Total Guitar

STEVIE RAY VAUGHAN

The pride of Texas was the ultimate screamer of tubes

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Stevie Ray Vaughan brought physicalit­y and soul to guitar playing, and he brought it in spades. The soul came through the speaker. The physicalit­y was there for all to see. To watch him play, there were occasions in which SRV would throttle the guitar as though it were an arm wrestling contest at last orders in a Nantucket alehouse. His strings were the stuff of legend – 13s? No, 14s; 17s! Heck, some might argue he used piano wire. Either way, he went down the heavy-gauge route and had the dexterity to manipulate them as though they were dental floss. This, the fire in his belly, and the tone-gussying Tube Screamer playing mediator between Fender Strat and amp give him a range of dynamics that few, if any, players could match.

And yet, there was a tenderness to his playing. There are many who argue that his cover of Jimi Hendrix’s Little Wing eclipses the original. That’s for debate. What is not is that Vaughan, who was only 35 years old when he died in a helicopter crash, he left an over-sized impression on guitar culture in a short space of time. Just like Hendrix.

His debut studio album with backing band Double Trouble, Texasflood, remains a blue-chip classic of the genre, and showcases the range of those dynamics. That title track – a cover of the 1958 Larry Davis number – could convince you that the sun never shines on Texas, least not while Vaughan was in it. The likes of Prideandjo­y and Tellme demonstrat­e what he could do with a groove behind him. Sadly, generation­s won’t get to see him onstage, but so long as sets such as those at Montreux in 1982 are available on Youtube and DVD, more will bear witness to this singular talent.

GARY MOORE

The heavy rocker who went back to his roots

In 1966, when Gary Moore was just 14, he was already a self-professed ‘blues snob’, playing guitar in local bands in his hometown of Belfast. During the late 70s and 80s, with Thin Lizzy and as a solo artist, Moore dazzled as a shredder. But in 1990 he returned to his first love with Stillgotth­eblues, a totemic work of electric blues featuring George Harrison, Albert Collins and Albert King, while 1995’s Bluesfor Greeny was another high-water mark, a heartfelt tribute to Peter Green, tracked with the legendary ’59 Les Paul Standard he bought from his hero.

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