As a guitar player who loves this man's approach. What he's doing with his index finger is incredibly difficult, especially with a set of 13's on the neck. Best vibrato I've ever heard.
13's where only a bit on his career explained by Rene, his guitar tech, he then wen't to a blend bewtween low strings 13 and high strings on 12, on e flat that becomes 12 on highs and 11 on e flat, so is very playable, sorry im kinda tired of people thinking that stevie played his WHOLE career with 13''s, Rene said it, he was destroying his fingers.
If it was the end of the 70's and they had a female vocalist then the band was called Double Trouble. That band was formed after the demise of Triple Threat Revue in 1978. The band consisted of Stevie, Lou Ann Barton and Johnny Reno (sax) from TTR, with new members Chris Layton (drums) and Jackie Newhouse (bass). By 1980 Lou Ann and Reno had left and the band was reduced to a 'power trio' of Stevie, Layton and Newhouse. Since Stevie was clearly band leader and his star was rising, they changed the name of the band to 'Stevie Vaughan and Double Trouble', which is how they are billed on the album 'In the beginning' which was recorded at that time with that line-up. The year after, in 1981 bassist Jackie Newhouse left and was replaced by Tommy Shannon. The band got a new manager who suggested Stevie call himself 'Stevie Ray Vaughan', Stevie loved it cos it sounded like 'Stevie Rave On', so the band became 'Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble'. First time that incarnation of SRV&DT recoded together was as Doyle Bramhall's backing band on the song 'Too Sorry' on his album 'Bird Nest on the Ground' in 1981. Look it up, it's here on youtube. Two years later they recorded 'Texas Flood' and you know the rest.
Actually, that is a huge mistake. He was not a Humbucker fan but he played the shit out of a 335 depending on what he was feeling that day. I wish I had a recording of him and Larry Carlton. It was a hot ass mess because Larry could not really understand what Stevie was doing. Larry being a practitioner of notation and Stevie was a master of the pentatonic scale. That combo is like having Barbra Streisand try and keep up with Mavis Staples. It wont work because Barbra prob didn't have any black friends growing up. Stevie had a ton.
This is crazy! I mean me seeing this picture! I've seen him 3 times, met him once, and never seen a Gibson guitar in his hands! It looks weird to me. But I'm pretty freakin' weird 🙃
Hehe. You never seen the cover of "Soul to Soul" before? The photo I used is an outtake from the cover photo session, and he's holding the same guitar...
@@afloydianslip8613 how did that "Slip" by me? Sorry, couldn't resist... I remember that album name, but I didn't have it. Do you think that it's weird that I never saw a Gibson anything in his hands on stage? Did someone take a poll and the majority said "Strat only!" lol
@@johnsallee7824 Big brother Jimmie inherited them all. The storage facility he had everything stored in was burgled a few years back (Number one wasn't stolen) so he moved everything to a bank vault. Every once in a while he lets them out so people can see them, but they're not played much.
I would state without hesitation that the technique is perfect but much too clean to reflect Stevie on stage. Its a pity that this was never released. Still got all my LP's. A typical studio version where everybody behave like an angel while keeping the demons checked.... sadly !
Jimmie Vaughan has them, and occasionally shows them in exhibits . The exception to this is that Guitar Center bought the strat he played “Lenny” and “Riviera Paradise” (the strat is named “Lenny”) and they also bought his “Hamiltone” guitar (the one he plays on the “Couldn’t Stand The Weather “ video, with his name inlaid on the fretboard) and both of those guitars are on display, every day , at the Guitar Center off Anderson Lane in Austin , TX
Well. his drug and alcohol addiction nearly killed him in 1986. He collapsed on stage in England and realised he had a choice... clean up or die. So one could argue that he was fairly broken then. He chose to clean up, and imho his playing improved immensely, even though I didn't think it could get any better. But as far as this particular song is concerned, there were technical issues that plagued the recording. The guitar fell out for about 30 seconds during the second chorus (just before the guitar solo at 2:40) and Stevie stopped singing while they figured out what was wrong. I edited that bit out and substituted it with the third (?) chorus which was fine. There was also a very audible bang/click noise at about 1:15 that irritated the f*** out of me so I edited that out too.
@@afloydianslip8613 Well put. My comment was intended mostly as humor solely to the title word of "repaired". While there is not one of us on this planet that are not broken in some way... SRV was nearly perfect in his art. Growing up in Austin, I was fortunate enough to see SRV numerous times... before and after '86. Crossed paths with him on occasion and always admired his talent. While he himself, as are all of us, was in need of repair... his music and talent never was.
This is not the best version of this song. Chech out his live performance on the riverboat president in New Orleans. He has a keyboard player on that performance
I never claimed it was. Personally I like them both, and I'm one of those ones that believes that bringing in Reese Wynans (the keyboard player) was one of the best things that Stevie did, it added a new dimension to their work. Reese was actually bought in during these sessions, obviously before this 'patched' version was recorded, since he didn't play on it.
Hehe. He's not playing it in the photo either; it's not plugged in. The guitar isn't photoshopped; it was a prop for the photo session. The photo is from the 'Soul to Soul' album cover photo session - guitar and all.
His vocals are underrated. He has a soulful, blues voice. I've heard the live rendition before. It's gold.
The drummer, bass, keys all realized that all they had to do was keep perfect time because they were performing with someone with the touch.
Stevie rides with me every day and I don’t care who hears it.
I play his cds loud no matter who is with me.....
Shame the world lost this guy, he really was one of a kind.
The Best Version I’ve yet to hear. Srv my number 1. For ever.
FOREVER...
did you hear the one on the river boat live
@@lennyluzitano8920 Yes Loved it a long time. its a great Version too
Hell Yeah!!!
Stevie Ray's vocals are stellar. His playing is sharp and mean to match the lyrics.
Stephen Ray Vaughn is really been missed. I see why the sky is crying
You can dig gold the ground, but this is timeless.
First song of the year 2023 that I listen too. One of my favs of SRV indeed. Gotmoretone. Congrats
Good for you. I remember when it came out. We all get old if we’re lucky!
Rest in Paradise SRV
This song is one of the Greatest song I'm Leaving You and I have Let Go of something that wasn't good for me Feels Amazing MissyaStevieRay ❤❤❤
The one & only Stevie Ray Vaughan, absolutely the best version of this song I've ever heard. Thank you!!!!!
I was fortunate enough to see him in concert about 1.5 years before his death. 😞
....lucky!!....
The GOAT!
I love this guy
Greatest of all time
RIP Stevie Ray Vaughan 😢
I believe one of the genius things about Stevie is how he got such a "Monster" tone for essentially playing with very little "dirt"!!!🤔🤔🤔
GREAT LYRICS.....you gotta love this song...Stevie Ray lives on....nice eq on the kick drum...
One of the best of all time!!
This is the best version out there
Healings upstairs, Kansas City MO. 1983 I believe. Imo the best out there, it’s raw and straight to the point
Howlin wolf
@@Colinshreds69 ua-cam.com/video/Stpxg2R6zlI/v-deo.html check out this version the solo is so good
ua-cam.com/video/jaLYalIEF68/v-deo.html
This Is the best version
@@Colinshreds69 💯
Seen him twice live fantastic
....hoping he comes to slaithwaite......it's a lovely
As a guitar player who loves this man's approach. What he's doing with his index finger is incredibly difficult, especially with a set of 13's on the neck.
Best vibrato I've ever heard.
13's where only a bit on his career explained by Rene, his guitar tech, he then wen't to a blend bewtween low strings 13 and high strings on 12, on e flat that becomes 12 on highs and 11 on e flat, so is very playable, sorry im kinda tired of people thinking that stevie played his WHOLE career with 13''s, Rene said it, he was destroying his fingers.
yup, pretty hard core, scary thing is he can go on all night playing like this
Yup. Superhuman finger/forearm strength and control
@@kaiselkamish9904 Thanks I was getting ready to try the barbed wire 13's !
BB's vibrato too!!!
This is Fire 🔥
Love it
Put on your headphones…… !
Just OMG!
After hendrix..This is the guy
SRV better than Hendrix..so is KWS..
❤❤❤
That Dimension D chorus on full display here.
LIKE TO HEAR HIM PLAY THAT GIBSON 335 HE,S A STRAT MAN, JUST SAYIN.
Howlin. Wolf. Cover . Powerful. !
Super guitarrista faz falta
where r u from home?St.Paul,mn.i everyone gets the blues,ive always said blues arnt born....ThERE EARNED
Guitar Player Extrodinaire
*He meant it !*
Stevie played clubs in Dallas late 70's but I forget if the band was called Double Trouble back then
If it was the end of the 70's and they had a female vocalist then the band was called Double Trouble. That band was formed after the demise of Triple Threat Revue in 1978. The band consisted of Stevie, Lou Ann Barton and Johnny Reno (sax) from TTR, with new members Chris Layton (drums) and Jackie Newhouse (bass). By 1980 Lou Ann and Reno had left and the band was reduced to a 'power trio' of Stevie, Layton and Newhouse. Since Stevie was clearly band leader and his star was rising, they changed the name of the band to 'Stevie Vaughan and Double Trouble', which is how they are billed on the album 'In the beginning' which was recorded at that time with that line-up. The year after, in 1981 bassist Jackie Newhouse left and was replaced by Tommy Shannon. The band got a new manager who suggested Stevie call himself 'Stevie Ray Vaughan', Stevie loved it cos it sounded like 'Stevie Rave On', so the band became 'Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble'. First time that incarnation of SRV&DT recoded together was as Doyle Bramhall's backing band on the song 'Too Sorry' on his album 'Bird Nest on the Ground' in 1981. Look it up, it's here on youtube. Two years later they recorded 'Texas Flood' and you know the rest.
have a shirt,," DOUBLE TROUBLE on the back...
rock on!!!
Thx for the info.
super!!!
Thanks
he's definitely not playing that on a 335, but nice to see him holding one
Actually, that is a huge mistake. He was not a Humbucker fan but he played the shit out of a 335 depending on what he was feeling that day. I wish I had a recording of him and Larry Carlton. It was a hot ass mess because Larry could not really understand what Stevie was doing. Larry being a practitioner of notation and Stevie was a master of the pentatonic scale. That combo is like having Barbra Streisand try and keep up with Mavis Staples. It wont work because Barbra prob didn't have any black friends growing up. Stevie had a ton.
He had a black 1968 and he also had a red one. The one in this photo I had not seen but sure does not mean it was not his.
So ROUDY !!!
Well that's what all my neighbours say 😎🇦🇺
Top 🤟🏼🎸😎🤠♥️
Loved KWS version of this tune. But damn son, this SRV take is 10 times nastier !
(With apologies to Mr. Chester Burnett, of course.)
Nice
❤
Never heard this before.. thank you … SRV .. all day n night …
This is crazy! I mean me seeing this picture! I've seen him 3 times, met him once, and never seen a Gibson guitar in his hands! It looks weird to me. But I'm pretty freakin' weird 🙃
Hehe. You never seen the cover of "Soul to Soul" before? The photo I used is an outtake from the cover photo session, and he's holding the same guitar...
@@afloydianslip8613 how did that "Slip" by me? Sorry, couldn't resist...
I remember that album name, but I didn't have it. Do you think that it's weird that I never saw a Gibson anything in his hands on stage? Did someone take a poll and the majority said "Strat only!" lol
@@johnsallee7824 Not at all weird, you're not the first to say it. There's a reason the guitar he called 'number one' was a Strat.
@@afloydianslip8613 Any idea who has Stevie's guitars?
@@johnsallee7824 Big brother Jimmie inherited them all. The storage facility he had everything stored in was burgled a few years back (Number one wasn't stolen) so he moved everything to a bank vault. Every once in a while he lets them out so people can see them, but they're not played much.
Un ovni aussi !
Talking about narcissists now ! 3:29
I would state without hesitation that the technique is perfect but much too clean to reflect Stevie on stage. Its a pity that this was never released. Still got all my LP's. A typical studio version where everybody behave like an angel while keeping the demons checked.... sadly !
🇨🇱❤️
🔥🔥🔥
Wicked
Cool seeing a 335 in his hands
Speaking of guitars, I wonder where his are. Jimmy? There should be a Stevie Ray Vaughn museum...
Jimmie Vaughan has them, and occasionally shows them in exhibits . The exception to this is that Guitar Center bought the strat he played “Lenny” and “Riviera Paradise” (the strat is named “Lenny”) and they also bought his “Hamiltone” guitar (the one he plays on the “Couldn’t Stand The Weather “ video, with his name inlaid on the fretboard) and both of those guitars are on display, every day , at the Guitar Center off Anderson Lane in Austin , TX
Repaired from what?.... SRV was never broke!
Well. his drug and alcohol addiction nearly killed him in 1986. He collapsed on stage in England and realised he had a choice... clean up or die. So one could argue that he was fairly broken then. He chose to clean up, and imho his playing improved immensely, even though I didn't think it could get any better. But as far as this particular song is concerned, there were technical issues that plagued the recording. The guitar fell out for about 30 seconds during the second chorus (just before the guitar solo at 2:40) and Stevie stopped singing while they figured out what was wrong. I edited that bit out and substituted it with the third (?) chorus which was fine. There was also a very audible bang/click noise at about 1:15 that irritated the f*** out of me so I edited that out too.
@@afloydianslip8613 Well put. My comment was intended mostly as humor solely to the title word of "repaired". While there is not one of us on this planet that are not broken in some way... SRV was nearly perfect in his art. Growing up in Austin, I was fortunate enough to see SRV numerous times... before and after '86. Crossed paths with him on occasion and always admired his talent. While he himself, as are all of us, was in need of repair... his music and talent never was.
Play that Howlin Wolf classic!!!
So much better than Howlins version..
@@cathyr2419 wolf's version was the original classic to be later borrowed from. It was the unvarnished standard bearer...
Comment a Crime never plays. Goes to Voodoo Child.
I wonder if he's playing his Stratocaster, it doesn't sound like it,
I wonder if he is using an octavia effect .
Sing on Brother,,,, play on DRUMMER !!☆☆ sadly missed ☆☆☆
No way that's Chris Layton on drums. But I love the rare cut of SRV.
Who else would it be? It's from 1985. Chris Layton was Double Trouble's only drummer from about 1978 to the end.
@@afloydianslip8613 could just be the way it is mixed but my ears say that is not Chris Layton or any other seasoned blues drummer.
@@afloydianslip8613 IDK but the drums don't swing like Chris or any blues drummer would play them. Did you do some quantization or timing adjustments?
Esto es en las sesiones de grabacion de Soul to Soul, Stevie toco la bateria
was this played on a 335?
I'm pretty sure this is his strat.. Would like to see/hear that 335
I seriously doubt it, the ES335 is a hollow-body semi-acoustic. This has the fat bass sound of a Strat. IMHO.
I was wondering but you never know with production anymore...
This is not the best version of this song. Chech out his live performance on the riverboat president in New Orleans. He has a keyboard player on that performance
I never claimed it was. Personally I like them both, and I'm one of those ones that believes that bringing in Reese Wynans (the keyboard player) was one of the best things that Stevie did, it added a new dimension to their work. Reese was actually bought in during these sessions, obviously before this 'patched' version was recorded, since he didn't play on it.
This must be a early version?
From the 'Soul to Soul' sessions in 1985. Not that early, he played it on stage at least as early as 1980.
Cool, i have the live at fitzgeralds in early 80s was an amazing set
New Year's Mardi Gras
On the steamer boat concert?
It sounds a little bitty, teeny,weeny,teensy ,
weensy, minute resemblance. Like Alice Cooper's
"School's out for Summer"
My fingers hurts, It sounds like .14 to .60, normally nobody needs more than .12
LOL. "It's flooding down in Texas, all the telephone lines are down". So Stevie picked them up and strung his guitar with them :)
Lol
It's like SRV plays from the heart regardless of string gauge. 😎
he used .12 to .17
I've only ever seen 1 photo of his fret hand, and it looked like a mummies hand all Calloused, the Whole Hand was this way!
@@paulhaye3725 Like that!
This picture is photoshop. He never played that guitar! 😂 jk
Hehe. He's not playing it in the photo either; it's not plugged in. The guitar isn't photoshopped; it was a prop for the photo session. The photo is from the 'Soul to Soul' album cover photo session - guitar and all.
Yo that srv tone is crazy
опа! стиви не со стратом!🤣
hell yah u got more secret tape of the geats? holy s!**! Share an share alike,i ve always lived by L.L.REZ.i gotta Majon