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Music CD - Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble: Live at Montreux 1982 & 1985

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Music CD: Live at Montreux 1982 & 1985 Artist: Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
List Price: $24.98
Our Price: $12.26
Your Save: $ 12.72 ( 51% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Sony
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Hide Away 2. Rude Mood 3. Pride And Joy 4. Texas Flood 5. Love Struck Baby 6. Dirty Pool 7. Give Me Back My Wig 8. Collins Shuffle
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0696998615120 Format: Live Label: Sony Manufacturer: Sony Number Of Discs: 2 Publisher: Sony Release Date: 2001-11-20 Studio: Sony
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Great Live SRV! Comment: Two great sets from the Montreux Jazz Festival fill out this double live album, and it provides a stark contrast of how Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble were received early in their careers and, just a few short years later, with some fame behind their music. I've heard some claim that the booing SRV and the band received during their 1982 set was due more to the house sound being turned up far too high, such that it was impossible to hear Stevie tickling those strings. This may be true...I don't know, as I wasn't there. But by the end of the set he's clearly won over much of the crowd, which forces me to wonder why those fans were able to hear his playing while others were not. In spite of this, SRV's 1982 set is very strong. The band is tight, the playing top notch. The only weakness is in Stevie's vocals, and he doesn't seem to have found his own singing voice that would be so familiar later in his career.
The 1985 set was a completely different story. Having tasted success, the band was very well received, by a roaring crowd, and they play with great intensity throughout.
I've tried to think of any reason to give this less than five stars, and no such reason comes to mind. A great live album, from an artist who is sorely missed.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Phenomenal Comment: These are two classic SRV shows and a good place to start for anyone just beginning to be interested in SRV (good bang for the buck and includes a solid number of SRV staples). As others have written, the first (1982) was a defining performance -- he was booed, but made the right impression on notables (including Bowie). The second show is a triumphant return.
Highlights include the 82's Texas Flood and Dirty Pool and 85's Voodoo Chile and Tin Pan Alley.
Customer Rating:      Summary: 1982 performance is second to none Comment: This is a must have for SRV fans. I would suggest the DVD as well captures a world class performance before he was even discovered or released on CD.
The 1982 version of Hideaway/Rudemood will give you goose bumps or you dont like blues.
ENJOY!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Amazing - Nicely Put Together Comment: Hats off to Jimmie for tastefully adding to the SRV catalog. This album is a true treat for any SRV fan. The story has been well told about how SRV & DT went to the Montreux Blues Festival as was boo'ed. Afterwards David Bowie approached Stevie to play on the Let's Dance album and Jackson Browne offered the band free use of his LA studio, which produced their masterful debut album 'Texas Flood'. This frist disc is from the 1982 set and it is amazing. The second disc sees the band returning in 1985, but this time to cheering fans. This disc and many of the songs are on Alive Live. It's great to comapre and contrast the two shows and see how they had evolved during that time period. It's great that more material has been made available to the public from his early days. The CD is nicely put together with great pictures and liner notes. This is a great addition to any SRV collection and an excellent way to get to know Stevie for first timers.
Customer Rating:      Summary: get it on DVD Comment: I bought this in a 2-DVD set for my husband this past Christmas; he is a big SRV fan. The DVD set is absolutely fantastic. The music is great, but Stevie Ray is also so awesome to watch, especially the 1985 concert. It is a must-have for SRV fans; get it on DVD, you won't regret it!
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Editorial Reviews:
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It's not the familiar, fiery playing of Stevie Ray Vaughan that tips listeners off that this set's first disc has captured an extraordinary moment in modern blues history; it's the jarring, rising chorus of boos that accompanies it. As with previous musicians as disparate as Dylan and Stravinsky, Vaughan's willful tweaking of staid genre conventions initially infuriated purists. Though few could have imagined it at the time, Vaughan and company's July 17, 1982, show at the Montreux Jazz Festival (included here in its entirety) ignited not only a brilliant career, but a widespread revival of the blues as well. David Bowie was there that night, but he was not booing. He secured the Texas guitarist's services for his smash Let's Dance album on the spot, nearly a year before Vaughan would make his major-label debut. Straight from the Austin club scene, the band displays their nervous energy in a set that contains several previously unreleased/rare gems from SRV's early repertoire, including the Hound Dog Taylor romp "Give Me Back My Wig." By the time of this set's second disc, recorded just three years later, SRV was a worldwide star, the boos had turned to rousing cheers, and Vaughan's nervousness was replaced by an incendiary swagger he seemed all too happy to push into the crowd's faces. With the band (drummer Chris Layton, bassist Tommy Shannon) now augmented by Reese Wynans on organ and guest guitarist Johnny Copeland sitting in on "Tin Pan Alley," the triumphant show (11 of the 15 songs are included here) centered on the cream of SRV's first three studio albums. While some of these tracks have found their way onto other releases (Live Alive, Blues at Sunrise), the show's "Scuttle Buttin'," "Voodoo Chile," "Gone Home," and "Couldn't Stand the Weather" are released here for the first time. The set's comprehensive liner notes contain new commentary from the band's Shannon and Layton, David Bowie, early confidant Darryl Pitt, and many quotes from the guitar legend himself. All history lessons should be this riveting. --Jerry McCulley
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