Archive | Stevie Ray

Stevie Ray Vaughan – Voodoo Chile (Slight Return)

Stevie Ray Vaughan (SRV) – Live at the El Mocambo 1983 I’ve moderated the posts and reported spam/solicitors to youtube moderation. Furthermore, if you are to find trolls posting comments in here, don’t feed them. Without your nourishment they will wither and die. Simply mark them as spam, and discontinue the pms with such harsh language. youtube is a community driven website, and you, as the user, have the power to moderate posts yourself! Thanks Check out the videos I posted in the Video Response section! Please keep comments insightful and useful.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Posted in Stevie RayComments (0)

Stevie Ray Vaughan Little Wing

Stevie Ray Vaughan doing 2 Hendrix covers, Little Wing and a bit of Third Stone From The Sun.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Posted in Stevie RayComments (1)

The Maestro at Work

I saw Stevie Ray Vaughn at Redrocks Amphitheatre in Denver in the mid-90s with BB King and the Allman Brothers.  He played in between the two and literally stole the show.  All those years, I thought it was two guitars playing, but no, it was just him.  His style is classic free form and his hands have a mind of their own.  Thank you Stevie for making my many road trips tolerable.  Next time you are driving down the road and you see someone in a BMW 325, bouncing all over the car, playing lead on the steering wheel, with the windows vibrating and a big smile on their face, wave because its me “living life by the drop”.  And, I can’t hear you if you honk.

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Posted in Stevie RayComments (0)

Stevie Ray Vaughan – Texas Flood (Long version!)

Long version of Texas Flood by stevie ray vaughn ! Texas Flood is an electric blues album by blues guitarist Stevie Ray Vaughan and his band Double Trouble, released in 1983. Although “Texas Flood” has three verses of lyrics, the song is more of a prolonged guitar solo, allowing Vaughan to show off his characteristic electric blues style. During live shows, he would often play portions of this song behind his back, arousing an enthusiastic crowd response. Stylistically, “Texas Flood” is structured around the common three chord blues progression. Written and performed in the key of G (sounding F# because of Vaughan’s tuning), it is in 12/8 time, or compound time[1], which gives it a “slow burning” feel that is common in Texas blues. en.wikipedia.org

Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

Posted in Stevie RayComments (0)

Advertise Here

Guitar Chord Widget

A add9


Powered by
TheGuitarLesson.com

Recommend Link

Rss Feed Tweeter button Facebook button Technorati button Reddit button Myspace button Linkedin button Webonews button Delicious button Digg button Flickr button Stumbleupon button Newsvine button Youtube button