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A straight-ahead love song that, from the hands of Stevie Ray Vaughan, becomes not so standard. The artist wrote this after meeting a new girlfriend and he released it on his 1983 debut LP Texas ...
Texas guitar god Stevie Ray Vaughan generally stuck to tried-and-true blues forms and feels, and benefited from one of the baddest rhythm sections in blues history, also known as Double Trouble.
They belonged to Stevie Ray and no one else. Only Eric Clapton and B.B. King seemed to get it, if only because they were unafraid to cut loose, show off, give it the ol' what-tha-hell.
Guitar World 's December 1990 issue was dedicated to Stevie Ray Vaughan, who was tragically killed on August 27 of that year in a helicopter crash. The accident came just as Vaughan was in the ...
Stevie Ray Vaughan would have turned 56 this October. Their last conversation (after that final gig with Eric Clapton and Robert Cray at Alpine Valley in East Roy, Wis.) was a trifle.
Stevie Ray Vaughan's childhood home in Dallas, recently sold for a song. That the legendary guitarist grew up in the home mattered little to the buyers, who purchased it for less than the $159,900 ...