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On March 15, 2008. Smokestack Lightnin' inducted Stevie Ray into the Smokestack Lightnin' Hall of Fame with this fantastic 5 song set. Stevie, a Blues Legend.
Stevie Ray Vaughan/Slide Thing/Live-In The Beginning/Sony
Stevie Ray Vaughan/The Things I Used To Do/Couldn’t Stand The Weather/Epic
Stevie Ray Vaughan/Give Me Back My Wig/Martin Scorsese Presents SRV/Sony
Stevie Ray Vaughan/Chitlins Con Carne/The Sky Is Crying/Epic
Stevie Ray Vaughan/The Sky Is Crying (Live)/Martin Scorsese Presents SRV/Sony
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Born and raised in Dallas, Vaughan began playing guitar as a child, inspired by older brother Jimmie. When he was in junior high school, he began playing in a number of garage bands, which occasionally landed gigs in local nightclubs. By the time he was 17, he had dropped out of high school to concentrate on playing music. Vaughan's first real band was the Cobras, who played clubs and bars in Austin during the mid-'70s. Following that group's demise, he formed Triple Threat in 1975. Triple Threat also featured bassist Jackie Newhouse, drummer Chris Layton, and vocalist Lou Ann Barton. After a few years of playing Texas bars and clubs, Barton left the band in 1978. The group decided to continue performing under the name Double Trouble, which was inspired by the Otis Rush song of the same name; Vaughan became the band's lead singer.For the next few years, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble played the Austin area, becoming one of the most popular bands in Texas. In 1982, the band played the Monteux Festival and their performance caught the attention of David Bowie and Jackson Browne. After Double Trouble's performance, Bowie asked Vaughan to play on his forthcoming album, while Browne offered the group free recording time at his Los Angeles studio, Downtown; both offers were accepted. Stevie Ray laid down the lead guitar tracks for what became Bowie's Let's Dance album in late 1982. Shortly afterward, John Hammond, Sr. landed Vaughan and Double Trouble a record contract with Epic, and the band recorded its debut album in less than a week at Downtown.Vaughan 's debut album, Texas Flood, was released in the summer of 1983, a few months after Bowie's Let's
Dance appeared. On its own, Let's Dance earned
Vaughan quite a bit of attention, but Texas Flood
was a blockbuster blues success; receiving positive reviews in both blues
and rock publications, reaching number 38 on the charts, and crossing over
to album rock radio stations.
Bowie offered
Vaughan the lead guitarist role for his 1983
stadium tour, but he turned him down, preferring to play with
Double Trouble.
Vaughan and Double Trouble set off on a successful
tour and quickly recorded their second album, Couldn't Stand the Weather,
which was released in May of 1984. The album was more successful than its
predecessor, reaching number 31 on the charts; by the end of 1985, the album
went gold.
Double Trouble added keyboardist
Reese Wynans in 1985, before they recorded their
third album, Soul to Soul. The record was released in August 1985 and was
also quite successful, reaching number 34 on the charts.
Although his professional career was soaring, Vaughan was sinking deep into alcoholism and drug addiction. Despite his declining health, Vaughan continued to push himself, releasing the double live album Live Alive in October of 1986 and launching an extensive American tour in early 1987. Following the tour, Vaughan checked into a rehabilitation clinic. The guitarist's time in rehab was kept fairly quiet, and for the next year Stevie Ray and Double Trouble were fairly inactive. Vaughan performed a number of concerts in 1988, including a headlining gig at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival, and wrote his fourth album. The resulting record, In Step, appeared in June of 1989 and became his most successful album, peaking at number 33 on the charts, earning a Grammy for Best Contemporary Blues Recording, and going gold just over six months after its release.In the spring of 1 990, Stevie Ray recorded an album with his brother Jimmie, which was scheduled for release in the fall of the year. In the late summer of 1990, Vaughan and Double Trouble set out on an American headlining tour. On August 26, 1990, their East Troy, WI, gig concluded with an encore jam featuring guitarists Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, Jimmie Vaughan, and Robert Cray. After the concert, Stevie Ray boarded a helicopter bound for Chicago. Minutes after its 12:30 a.m. takeoff, the helicopter crashed, killing Vaughan and the other four passengers. He was only 35 years old.Family Style, Stevie Ray's duet album with Jimmie, appeared in October and entered the charts at number seven. Family Style began a series of posthumous releases that were as popular as the albums Vaughan released during his lifetime. The Sky Is Crying, a collection of studio outtakes compiled by Jimmie, was released in October of 1991; it entered the charts at number ten and went platinum three months after its release. In the Beginning, a recording of a Double Trouble concert in 1980, was released in the fall of 1992 and the compilation Greatest Hits was released in 1995. In 1999, Vaughan's original albums were remastered and reissued, with The Real Deal: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 also appearing that year. 2000 saw the release of the four-disc box SRV, which concentrated heavily on outtakes, live performances, and rarities. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide |