео.html

  • @sjd5750
    @sjd5750 Год назад +6

    I love at the end how he peers out at the audience, as if to say, "How was that..Pretty good?!"

  • @SueProst
    @SueProst Год назад +1

    Bass is played by Tommy Shannon. You are the first to notice Tommy in this performance . He was Stevie's best friend and he got one at the same time Steve in the fallo 1986.

  • @heyskipj
    @heyskipj Год назад +2

    SRV is a GOAT for sure. Don’t sleep on “Tin Pan Alley” live with Johnny Copeland. It’s blues and more his natural style.

    • @rayj1011
      @rayj1011 Год назад +1

      I was going to say the same thing, it's a great blues performance.

  • @omniversalll
    @omniversalll Год назад +3

    Favorite artist to watch reactions of, such an awesome rabbit hole. Little Wing live @ the El Mocambo, or Texas Flood @ the El Mocambo, are an absolute must. Solid reaction man.

  • @tonydagostino6158
    @tonydagostino6158 Год назад

    In 1982 I was spending a lot of time in Austin Tx for my job and spent considerable time in a blues dive bar on 6th Street called "The Bar". One night another Austin blues legend Lou Ann Barton was playing. When she came out for her second set there was a new guitar player with a seriously beat up Strat and a funny hat. Most of the regulars knew who he was but SRV wasn't that widely known outside of Austin and Dallas clubs at that time. Needless to say I was blown away by the solos he did during that set. Just a few months later David Bowie's "Lets Dance" album came out, with Stevie on guitar and that was the start of him really going worldwide. The day he died was such a black day

  • @a2zme
    @a2zme Год назад +19

    More Stevie please! :)
    #RIP

  • @midnitesunblues
    @midnitesunblues Год назад +4

    A lot of requests coming in for Texas Flood live at the El Mocambo, 1983. I agree, check it out. another one from the same show is "Lenny" Don't miss that one. Stevie will blow your mind. I really enjoyed your reaction to Voodoo Child. Please keep going with Stevie.

  • @charlesmarkley220
    @charlesmarkley220 Год назад +14

    This a tribute in it's finest form. Jimi Hendrix would be proud and flattered.

  • @ajaxfernsby4078
    @ajaxfernsby4078 Год назад +10

    Syed, I think you’d appreciate his live “Look At Little Sister.” I believe it’s from the same show. During the performance, he breaks a string. He continued playing with no trace of a signal to his crew, seemingly confident that they are on it. After a while and barely a glance over his shoulder, someone shows up with another guitar. The switch was so seamlessly smooth it was beautiful. I had to replay it a dozen times. Check it out.

    • @LadyIarConnacht
      @LadyIarConnacht Год назад +2

      Smoothest thing I ever did see.

    • @reneemaciag3084
      @reneemaciag3084 Год назад +1

      Right on! I've watched that over and over again. Hats off to that roadie as well!

  • @johnmurphyakins989
    @johnmurphyakins989 Год назад +1

    When someone like Eric Clapton says,"“Because when I play, I sometimes stop. Every now and then, I just stop and think ‘what I’m going to do now’. I don’t want to repeat myself, so I get caught up somehow. You freeze, and most players do, I never saw him(Stevie Ray Vaughn) do that; he was a channel in some way.” Your right it just flows out of him. He is the GOAT in my opinion!

  • @Chase57Tx
    @Chase57Tx Год назад +9

    He could play behind his back better than anyone else. There's one live performance where a string breaks, and he switches to a 2nd guitar without missing a beat.

  • @bella-xp7qd
    @bella-xp7qd Год назад +1

    He was the nicest man on the planet. When he went to record this , he asked Mr Hendrix for permission. He used Jimi's wawa pedal. When in concert he never played the same song the same way. His base player was in The Edgar and Johnny Winters band. Check out Texas Flood pleased

  • @dmwalker24
    @dmwalker24 Год назад

    My Step-Dad was already in the North Texas music scene when Stevie was still a kid. He knew Stevie's older Brother Jimmie. From all the stories I've heard, and everything I've dug up myself, Stevie was just a genuinely wonderful human being. He was a massive admirer of Jimi Hendrix. If you look close at Stevie's guitar, the whammy bar and bridge are for a left-handed Strat, even though he played right-handed. Just one of many of his nods to Hendrix.

  • @hemlock399
    @hemlock399 Год назад +1

    That guitar is nicknamed "Number One", or Stevie's "First Wife". It's a 1963 Fender Stratocaster which he purchase in 1973. It seems to have been his favourite instrument more or less for the rest of his career, & it suffered *lot* of abuse (& it shows). Check out "Third Stone from the Sun (from Live at the El Mocambo)" for an example of SRV beating the hell out of "Number One".
    SRV had it fitted with a left-handed tremolo assembly ("whammy bar") so that the arm would be at the top of the strings, partially emulating Hendrix, who played a right-handed guitar left-handed, & therefore upside-down, with the tremolo arm at the top.
    Besides the nuances of sound SRV created with his hands, there's a volume dial & 2 different tone dials along with a multi-position pickup switch on his guitar, all of which he uses to manipulate the sound of his guitar throughout this performance. (The pickup switch is used to turn on one or a combination of the 3 pickups, where each pickup gives a different sound.) In addition, he's got a wah pedal on the floor in front of him that he uses several times. There's *a lot* going on there.

  • @jf-sn3yy
    @jf-sn3yy Год назад +2

    I saw SRV 33 years ago today. Probably exactly to the minute as I'm typing this. He was playing with another pretty good guitarist...Jeff Beck.

  • @kengunter6903
    @kengunter6903 Год назад +3

    The GOAT.Period!!!!!

  • @Oscarphone
    @Oscarphone Год назад

    Hard to believe he did this 34 years ago. I can never get enough of this Voodoo Child. The drums are relentless...
    Syed, when he "reaches down" during the solo, he's dropped his pick. Also watch that little white switch just below his fingers, that's the change in sound you are hearing.

  • @usmcmech96
    @usmcmech96 Год назад +5

    SRV didn't die in a helicopter crash, God needed someone to give him guitar lessons.

  • @benhinds2971
    @benhinds2971 Год назад +5

    It shows on how much respect he had for Jimi to see that he was more focused on the way it sounds, rather than showing how fast he could play or how magical his fret work is. Because that's what was most important to Hendrix. Probably one of the many reasons Jimi hated that "Best" compliment.

  • @rayj1011
    @rayj1011 Год назад +1

    Stevie's brother Jimmie Vaughan, formerly with the Fabulous Thunderbirds, is also an accomplished guitarist. i saw him opening for Eric Clapton a couple of months ago with his own band.

  • @benhinds2971
    @benhinds2971 Год назад +1

    He is the only one I've seen that doesn't overplay that song. When people do that it becomes boring. It's still a song. Not a platform to show how fast you can play.

  • @mgonzales56
    @mgonzales56 Год назад +1

    I like Jimi, but Stevie made this song his own. Stevie is number 1 in my book followed second by Terry Kath...sadly both have passed way before their time. Great reaction.

  • @Donnagilbert6497
    @Donnagilbert6497 Год назад +4

    Great reaction! And yes, he was as humble as he was talented. Along with the other live performances mentioned, I think you’d love “Tin Pan Alley” with Stevie Ray Vaughan and Johnny Copeland making a guest appearance. Deep Blues and one of his coolest looks.

    • @harrietmiller3982
      @harrietmiller3982 Год назад

      Oh great suggestion Michael💙🎸🎶 one of my personal favorites💙

    • @claireburling8547
      @claireburling8547 Год назад +1

      Oh yeah, this performance is exceptional. Stevie looks great, sings with grit n passion and the strumming! GOAT. Well, you'll see. Don't wait on this.

  • @DJDOGG31
    @DJDOGG31 Год назад +2

    Eric Clapton said it best. SRV was like river, it just flowed out of him. When he first heard him play Clapton said I need to see this.

  • @markroberts8864
    @markroberts8864 Год назад +2

    You definitely, definitely have to watch him do Texas Flood, live at El Mocambo. It's a must watch!

  • @brianjones8751
    @brianjones8751 Год назад +1

    As a long time bass player I can tell you he never plays a song the same way twice

  • @reneemaciag3084
    @reneemaciag3084 Год назад

    The first time I heard Stevie Ray I thought I was listening to two guitarists. Blew my mind when I saw a live performance and watched the magic happen.

  • @t0dd000
    @t0dd000 Год назад +1

    The bass player and that drummer are just killing it.

  • @janawebb6490
    @janawebb6490 Год назад +6

    He was truly amazing

  • @416TreasureHunters
    @416TreasureHunters Год назад +1

    Stevie Ray played his guitar like it owed him money, rip.

  • @minigirl6839
    @minigirl6839 Год назад +1

    Stevie Ray Vaughan has several versions of Voo Doo Child out there. You should do yourself a solid and watch them all. Stevie Ray freestyles every performance. No two are the same. He literally plays both lead and rhythm guitar parts at the same time. He couldn't read music and played by ear. I made a previous suggestion of his duo with Jeff Healey on Look at Little Sister, but honestly, if you watch Stevie's solo performance of that same song, you actually get to watch Stevie Ray play without strings for a brief period, then switches out guitars without missing a lick. Stevie Ray actually requested permission to cover a few of Jimi's songs. He visited Jimi's father in person to ask his permission. Stevie Ray also is using Jimi's actual wa wa pedal when he was performing Jimi's songs. Some say the pedal was gifted to him by Jimi's father and some say his brother Jimmy Lee Vaughan acquired it, when he was playing with Jimi, and gifted it to Stevie Ray.

  • @harrietmiller3982
    @harrietmiller3982 Год назад +5

    🙌👏‼️I always enjoy your thoughtful and knowledgable reactions so much💯 I was excited to see you do Pride and Joy even if it was from a recording. You are so tuned in and perceptive you identified within like 20,seconds how closely meshed his guitar is to being an additional appendage. You really got a lot out of listening to him but how much more fun is he to watch❓🎸🎶‼️ And yes he was the coolest guy on the planet for sure and mostly cuz he wasn't trying to be, he just was. A very humble, sweet, and kind guy too.
    You should know that no two songs from him are ever played the same. It would depend on his mood and where the river of music would take him whenever he strapped in. For your own personal enjoyment (if not a reaction) you should check out his version of Voodoo Chile from his Toyko concert. It is about 15 minutes long and he weaves and blends new levels and interesting side trips and slides back into the main chords effortlessly. He elevates it to new heights IMO. Stevie was a huge fan of Jimi's since a young age and got a lot of inspiration from him.
    And you observed the watchful eye of Tommy Shannon the bassist. This group was such a tight Band of Brothers. Tommy and Chris Layton on drums kept an eagle eye on Stevie so they could keep him in the pocket while Stevie soared around them.
    The more you watch him live you will see he adjusted his foot pedals, his amps, all the knobs and dials on his guitar and tunes his guitar all without missing a beat in most cases. He even seamlessly has guitars switched out after breaking those heavy gauge strings he used all the while playing live. Talk about a pro boss move. You have barely begun your discovery of this incredibly gifted and other worldly artist.
    I would love for you to react to a tune Stevie wrote called "Aint Gone 'N' Give Up On Love" at the Capitol Theatre 1985. (Not copyright blocked at all)
    Thanks for this great reaction today✌️💙 and shout to Eddie for suggesting it to you👏✌️

  • @janelleyurosky4688
    @janelleyurosky4688 Год назад +1

    Yes please... Texas Flood live at El Mocambo is an awesome SRV experience! 🥰✌

  • @armadillotoe
    @armadillotoe Год назад +1

    All of that music is from Stevie Ray, bass, and drums.
    If you watch carefully you will see he is constantly adjusting the tone, volume, pickup select, using the whammy bar, bending notes, and using foot pedals in addition to playing great guitar and singing.

  • @mookie7688
    @mookie7688 Год назад +2

    Tommy Shannon is one of the great blues bassists of his generation. He and drummer Chris Layton played with SRV throughout his career. I doubt they ever played a song the same way twice.

  • @jimwebb9328
    @jimwebb9328 Год назад +1

    It's great that you called attention to the bass work. That's Tommy Shannon. Chris Layton on drums. The 4th member of the band is Reese Wynans on keyboards but he's not playing on this song. Check out Riviera Paradise or Look At Little Sister from this same show to hear Reese show his stuff.

  • @sailinbob11
    @sailinbob11 Год назад

    He's got peddles ,but he's picking up a guitar pick when he bends down. He can change the tone with a flick of the switch, or turn of a knob on the guitar, but to do it so quickly, and precisely is his genius. Truly a tragic loss. RIP Stevie !

  • @alyosha1974
    @alyosha1974 Год назад +6

    Jimi Hendrix's Machine Gun would be a great follow up to this.

  • @artbagley1406
    @artbagley1406 Год назад

    Tommy Shannon, on bass, is another Texas blues artist from way back. He came up with another Texan famous in blues circles, Johnny Winter; great "genes." Chris Layton, on drums, ain't no slouch either; very strong stix man. Together, Chris and Tommy comprise DOUBLE TROUBLE. All together, this is one of the top 5 3-man-bands in music history. Love your comments; lots of insightful observations!

  • @karenscigliano9787
    @karenscigliano9787 Год назад

    I can't listen to SRV-any kind of recording- without my whole body vibrating to the chills going up and down my spine-- and that's while my brain and heart are achin' and breakin' cause he's gone 💔
    I did love the man...And, no...we're not missing Tommy's bass line- LOL ❤️‍🔥thanks for another GREAT reaction 😘

  • @C_mao
    @C_mao Год назад +1

    He reaches down to adjust the settings on one of his effects pedals, maybe it was the 'tube screamer'(the old green type, really just a treble booster) but yes he's also manipulating a wah wah pedal to get that 'quacky' sound on the intro, and at the end. Sometimes during the song you'll see him switch the pick-up selector, it's a 5-way switch, on a Stratocastor, due to three pick-up (bridge/middle/neck, 'single coils') He didn't use a lot of effects. Most of the 'effects' are just his own ability to utilize so many playing techniques. He was such a great player and he loved to play, a lot. You can see that he wore right through the clear coating, stain, and even into the wood of his guitar, cuz he played it 'so' much. I think that guitar was on it's second neck. The letters he put on there were the reflective letters people used to put on their mailbox, you could get them at Academy Surplus. And of course he had other guitars too. He referred to this guitar as 'Number 1', his 'number two' he called 'Lenny' after his ex-wife Lenora. I'm glad you got to see this one. You deserved it. "Texas Flood" live at El Macombo, and 'Mary Had A Little Lamb" live in Tokyo are recommended, really just anything by SRV live or otherwise. He has a double-Live album called 'Live-Alive' i'd recommend you get it. Also off his In Step album, Tightrope, Crossfire, and Travis Walk, are classics. I believe he was the greatest blues guitar player of all time. He took what Hendrix did and improved upon it. (I'm not sure how some people aren't able to see this) Even Hendrix would have agreed. But his main influence were the old blues guys. Basically, old black guys that sang and played the blues, and his brother. He also collaborated with some artists and made a song called Tick Tock (it's almost like he was too good for this current world) He played on David Bowie's 'Let's Dance album. Instead of 'guitar god' i think he was more like a 'guitar angel'. Btw; The pick-up near the bridge gives you that edgier sound, but the pick-up by the neck will give you a smoother, "sweet-child-o-mine intro sound". Google 'Sweet Child O Mine, and you'll see what i mean, it's a good example of a neck pick-up sound. Peace

  • @kevinmarshall854
    @kevinmarshall854 Год назад

    One of the greatest guitarist that has ever lived.

  • @alanbraun1187
    @alanbraun1187 Год назад

    He's turning the tone Knob , he so smooth at it you almost don't see it. SRV RIP

  • @charlesmarkley220
    @charlesmarkley220 Год назад

    He opens with the basic riff and closes with it. In between, total mastery.

  • @bloodybutunbowed291
    @bloodybutunbowed291 Год назад +2

    Texas Flood live at the ElMocambo is required watching.

  • @vangannaway1015
    @vangannaway1015 Год назад +3

    Tommy Shannon was Johnny Winters bass player.

  • @starburstppl
    @starburstppl Год назад

    RIP SRV Gone, but never forgotten! 💯👍🏼🎸

  • @luissalinas6938
    @luissalinas6938 Год назад +1

    He dropped his pick. He can break a string and sub out a new guitar without breaking stride while playing live on stage, SRV was truly amazing R.I.P.

  • @beetlejuice8431
    @beetlejuice8431 Год назад

    Seeing him live as a kid was amazing I remember walking up to the park as he had already begin to play and the sounds that echoed through were amazing rip goat of guitar

  • @karthain5742
    @karthain5742 Год назад +1

    In my opinion, this is the best live performance of this song he did that’s on video.

  • @momzer
    @momzer Год назад

    Stevie's older brother Jimmie said that he never heard Stevie play a song the same way once.
    Stevie always played with passion and straight from his heart and soul. He played what he felt in the moment. So Tommy Shannon (bass), Chris "Whipper" Layton (drums) and Reese Wynans (keys) had to be ready for anything and they always were.
    When he's bending down, he's changing the settings on his effects pedals. That's how he gets some of the different sounds you're noticing. Like in your video at about 1:34, that's a wah wah pedal. At 1:26, that's another pedal. I'm not an expert. I'm sure there are others who could explain better.

  • @patticriss2238
    @patticriss2238 Год назад

    My favorite Stevie story is about his clothes. Double Trouble said Stevie didn’t have stage clothes and street clothes. They were just Stevie’s clothes. As you see more of him, you’ll understand. Cool guy.

  • @lathedauphinot6820
    @lathedauphinot6820 Год назад +1

    Yes, he has a tone switch and whammy bar on his guitar and another effect or two at his feet, but he’s also a master of tone like no one else, except maybe for his brother. “Little Wing” El Mocambo, please? He’ll leave you speechless.

  • @jasonremy1627
    @jasonremy1627 Год назад +16

    This is a cover of a Jimi Hendrix song. SRV is the only guitarist who can play Jimi as good as Jimi and still make it his own. Besides "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)", which is this song, Stevie also does a great version of Jimi's "Little Wing" which is so tender and beautiful.

  • @EMal-mf9pc
    @EMal-mf9pc Год назад

    One of the best guitarists of all time

  • @cathymcmahen271
    @cathymcmahen271 Год назад +1

    Yes. Coolest person on the planet. Rest in peace SRV. Try "Little Wing," live from El Mocambo. Then there is so much more.

  • @jasoncook4008
    @jasoncook4008 Год назад

    Stevie Ray Vaughan bending 13 gauge guitar strings like they're 10 gauge guitar strings , you gotta love it .

  • @dianesaienni5466
    @dianesaienni5466 Год назад

    His bass player said all Stevies emotions came out threw his playing and everything was fluid and unrehearst. Your right Double Trouble just kept up with him. Stevie was instrumental in being the blues back to the eighties and loved all his blues heros and always held them above himself. The man was a gentle soul and loved by many. His life was cut way too short the same way Kobe Bryant's was...flying In fog.

  • @barrycowan3540
    @barrycowan3540 Год назад

    Your comments are so right on the money - the snarl, the notes have bite, they have teeth - there's something about his sound that's so affecting. The music just flowed out of SRV.

  • @unknownrider3071
    @unknownrider3071 Год назад

    An enjoyable reaction - thanks. He controls the sound with the three volume controls on the guitar and with the foot pedals you can see at the beginning and end of the video.

  • @waynewaltz466
    @waynewaltz466 Год назад +2

    Best Jimi Hendrix cover ever.
    Recomend the original.

  • @RandyTWA
    @RandyTWA Год назад +1

    Great observation about the bass player (Tommy Shannon) watching SRV. Stevie never played a song twice exactly the same and the rhythm section had to adapt on the fly.

  • @zwieseler
    @zwieseler Год назад +1

    The live performance you have to see is Third Stone From The Sun …. At El Mocambo.