Home Up Live Stevie Ray Vaughan Compilations Miscellaneous SRV
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| Miscellaneous This
page includes a variety of items such as recordings Stevie Ray
Vaughan played on, tributes. We took the opportunity to note some
other great blues and rock greats from
Texas.
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| In
Session - 1999 |
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Albert
King with Stevie Ray Vaughan
Recorded Dec. 6, 1983, at CHCH Studios, Hamilton, Ont.
This is more of an Albert King release since it is his band and
material rather than a Stevie Ray Vaughan release. It is quite
good.
1. Call It Stormy Monday
2. Old Times (chatter)
3. Pride And Joy
4. Ask Me No Questions
5. Pep Talk (chatter)
6. Blues At Sunrise
7. Turn It Over (chatter)
8. Overall Junction
9. Match Box Blues
10. Who Is Stevie? (chatter)
11. Don't Lie To Me
Albert King, electric guitar, vocals
Stevie Ray
Vaughan, electric guitar (vocals, track 3) Tony Llorens, piano,
organ
Gus Thornton, bass
Michael Llorens, drums
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SACD
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| Family
Style - 1990 |
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1. Hard To Be
2. White Boots
3. D/FW
4. Good Texan
5. Hillbillies From Outerspace
6. Long Way From Home
7. Tick Tock
8. Telephone Song
9. Baboom/Mama Said
10. Brothers
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| Solos, Sessions and Encores |
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1 The Sky Is Crying (Live) 11:46
2 Soulful Dress (Album Version) 5:25
3 Don't Stop By The Creek, Son (Album Version) 6:44
4 Miami Strut (Album Version) 4:17
5 Na-Na-Ne-Na-Nay (Album Version) 5:10
6 Goin' Down (Live) 8:48
7 Oreo Cookie Blues (Album Version) 10:53
8 On The Run (Live) 8:54
9 Albert's Shuffle (Live) 11:51
10 Change It (Live) 7:01
11 You Can Have My Husband (Album Version) 4:13
12 Texas Flood (Live) 9:10
13 Pipeline (Album Version) 4:19
14 Let's Dance (Album Version) 12:17 |
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From
Amazon:
The blues-rock guitar hero's studio vaults were nearly empty when he
died in an August 27, 1990, helicopter crash. This set unearths a
1978 Austin session track of "You Can Have My Husband"
with Vaughan as second fiddle to his then girlfriend, singer Lou Ann
Barton, but it's undistinguished compared to the previously
unreleased live performances that compose this disc's heart. Vaughan
contributes teeth-baring pentatonic solos to Lonnie Mack's
"Oreo Cookie Blues" at Atlanta's Fox Theatre in 1986 and
brings his bullish tone to the late blues piano stomper Katie
Webster's "On the Run" at the 1988 New Orleans Jazz &
Heritage Festival. Bonnie Raitt's distinctively keening slide adds
elegance to a "Texas Flood" from Bumbershoot 1985 in
Seattle, and when Stevie's older sibling Jimmie Vaughan stops by Saturday
Night Live to play rhythm on a 1985 "Change It," li'l
bro' squeezes out screaming fireworks. But the best cut's a
breathtaking '88 Jazz Fest slugfest with Texas Telecaster blaster
Albert Collins that's jammed with howling, shaken notes and
machine-gun riffing. Both are in top form. The rest is culled from
Vaughan's guest appearances on others' releases or previous
retrospectives and include matches with blues godfathers B.B. King
and Albert King, as well as Johnny Copeland and A.C. Reed, Jeff
Beck, Austin barrelhouser Marcia Ball, surf guitar king Dick Dale,
and David Bowie, whose "Let's Dance" introduced Vaughan to
the mainstream in 1983. --Ted Drozdowski |
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| David
Bowie - Let's Dance - 1983 |
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| Stevie
Ray Vaughan helps out on this David Bowie release.
1. Modern Love
2. China Girl
3. Let's Dance
4. Without You
5. Ricochet
6. Criminal World
7. Cat People (Putting Out Fire)
8. Shake It
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| Pickin' on Stevie Ray Vaughan -
2001 |
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1. Couldn't Stand The Weather - Pat McGrath/Lee Hanover/Tim Crouch/David Talbot/Earl Palmer
2. Superstition - Dennis Caplinger/Bill Bryson/Gabe Witcher/Kenny Blackwell
3. Cold Shot - Pat McGrath/Tim Crouch/David Talbot/Earl Palmer/Dennis Crouch
4. Pride And Joy - Dennis Caplinger/Bill Bryson/Michael Witcher/Kenny Blackwell
5. Scuttle Buttin' - Mark Thornton/David Talbot/Tim Crouch/Earl Palmer/Dennis Crouch
6. The Sky Is Crying - Dennis Caplinger/Bill Bryson/David McKelvy/Kenny Blackwell
7. Rude Mood - Mark Thornton
8. Life By The Drop - Dennis Caplinger/Bill Bryson/David McKelvy/Kenny Blackwell
9. Love Struck Baby - Lee Hanover/Pat McGrath/Tim Crouch/David Talbot/Earl Palmer/Dennis Crouch
10. Things That I Used To Do - Dennis Caplinger/Bill Bryson/Gabe Witcher/Kenny Blackwell
11. Tight Rope - Pat McGrath/Lee Hanover/Tim Crouch/Earl Palmer/Dennis Crouch/David Talbot
12. Lenny - Dennis Caplinger/Bill Bryson/Michael Witcher/Kenny Blackwell
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| A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan
- 1998 |
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From
Amazon
Already a legend among musicians, Stevie Ray Vaughan was bringing
new relevance and popularity to the blues when his career was cut
short in a fatal helicopter accident following a 1990 concert
appearance. His music offered the drama and sheer firepower of rock,
and his flamboyant live shows likewise proved well suited to
arena-sized crowds, yet there was little argument that Vaughan's
fealty to the blues remained at the core of his style. This 1996
concert tribute underscores that common denominator through muscular
performances from contemporary blues masters who readily (and
appropriately) confirm the Texas guitarist as a true peer--it's no
small matter that bona fide influences Buddy Guy and B.B. King cite
the honoree on an equal plane with Vaughan's most obvious rock
forebear, Jimi Hendrix.
King and Guy are among the stars who interpret
Vaughan's own songbook in live performances backed by either his old
band, Double Trouble, or the larger Tilt-a-Whirl Band. Bonnie Raitt,
Eric Clapton, Robert Cray, Dr. John, and the late
guitarslinger's big brother, Jimmie Vaughan (himself a major figure
since his days with the Fabulous Thunderbirds) all pay gritty
musical homage noteworthy for powerhouse guitar work. Whether clad
in coveralls (Guy) or Armani (Clapton, of course), each reaches the
same common ground in the soul-deep language of the blues; equally
important, the choice of material points up Vaughan's sure sense of
blues song form and a penchant for tough, frequently witty lyrics
that fit snugly into blues traditions. The 80-minute concert also
intersperses brief interviews with the principals, with the music
building toward a satisfying climax in three high-octane jams
featuring the headliners in lively exchanges. The DVD optimizes the
full-frame visuals of the original videotaped special, and the 5.1 audio
mix likewise fine-tunes the straightforward stereo mix with some
added ambience. --Sam Sutherland
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| Great
Texan Musicians |
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| The Complete Blind Willie Johnson |
Double Blues |
Ultimate Collection |
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| Tres Hombres |
Second Winter |
Essential Janis Joplin |
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| Hot Stuff: The Greatest Hits |
The Essential Jimmie Vaughan |
10 Days Out |
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| Red Headed Stranger |
Buddy Holly Gold |
Live from Austin, TX |
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