Texas FloodStevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
Release Date: 08/08/2000
Original Release:
1983
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 384245_CD
UPC # 074646587065
Label: Legacy Recordings
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
1.
Love Struck Baby
2.
Pride and Joy
3.
Texas Flood
4.
Tell Me
5.
Testify
6.
Rude Mood
7.
Mary Had a Little Lamb
8.
Dirty Pool
9.
I'm Cryin'
10.
Lenny
11.
Srv Speaks - (previously unreleased)
12.
Tin Pan Alley - (previously unreleased)
13.
Testify - (previously unreleased)
14.
Mary Had a Little Lamb - (previously unreleased)
15.
Wham! - (previously unreleased)
Performer: Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
Engineer: Richard Mullen Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: This 1999 reissue contains five bonus tracks not on the original release. Personnel: Stevie Ray Vaughan (vocals, guitar); Tommy Shannon (bass); Chris Layton (drums). Producers: Richard Mullen, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Double Trouble. Principally recorded at Down Town Studio, Los Angeles, California and Riverside Sound, Austin, Texas. Live tracks recorded at The Palace, Hollywood, California on September 23, 1983. Originally released on Epic (38734). Includes liner notes by Michael Ventura. This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players. This 1999 reissue contains five bonus tracks not on the original release. Personnel: Stevie Ray Vaughan (vocals, guitar); Tommy Shannon (bass); Chris Layton (drums). Producers: Richard Mullen, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Double Trouble. Principally recorded at Down Town Studio, Los Angeles, California and Riverside Sound, Austin, Texas. Live tracks recorded at The Palace, Hollywood, California on September 23, 1983. Originally released on Epic (38734). Includes liner notes by Michael Ventura. This is a Super Audio CD playable only on Super Audio CD players. Quite possibly the only electric blues/rock guitarist to come near rivalling Jimi Hendrix, Vaughan, who, like Hendrix, died tragically, was so good he was ridiculous. He was lacking in really good material, and his own compositions were mainly guitar workouts, such as "Rude Mood," although he shows great feeling on the instrumental "Lenny." He is much more comfortable singing non-originals, and on this album he covers Buddy Guy's "Mary Had A Little Lamb" and Howlin Wolf's "Tell Me," but the listener is still waiting for the bit where the guitar solo comes in. Poor Double Trouble barely get a look in. Quite possibly the only electric blues/rock guitarist to come near rivalling Jimi Hendrix, Vaughan, who, like Hendrix, died tragically, was so good he was ridiculous. He was lacking in really good material, and his own compositions were mainly guitar workouts, such as "Rude Mood," although he shows great feeling on the instrumental "Lenny." He is much more comfortable singing non-originals, and on this album he covers Buddy Guy's "Mary Had A Little Lamb" and Howlin Wolf's "Tell Me," but the listener is still waiting for the bit where the guitar solo comes in. Poor Double Trouble barely get a look in.
Entertainment Weekly (4/2/99, p.95) - "The late Texas guitarist was a fiercely distinctive blues-rock phenom whose sensitivity and imagination justified his rapid rise to prominence..."
Entertainment Weekly (4/2/99, p.95) - "The late Texas guitarist was a fiercely distinctive blues-rock phenom whose sensitivity and imagination justified his rapid rise to prominence..."
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