Love Chain of Fools! And who's playing those hot guitar riffs in the background? That certain sound we all know. Unmistakably Stevie Ray! Thank U thank U ! ☮️to all.
There's no denying That's Stevie Add that to the list with Bowie.. and Don Johnson thank you for posting I never heard that before and I thought I heard it all ... more please!
Jennifer Warnes "First We Take Manhattan." He played with many people. I wish we had the recordings of him just sitting in jamming with folks after hours or just for fun.
I hear both Vaughn bros and this always makes me happy to hear them together! I can not imagine how much Jimmy misses his lil bro! I'm just happy they patched things up b4 the accident because they had a lil rift where they weren't really talking for a couple years I believe. RIP SRV
Could very well be Jimmie you hear, he played on it too. He played on almost the whole album; there was only three songs he didn't play on. I'm assuming it's Loaded Dice you heard him on, cos he played 6-string bass on Chain of Fools.
Yep, most of it sounds like Jimmie to me also, but there are few licks in there that are more SRV to my ears, I think the producer probably picked and mixed what he liked the most.
There's this one lady..named...ummm...wait a min....oh..yeah...Aretha...and She's got a really great version of this particular tune as well...did u write it,....?
You're right, it's the same song. 'Chain of Fools' was originally written for Otis Redding by Don Covay, but when producer Jerry Wexler heard the demo he sent it to Aretha instead. After the success of Aretha's version in 1968 (it reached #1 on Billboard R&B charts, #2 on Billboard Hot100 and was awarded a Grammy for Best Female R&B Performance) Covay used to play it as a piano instrumental on stage with his own band 'The Goodtimers' (note - Covay didn't play the piano lead, Ernest Lane did). He obviously realised that nobody could sing it better than Aretha.
New tunes to me, and I have been chasing SRV since 85, cried when I heard he died. Cried again listening to Life By The Drop on posthumous album. Love these jump and jive tunes the most, they are the most lively.
Never heard these tunes before, stevies solo on roll the dice is really tasty! Man he was a genius
Love Chain of Fools! And who's playing those hot guitar riffs in the background? That certain sound we all know. Unmistakably Stevie Ray!
Thank U thank U ! ☮️to all.
There's no denying
That's Stevie
Add that to the list with Bowie.. and Don Johnson thank you for posting
I never heard that before and I thought I heard it all ... more please!
Jennifer Warnes "First We Take Manhattan." He played with many people. I wish we had the recordings of him just sitting in jamming with folks after hours or just for fun.
Merci pour ce merveilleux post rare.
C’est du très grand Stevie Ray Vaughan 🌟🇮🇪🇺🇸🇫🇷💫👍👍👍
Wi😉🍻🦅
@@georgewashington3393
🇮🇪🇺🇸🇫🇷💫🐺
I hear both Vaughn bros and this always makes me happy to hear them together! I can not imagine how much Jimmy misses his lil bro! I'm just happy they patched things up b4 the accident because they had a lil rift where they weren't really talking for a couple years I believe. RIP SRV
You're absolutely right, I forgot to say that Jimmie plays on these too...
6:05 That solo was craryz
Legends
thanks for posting this! amazing.
really amazing
❤❤❤❤❤
Sounds like Jimmie Vaughan to me.
Could very well be Jimmie you hear, he played on it too. He played on almost the whole album; there was only three songs he didn't play on. I'm assuming it's Loaded Dice you heard him on, cos he played 6-string bass on Chain of Fools.
Yep, most of it sounds like Jimmie to me also, but there are few licks in there that are more SRV to my ears, I think the producer probably picked and mixed what he liked the most.
There's this one lady..named...ummm...wait a min....oh..yeah...Aretha...and She's got a really great version of this particular tune as well...did u write it,....?
You're right, it's the same song. 'Chain of Fools' was originally written for Otis Redding by Don Covay, but when producer Jerry Wexler heard the demo he sent it to Aretha instead. After the success of Aretha's version in 1968 (it reached #1 on Billboard R&B charts, #2 on Billboard Hot100 and was awarded a Grammy for Best Female R&B Performance) Covay used to play it as a piano instrumental on stage with his own band 'The Goodtimers' (note - Covay didn't play the piano lead, Ernest Lane did). He obviously realised that nobody could sing it better than Aretha.
New tunes to me, and I have been chasing SRV since 85, cried when I heard he died. Cried again listening to Life By The Drop on posthumous album.
Love these jump and jive tunes the most, they are the most lively.