Stevie Ray Vaughan Voodoo Child Live In Tokyo 1080P

preview_player
Показать описание
From the DVD "Live In Tokyo"

These video uploads are completely nonprofit, no copyright infringement intended. The intention is rather to encourage those among the audience who enjoy the clips to buy the artists' CDs and DVDs and thus support them or their legal heirs. All DVDs shown here are available at the usual online shops..
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

nice to see folks are watching this in 2024, even as Taylor Swift released an album today

kckss
Автор

He ain’t playing a guitar man he playing his emotions 💯

JHolmes
Автор

There are no words to describe his just absolutely INCREDIBLE

sarahmunoz
Автор

It's easy to overlook how badass Tommy and Chris are - what a PHAT, tight rhythm section

brendanpowers
Автор

Stevie made a deal with the devil. Don't know what Stevie got, but the devil got guitar lessons.

EgbertWilliams
Автор

I love what he says at the very beginning, "Let's go to Texas (his state) by way of Seattle." Seattle was where Jimi Hendrix was from. So good, such a loss, both of them. Jimmi choked on his puke, Stevie got on the wrong helicopter, I still want to cry when I think about it.

timbohan
Автор

What really gets me every time I watch him play is the sheer effortlessness of it all. From his strumming to his fretting to his use of the whammy, knobs and switches; it all appears as natural to him as walking is to everyone else.

DonPasquale_
Автор

This guy was a fuckin' beast. There are alot of great guitar players, then there are god-mode. Hendrix/SRV.

djackthatsright
Автор

There are good guitarists, and there are great guitarists, .. ..and then there's Stevie.

rickdavis
Автор

I am 64 years of age, been listening to rock and roll since I was about 11 years old and playing guitar since I was 15. I thought I had indeed heard it all till watched this video. Never knew it was out there. Stevie Ray has long left us but I must declare without hyperbole or gratuitous flattery, I think this is the truly most distinguished exemplary moment of a man in a state of true perfection and one with his instrument. How I envy those lucky Tokyo fans in that venue that night...I would have most certainly levitated out of my seat. He was there, at the mountain top...he needn't have gone any further.

psychobuzzard
Автор

I saw SRV early in his career, in a reception room that only holds 220 people. Me friends and I hadn't heard of him yet and tickets were only $5 so we went I was 3-4 from him that evening as he melted my face. I've played in bands for years but I never saw/heard anything like him. Then I saw him 3x thereafter. SRV can't be copied or even emulated decently by cover bands.
He has his own style that can't be reproduced.

iamkenman
Автор

Me: *slowly looking towards my guitar after the video has ended*
Guitar: N O P E

theharlequin
Автор

How is it humanly possible to be so at ease at every level of one´s relationship with a guitar? What a phenomenal gift Stevie´s given us all.

ossau
Автор

Japanese fans so respectful. Not a peep until the end. No catcalls or whistles. Made for an exceptionally clean recording! Thank you!

martindizoniii
Автор

Dare I say, this is the best version of

notdll
Автор

We're going to need some caskets in here quick, this guy's killin it

JohnVC
Автор

The only man capable of playing Jimi Hendrix and actually doing the music the justice that it deserves. It's amazing how people like Jimi and Stevie were only on this earth for such short periods of time yet they left such lasting impacts on the face of music. I'm a prime example, Stevie died when I was 3 1/2 years old yet 24 years later you could not find a bigger fan of his that I am. It's a shame that the vast majority of people in the world today who were born in the 90s have no idea who or what true musicians really are

PowerchairGeek
Автор

I don't have to think twice, this must be his best performance of this particular song. I admire Jimmie, but with all due respect, nobody can bring the energy and power like Stevie does to a song. It's pure power, combined with delicate emotions. That's what great musicians do. They move you, you don't listen to them, you experience them.
They sure don't make them like that anymore, at least not what I've experienced lately.

bartaerts
Автор

What is sad, that some people don't know, is that he was celebrating 3 years of sobriety when he passed. He was playing the best he ever did at the end. And stations trying to pass off Blink 182 as classic

michaeldistefano
Автор

This is what it looks like when music is INSIDE of a man, and gets out.

corradocb