*** Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
SRV
(Epic/Legacy)
This four-CD (one’s a DVD) set drawing heavily on live performances is
enjoyable if not indispen- sable. It provides a deeper
look at Vaughan’s early career, running from his days with Austin’s Paul
Ray and the Cobras to his rising-star era; there’s lots of entertaining material,
including an instrumental duet with his brother Jimmie on “Rude Mood/Pipeline.” But
Vaughan’s best live recording remains the already available Carnegie Hall concert,
and there are other versions available of almost everything here. Still, when you
listen to the compendium of definitive blues licks (to say nothing of a Stratocaster
tone rivaled only by Jimi Hendrix) that Vaughan dispenses with offhand grace and power
— whether he’s ripping through Guitar Slim’s “The Things That I Used To Do,” popping
strings on Howlin’ Wolf’s “I’m Leaving You (Commit a Crime),” or squeezing every ounce
of his Texas soul into the guitar/vocal synergy of “Leave My Girl Alone” — it’s obvious
there’s no such thing as hearing too much of a genius.
— Ted Drozdowski
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