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Jimmie Vaughan

 
Gale Musician Profiles:

Jimmie Vaughan


Guitar, singer

Texas guitarist and vocalist Jimmie Vaughan estab lished himself as a powerful blues presence as a member the Fabulous Thunderbirds, and laterasasolo artist. A native of Dallas, Texas and longtime resident of Austin, Texas, he offers contradictory blues that celebrate being alive as opposed to the usual "My-baby-done-left-me" blues commiseration. As the older brother of rock ‘n’ roll icon Stevie Ray Vaughan, who died in a tragic accident at the peak of his fame, he was noted for his musical craftsmanship more than the type of super-stardom his brother had achieved.

Vaughan covered his own material as well as songs such as Johnny Guitar Watson’s "Motorhead Baby" and other traditional Southwestern blues classics. The Houston Chronicle’s Marty Racine wrote, "Think Freddie-King-meets-Booker T and the MGs. It’s a mid-South circuitry that deviates from the usual Mississippi Delta/Chicago lineage and enriches the blues (much as Robert Cray did…) with an icy craftsmanship dedicated more to composition than form." Vaughan refers to his music as "Dallas music" because it reminds him of the music that overwhelmed him when he was a child. His music reflects the Top 40 blues and r&b flavor of Texas in the 1950s and 1960s, with the addition of his own unique, soul-drenched style.

James Lee Vaughan was born in 1953, and by the time he was 14, he had already started sneaking out of his home and taking cabs to a local blues club in Dallas called the Empire Ballroom. One of the employees there would let Vaughan in through the back door and keep an eye on him. Vaughan saw performers such as Freddie King, T-Bone Walker, and other blues legends. By the time he was 15, he was playing lead guitar in a Dallas-based blues-rock band called the Chessmen. The Chessman covered the psychedelic, overblown sounds of Jimi Hendrix, Cream, and the Yardbirds. Guitar Worlds Alan Paul wrote of Vaughan, "His ability to play note-perfect versions of the day’s hits helped make … [the Chessmen] one of the city’s top club and college-circuit draws." Vaughan told Paul, "I was making 300 bucks a week, more money than my dad …. Everyone else in the band was 21, and I was this little kid with attitude and a Telecaster. I knew all the licks."

When Vaughan was 15 or 16, he opened for Jimi Hendrix as part of the Chessmen; since the band was known for its covers of Hendrix and Cream, the band couldn’t play half of its repertoire and opened with Cream’s "Sunshine of Your Love". Vaughan told Paul, "[Hendrix’s] the Experience all came out of their dressing room to watch us, because they thoughtwewerefunny. Here they were in Texas, listening to a Cream cover band, and the guitarist is this little kid wearing a big jacket with feathers all over it. I was just trying to be as much like Hendrix as I could."

Vaughan was a founding member of the Fabulous Thunderbirds. The group released five albums in six years, beginning in 1986 with the platinum Tough Enuff and its top ten single. Four years later in 1990, Vaughan enjoyed his last appearance with the band in Fort Hood, Texas. By the time Vaughan left the band, he had completed his first studio collaboration with his younger brother Stevie Ray. The album, Family Style, was released in 1990. A few weeks before the album’s release, Stevie Ray Vaughan died in a helicopter crash in Wisconsin at the age of 35, plummeting his older brother Jimmie into a depression that lasted for roughly for two and half years.

In 1992, Eric Clapton asked Vaughan to open a series of concerts for him at London’s Royal Albert Hall. Although Vaughan hadn’t felt like touring or making an album since his brother’s death, he later explained to Epic, his label, thatthe reason he agreed toopen for Clapton was, "I just didn’t have the guts to tell him no." The audience response to this series of concerts was so positive that Vaughan returned home and began workon his first Epic solo album, Strange Pleasure, which was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1993.

Strange Pleasure featured eleven songs, including "Six Strings Down," a paean to his brother and other blues

legends, co-written by Vaughan with Art and Cyril Neville of the Neville Brothers. Vaughan and his Tilt-A-Whirl Band toured extensively as both headliner and supporting act, and performed on the Conan O’Brien Show as well as Late Night With David Letterman. Two years later, in 1995, Vaughan organized and directed a one-time concert event in Austin called A Tribute To Stevie Ray Vaughan, featuring performances by Eric Clapton, Robert Cray, Buddy Guy, Dr. John, B.B. King, Art Neville, and Bonnie Raitt. The concert was released as an album and a videocassette, and the single "SRV Shuffle" earned Vaughan a Grammy Award in 1996 for Best Rock Instrumental Performance.

Vaughan’s sound is defined by the presence of a swinging drummer and an organist playing bass with foot pedals, which gives him a unique roadhouse vibe. In 1998 Vaughan released Out There and returned to touring. Musician Magazine’s Ted Drozdowski wrote of Out There, "The depth and simplicity qj his performance recalls the Buddhist notion that the universe’s secrets can be found in a single blade of grass." After the release of Out There, Racine wrote, "Unlike Little Brother’s [Stevie Ray] stratospheric rock ‘n’ roll-ish bleed-all-over-the-frets confessions, Vaughan is grounded like a lightning rod." Vaughan’s remarkable continuity established a bonafide trademark sound. Although Vaughan had been playing since the 1960s, he didn’t begin singing until the 1990s. He told Paul that he was scared to sing: "I was scared to death …. I would sound like a 12-year-old kid…. So I just never did it. Now I’m starting to enjoy it, and I have some nights where I think I’m actually pretty good at it."

Vaughan told Paul that when he was 18 and just starting out in the music business, he assumed a record deal was the reward for hard work and for being a good musician. "And it was a real rude awakening when I found out that it had to do with all this other stuff, like who your manager was and what you looked like." Vaughan eventually came to accept the ways of the music industry world—and the challenges of life—telling Drozdowski, "You know the little RCA dog? Well, that’s where I’m at, with my ear cocked up and listening. Freedom and honesty are where it’s at for me. I’m discovering things."

Selected discography
Family Style, Epic Records, 1990.
Strange Pleasure, Epic, 1993.
Out There, Epic, 1998.

Sources
Guitar World, August 1998.
Houston Chronicle, June 28, 1998.
Musician, August 1998.
Request, August 1998.
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  • Genres: Rock

Biography

As a founding member of the Fabulous Thunderbirds, Jimmie Vaughan was one of the leading Austin, Texas guitarists of the late '70s and '80s, responsible for opening the national market up for gritty roadhouse blues and R&B. Influenced by guitarists like Freddie King, B.B. King, and Albert King, Vaughan developed a tough, lean sound that became one of the most recognizable sounds of '70s and '80s blues and blues-rock. For most of his career, Vaughan co-led the Fabulous Thunderbirds with vocalist Kim Wilson. It wasn't until 1994 that he launched a full-fledged solo career.

Born and raised in Dallas, Texas, Jimmie Vaughan began playing guitar as a child. Initially, Vaughan was influenced by both blues and rock & roll. While he was in his teens, he played in a number of garage rock bands, none of which attained any success. At the age of 19, he left Dallas and moved to Austin. For his first few years in Austin, Vaughan played in a variety of blues bar bands. In 1972, he formed his own group, the Storm, which supported many touring blues musicians.

In 1974, Vaughan met a vocalist and harmonica player named Kim Wilson. Within a year, the pair had formed the Fabulous Thunderbirds along with bassist Keith Furguson and drummer Mike Buck. For four years, the T-Birds played local Texas clubs, gaining a strong fan base. By the end of the decade, the group had signed a major label contract with Chrysalis Records and seemed bound for national stardom. However, none of their albums became hits and they were dropped by Chrysalis at the end of 1982.

At the same time the T-Birds were left without a recording contract, Jimmie's younger brother, Stevie Ray Vaughan, came storming upon the national scene with his debut album, Texas Flood. For the next few years, Stevie Ray dominated not only the Texan blues scene, but the entire American scene, while Jimmie and the Thunderbirds were struggling to survive. The T-Birds finally received a new major-label contract in 1986 with Epic/Associated and their first album for the label, Tuff Enuff, was a surprise hit, selling over a million copies and spawning the Top Ten hit title track.

The Fabulous Thunderbirds spent the rest of the '80s trying to replicate the success of Tuff Enuff, often pursuing slicker, more commercially oriented directions. By 1989, Jimmie Vaughan was frustrated by the group's musical direction and he left the band. Before launching a solo career, he recorded a duet album with his brother, Stevie Ray, Family Style. Following the completion of the record, Stevie Ray Vaughan died in a tragic helicopter crash in August of 1990. Family Style appeared just a few months later, in the fall of 1990.

After Stevie Ray's death, Jimmie took a couple of years off, in order to grieve and recoup. After a couple of years, he began playing the occasional concert. In 1994, he returned with his first solo album, Strange Pleasures, which received good reviews and sold respectably. Vaughan supported Strange Pleasures with a national tour. Out There followed in 1998. Released in 2010, Plays Blues, Ballads & Favorites found Vaughan covering songs by Jimmy Reed, Little Richard, Roy Milton, Roscoe Gordon and others who inspired him when he was first starting out as a musician. The like-minded Plays More Blues, Ballads & Favorites followed in 2011. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Jimmie Vaughan

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Jimmie Vaughan

Vaughan performing in Bowling Green, Kentucky in November 2010.
Background information
Birth name James Lawrence Vaughan
Born March 20, 1951 (1951-03-20) (age 60)
Dallas, Texas, United States
Genres Electric blues,[1] blues rock,[1] Texas blues, jazz blues
Occupations Singer, guitarist
Instruments Guitar, vocals
Years active 1964–present
Labels Epic, Shout! Factory
Associated acts Stevie Ray Vaughn, The Fabulous Thunderbirds, Omar Kent Dykes
Notable instruments
Gretsch G400JV Signature guitar, Fender Signature Stratocaster

James Lawrence "Jimmie" Vaughan (born March 20, 1951) is an American blues rock guitarist and singer from Dallas, Texas, United States.[1] He is the older brother of the late Stevie Ray Vaughan.

A significant influence on Jimmie Vaughan's style was Freddie King, who advised him personally; from Albert King and B. B. King; as well as from Johnny "Guitar" Watson.

Contents

History

In the late 1960s, Jimmie Vaughan and Paul Ray were playing at an East Austin club when future blues legend[citation needed] and Austin, Texas, native W. C. Clark sat in on bass guitar with the younger Austin locals. Clark was on tour as a member of the R&B Joe Tex Band at the time. After playing the session with Vaughan and Ray, Clark changed his mind about Austin blues having died, and two weeks later he left Joe Tex and moved back to Austin, where he then went on to develop his reputation as the "Godfather of Austin Blues."[2]

In 1969 in Ft. Worth, Vaughan's band opened for The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Vaughan lent Jimi Hendrix his Vox Wah pedal. Hendrix broke it, and gave Vaughan his touring Wah pedal. In the 1970s Clark formed several Austin bands with various names, which included as members Jimmie Vaughan, Vaughan's brother, Stevie Ray Vaughan, Lou Ann Barton, Billy Gibbons and Angela Strehli.

Jimmie Vaughan developed his own easily recognized personal style. He formed the band The Fabulous Thunderbirds with singer and harpist Kim Wilson, bassist Keith Ferguson, and drummer Mike Buck. (The original Fabulous Thunderbirds were all protégés of Austin, Texas, blues club owner Clifford Antone). The band's first four albums, released between 1979 and 1983, are ranked among the most important 'white blues' recordings. These early albums did not sell well, so the band was left without a recording contract for a couple of years (during the time when Vaughan's younger brother achieved commercial success).

The Fabulous Thunderbirds got a new contract in 1986, and made several albums with a more commercially popular sound and production style. Vaughan left the band in 1989, and made his first — and last — "duo album," Family Style, with his younger brother, Stevie Ray Vaughan. Before the album's release, Stevie Ray died in a helicopter crash in East Troy, Wisconsin, on August 27, 1990. The album was released a few days after the tragic accident. The artist listed on the album was "The Vaughan Brothers." The album was light, blues-influenced rock, with Jimmie Vaughan singing on several tracks.

Vaughan released his first solo album Strange Pleasure in 1994. The album contained a song "Six Strings Down" that was dedicated to the memory of his brother. He has continued his solo career since then. Vaughan's solo albums contain mostly blues-rock material that he writes himself. He made a special guest appearance on Bo Diddley's 1996 album A Man Amongst Men, playing guitar on the tracks "He's Got A Key" and "Coatimundi." In 2001, Vaughan paid an installment on his (and the Fabulous Thunderbirds') debt to harmonica swamp blues when he contributed guitar to the Lazy Lester album Blues Stop Knockin.'

Since 1997 Fender has produced a Jimmie Vaughan Tex-Mex Stratocaster.

Vaughan appeared in the 1998 released film Blues Brothers 2000 as a member of the fictional "Louisiana Gator Boys" blues band led by B.B. King.

Vaughan is close friends with Dennis Quaid. They worked together on the film Great Balls of Fire!

Vaughan was the third opening act for most of the dates of Bob Dylan's summer 2006 tour, preceded by Elana James and the Continental Two and Junior Brown.

Vaughan loves classic and custom cars, and is an avid car collector. Vaughan has had many of his customs and hot rods displayed in museums, as well as featured in rodding and custom magazines.[3]

Awards

Grammys

  • 1990 Contemporary Blues Recording: Family Style with Stevie Ray Vaughan
  • 1990 Rock Instrumental Performance: "D/FW" with Stevie Ray Vaughan
  • 1996 Rock Instrumental Performance: "SRV Shuffle" with Eric Clapton, Bonnie Raitt, Robert Cray, B.B. King, Buddy Guy, Dr. John, and Art Neville
  • 2001 Traditional Blues Album: Do You Get the Blues?

Discography

With Fabulous Thunderbirds

Vaughan Brothers

Solo career

  • Strange Pleasure (1994)
  • Out There (1998)
  • Do You Get the Blues? (2001)
  • On The Jimmy Reed Highway (2007) with Omar Kent Dykes
  • Plays Blues, Ballads & Favorites (2010)
  • Plays More Blues, Ballads & Favorites (2011)

Recent activities

Vaughan continues to perform. He has also been politically active to some degree. He endorsed Republican Presidential candidate Ron Paul in 2008 and played before one of Paul's speeches at the University of Texas.[4] Vaughan also opened for Ron Paul's keynote address at the Rally For The Republic in St. Paul, Minnesota on September 2, 2008. Vaughan appeared with Boz Scaggs & The Blue Velvet Band at the 2009 Hardly Strictly Blugrass Festival in San Francisco's Golden Gate Park.

Shout! Factory released Jimmie Vaughan's first new album in nine years, "Plays Blues, Ballads & Favorites," on July 6, 2010.

Vaughan performed on the episode of the TBS cable television show Conan that aired December 22, 2010.

References

  1. ^ a b c Du Noyer, Paul (2003). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Music (1st ed.). Fulham, London: Flame Tree Publishing. p. 181. ISBN 1-904041-96-5. 
  2. ^ Stevie Ray Vaughan followed by W. C. Clark Blues Revue, Austin City Limits, 1990
  3. ^ For instance, Street Rodder, 1/85, p.55, and Rod & Custom, 4/00, pp.88-91.
  4. ^ "Ron Paul Rally at University of Texas Draws Crowd of 4,000 — Ron Paul 2008". Ronpaul2008.com. http://www.ronpaul2008.com/press-releases/265/ron-paul-rally-at-university-of-texas-draws-crowd-of-4000. Retrieved 2011-12-08. 

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Gale Musician Profiles. Contemporary Musicians © 1989-2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Jimmie Vaughan Read more

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