Stevie Ray Vaughanโs Sophomore Album Boils with Authority and Intensity: Couldn’t Stand the Weather Features Appearances by Jimmie Vaughan and Tenor Saxophonist Stan Harrison
Mastered from the Original Master Tapes: Mobile Fidelity’s Hybrid SACD of 1984 Album Plays with Engaging Depth, Detail, and Attack
Like the destructive tornado on the albumโs cover, Stevie Ray Vaughanโs Couldnโt Stand the Weather blows with gale-force intensity, moves everything in its path, and contains beautiful moments of calm at its center. Caught up in the momentum gained from his brilliant debut, the guitar slinger comes on with a startling degree of authority, confidence, and swagger that hadnโt been witnessed in the blues realm in decades.
Mastered from the original master tapes, Mobile Fidelity’s numbered-edition hybrid SACD brings Vaughan and Co. into your listening room and places them at your feet. Theย searing tones from Vaughan’s โ59 Stratocaster guitar, drawl of his raspy voice, and every strategic bend of the strings are captured with extreme delicacy. The soundstage is deep and wide, and the microdynamics simply pop. Welcome to Texas, Stevie Ray style.
By the time Vaughan and Double Trouble entered the studio in January 1984, the bandโs reputation as the hottest blues-rock act in the world had been cemented. Vaughan even declined a juicy offer to tour as part of David Bowieโs band in order to live out his own dreams. And this proud Texas boy doesnโt mess around. Pulling no punches and embracing his role as bluesโ modern ambassador, Vaughanโs scorching 1984 record epitomizes his hallmark styles and moods: brazen, ferocious, mesmerizing, cathartic, defiant, soulful, all at once.
Here, in the form of the jaw-dropping version of โVoodoo Chile (Slight Return),โ is Vaughanโs touching acknowledgment of Jimi Hendrixโs looming influence. And in the hopping instrumental โScuttle Buttinโ,โ thereโs a lingering taste of the guitaristโs playful personality and pyrotechnic skill. โCold Shotโ bleeds with a loverโs scorn, but like a determined fighter, Vaughan picks himself up off the canvas and rears, ready to make another go. Brother Jimmie Vaughan assists on the title track, redolent with the slinky rhythms gleaned from rural Texas bluesman and down-home attitudes.
As he did on Texas Flood, Vaughan closes out the record in high style, bringing the concoction of smoldering blues, sultry shuffles, and jukejoint boogies to a simmer with the instrumental โStangโs Swangโโdedicated to jazz great Grant Green and punctuated with Stan Harrisonโs fiery tenor saxophone lines. Gutsy, gritty, and ceaselessly original, Couldnโt Stand the Weather served further notice that Vaughan was here to stay and demanded to be heard.ย





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