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Stevie Ray Vaughan died seven years later in a post-concert helicopter crash, and today Gary Clark Jr. assumes his mantle, but SRV birthed 21st century blues as sure as music defines the Texas ...
For proof, listen only to that dreadful 1996 A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan, on which brother Jimmie, Bonnie Raitt, Robert Cray, Dr. John, and other old friends tried to find some way into all ...
Rarer gems like “Rude Mood/Pipeline” performed with brother Jimmie for MTV and three songs from Vaughan’s last gig, at Wisconsin’s Alpine Valley, are worth the price of admission alone.
If you don’t already own a copy of Texas Flood, the debut album by legendary guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan and his band Double Trouble, then you should. Once this album was released in 1983 the ...
With the 1983 release of Texas Flood, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble set the rock world on fire. This was serious electric blues, by way of Texas, and the guitarist was an immediate sensation.
To help mark the 20th anniversary of Stevie Ray Vaughan's death (27 August 1990), Stevie Ray Vaughan And Double Trouble's1984 breakthrough album Couldn't Stand The Weather will be reissued on 26 July ...
Which brings us, however, to the second and somewhat less dismissable complaint: SRV comes packaged with One Night in Texas . . ., a DVD of Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble performing five ...
When Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble entered New York City's Power Station studios in January 1984 to record their second album, Couldn't Stand The Weather, they knew the pressure was on. "We ...
The song was written by frequent Double Trouble collaborator Doyle Bramhall and inspired by Vaughan’s struggle with drug and alcohol addiction. Vaughan sings in a quieter voice than usual, and ...
Jimmie Vaughan and inductees Reese Wynans, Tommy Shannon and Chris Layton of Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble speak in the press room during the 30th Annual Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame ...
Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble went back to work during the final years of the decade. While headlining several concerts, the band began work on what would be their final studio album, In Step.
True, Double Trouble wasn't involved on this one. It's also understandable that albums like In Session (1999) with Vaughan and Albert King sharing the stage wouldn't be represented.