Blues Legends

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One of the best parts about being a blues guitar fan are the guitar “duels” that really bring out the best in the players.

This first one is 3 Texas blues guitar greats…Albert Collins, Stevie Ray Vaughan and his brother Jimmie Vaughan. All 3 players are FINE on this rendition of Albert’s Frosty…have to give it to Jimmie though, he surprised me with this one!

Now for an oldie, but a goodie…can’t think of two more powerful onstage blues guitar players than Buddy Guy and Albert Collins…can you?

Comment it up folks – let us know you love Blues Music!

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Watch Gary masterfully re-create the wonderful Albert Collins slow blues “If Trouble Was Money”

While he doesn’t have the “Iceman’s” attack (as you can see from video clips below), he brings his own passion and style to the song.

What makes a blues artist stand out is when you know they are giving 110% – we can safely say that of both Albert Collins and Gary don’t you think?

By the way, this song finds its way onto a new Live Double CD from Gary Clark Jr that has some really cool tunes on it, check it out here.

Now here is the Iceman, Albert Collins (Man I gets so pissed that I never was able to see AC live!)

Votes?

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What a terrific picture of the 3 giants of the blues, each put his unique stamp on the blues, changed music forever and made the world a better place…what more could you ask for?

I wonder what each of these guys thinks (or would think for John Lee and Willie) of today’s music?

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Wish I could have seen these guys all together back in the day.
Watch as Carlos Santana, Jimmie Vaughan, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Cesar Rojas from Los Lobos…dream team? Ever notice how Stevie always played as if his life depended on that specific performance?

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Like a true bluesman, Johnny Winter went out still doing what he loved.

Sad to say that we heard today great Texas guitar slinger Johnny Winter died at the age of 70 while on tour in Zurich Switzerland, the blues music world will take moment to pause and surely celebrate the life and music of this man dedicated to the blues for decades.

As many blues acts do, Johnny was on a European summer tour following the highly successful 2011 release “Roots”. Another album was in the works “Step Back”, that will unfortunately be a posthumous release in the Fall.

Johnny stood out, both physically as an albino with his brother Edgar Winter, but more because of his high energy, fast, Texas-styled blues guitar sound. Honing his chops with the likes of Muddy Waters (having produced albums for Muddy later in Muddy’s life), he also came into his own during the blues renaissance in Austin led by WC Clark, the Vaughan Brothers and a veritable who’s who in the blues guitar world attracted by clubs that included Antone’s.

Johnny had battled personal demons and health issues for many years, but was at his most creative in the last few years as he experienced some renewal in his career as he seemed to have gotten his life together and had leveled out his health issues.

I will recall fondly the times I was able to catch Johnny’s powerful, raw and emotional playing…rest in peace Johnny – join Freddie, Muddy, the Albert’s…thanks for the great times and music.  More news on this topic

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If you are anywhere NEAR Chicago on July 30th then pick yourself up some Buddy Guy Birthday Bash tickets as Buddy Guy’s Legends Blues Club celebrates his birthday in style.

You can pickup tickets here…hopefully they’re not gone by the time you click on this…

I’ve been to BG’s Legends a couple of times, try and fit in a visit each time I make it to Chicago, great club and you will have a blast – guaranteed!

Buddy’s career as a Blues Guitar Player is as varied as the blues itself.  Starting out in the shadow of Muddy Waters alongside Junior Wells – his ascent as a solo artist was challenged given that Buddy’s incredible, raw, live performances scared off record execs – so recording was a challenge.

With the resurgence of blues guitar in the 1980’s and 1990’s led by Eric Clapton and Stevie Ray Vaughan, true innovators, pioneers and raw talent of Buddy Guy along with Albert and Freddie King finally began to receive the attention they deserved decades before.

If you will be heading to Legends for Buddy’s birthday bash, leave a comment and let us know…we’ll live vicariously through you 🙂

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Buddy Guy is one of the few remaining early blues greats that came up with Muddy Waters, Howlin Wolf, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee, BB King – a true legend that is still firing on all creative cylinders.

Watch this incredibly sincere by this legend of the Blues:

This entire interview is GOLD for blues fans, but there are two quotes that especially stood out for me…

1. 4:58 “You gotta put a lot of time into it man, I’ve been foolin with it for a long time and there is s still a lot I don’t know about the guitar” – you can’t expect to just pick it up and know it, or make an impact. Great to hear someone who has been playing the guitar for more than 50-years is still learning.

2. Watch the pure PASSION and LOVE for blues music after 50 – years as Buddy answers the question “What keeps you going, what do you still get out of performing blues music this far into your career” His lips quiver as he humbly shares the joy in just being able to share his craft with the world – that they think enough of him and his music to want to hear him around the world. To watch a guy that is so influential, so iconic and so successful still be happy to be invited to the next gig tells you all you need to know about why people love Buddy Guy – it’s his 100% dedication to pleasing his audiences

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I count myself among the small group of people who can’t help but feel blues music spiritually.

I don’t mean people who take their interest in blues as far as the Rolling Stones or the Black Keys – I am talking about those of us who may have been exposed initially through a mainstream rock band but who quickly discovered a nugget of Gold in the rhythm, power and raw emotion produced in the Blues.

Those of you who know what I’m talking about, you have all had that “Ah- Ha!” moment where you finally put it all together and said, it is the Blues at the root of the music I know I like that is responsible.

This leads us to pay more attention to the songs, where they came from, past performances, and finally the legends, stories and homage that are paid toward history to this fabulous tradition of roots blues music.

At that point, you go back to Robert Johnson, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGee, Lightning Hopkins, Hubert Sumlin, Muddy Waters, the Wolf, Pinetop Perkins, John Lee Hooker and discover the rich history of emotionally-charged, message laden, simple yet deadly blues music that essentially built the foundation for rock and everything that has come since from pop to punk, rap to hip-hop.

At the root of the blues is the feelings and meaning they provide for you…what does blues music mean to you?

  • Authenticity – in an era of falsehoods, there is no mistaking the authenticity in blues music – you can tell when the blues is coming from somewhere real within a performer and performance versus being faked
  • Escape – when many people listen to blues their brain can finally let go of stress, fatigue and anxiety allowing what many will call a “cleansing” experience
  • Sensuality – hard to argue that blues is some of the most fundamentally sensual and raw music ever produced
  • Community – if you have ever been to a blues festival you have experienced the community feeling with both the crowd and the performers – that just doesn’t happen in rock and most other forms of music (traditional country and bluegrass are pretty good for this too)
  • Good – despite them being called the “blues”, may people actually feel better after listening
  • Sad – nothing wrong with working through hard times with the support of some great blues music, hitting rock bottom can be the start of amazing recoveries in people’s lives…often the blues accompanies us and helps us through

What about you, how does your favorite blues music make you feel?  What does it mean to you?

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What more could you want than the spot-on blues guitar playing of Jimmie Vaughan with the Joplin-like vocals of Susan Tedeschi belting a BB King tune (Let the good times roll) backed by the #1 blues backup band in the world – Double Trouble (Tommy Shannon and Chris Layton of Double Trouble – Stevie Ray Vaughan’s former band)

Listen for the incredible timing, soul and jump that this song holds from a line-up that respects the tradition of pure blues.

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I really like these “behind the scenes” views into the recording process musicians use on their songs.

This video shares such a view (albeit still officially produced) into the recording studio during a recording of the song “Stop” from Joe Bonamassa’s 2010 CD “John Henry”.

Notice a few things:

  1. How several overdubs of vocals and guitar solo is done
  2. How Joe switches guitars on the solo – starting with a very clean “Lucille” model Gibson into a much dirtier Les Paul for the latter half of the solo
  3. How Bonomassa even switches from sitting to standing on different parts of the vocal (honestly I don’t know how anyone can record sitting down)

Anything else you notice of note in the video?