The Top Five Studio Guest Appearances by Stevie Ray Vaughan

by Damian Fanelli
Posted Jun 29, 2012 at 7:26am

For someone who spent a mere seven years in the spotlight, Stevie Ray Vaughan left behind an impressive amount of recorded material.

He released four studio albums, a double live album and a Vaughan Brothers album, not to mention enough leftover live and studio material to fill several posthumous albums and a box set.

He even made time to perform on albums by several other artists -- from Teena Marie to Stevie Wonder to Lonnie Mack -- very often with fiery results.

With that in mind, here are Vaughan's top five guest appearances as a session guitarist during his "famous" years, 1983 to 1990. We'll discuss his pre-fame session work in another story.

And just so the Vaughanophiles are clear, this list does not take into account Vaughan's 1983 Canadian TV studio appearance with Albert King -- or anything recorded in a TV studio, a radio studio or a studio apartment. It also doesn't include his 1987 recording of "Pipeline" with Dick Dale because that track is credited to the duo, so neither guitarist is the other's "guest."

05. A.C. Reed, "Miami Strut," from I'm In the Wrong Business (1987)
(Buy on iTunes)

A.C. Reed was a respected Chicago-based sideman who started his lengthy career in the '40s and worked with a host of big names, including Magic Sam, Son Seals, Albert Collins and Buddy Guy.

"Miami Strut" is a funky instrumental that features Vaughan playing a Strat through a Leslie cabinet, its revolving speaker providing an exceptionally "wet" sound. Note how he plays around Reed's catchy tenor sax riffs, making his guitar an integral part of the track. Vaughan's guitar solo starts around 1:22.

Because the album, which also features Bonnie Raitt, was released in 1987, it represents a lost period in Vaughan's discography, since Soul to Soul came out in 1985 and In Step came out in 1989.

WHILE YOU'RE AT IT: Check out "These Blues Is Killing Me" from the same album. Vaughan's guitar solo starts around 2:06. That's Reed on vocals.

[[ Stevie Ray Vaughan was only 35 at the time of his death, but he managed to revitalize the blues, influence a generation of guitarists and produce a phenomenal body of work. His story is told in Guitar World Presents Stevie Ray Vaughan, a newly updated and expanded collection of articles about the guitarist from the pages of GW. It's available now at the Guitar World Online Store. ]]


04. Bennie Wallace, "All Night Dance," from Twilight Time (1985)

Yes, it's SRV guesting with another sax player -- this time Bennie Wallace -- on another blues-based instrumental, a shuffle called "All Night Dance" from Wallace's now-out-of-print Twilight Time album from 1985.

Stevie's guitar solo starts around 3:24 -- and he really pours it on, dialing up his Soul to Soul sound and including several signature SRV motifs and bends.

Like a great songwriter who sometimes relegates jaw-dropping tunes to the cutting-room floor or non-album B-sides, Vaughan recorded this brilliant guitar solo one random day in his career -- and then just moved on to the next gig, never really looking back.


03. Johnny Copeland, "Don't Stop by the Creek, Son," from Texas Twister (1984)
(Buy it on iTunes)

Texas blues guitarist and singer Johnny Copeland (father of blues singer Shemekia Copeland) invited Vaughan to play on two tracks on his Texas Twister album from 1984. On "Don't Stop by the Creek, Son," Copeland, a fine player in his own right, stepped aside to let Vaughan handle all the lead work.

Although Vaughan's Strat was mixed a little too low in the original vinyl mix (It had to compete with Copeland's acoustic guitar), "Creek" is a fun, engaging, upbeat track with a catchy melody and some nifty guitar work from start to finish.

It's worth noting that the original 1984 Black and Blues version of Texas Twister featured two tracks with Vaughan on guitar -- "Don't Stop by the Creek, Son" and "When the Rain Stops Fallin'." However, when the album was reissued by Rounder Records in 1986, "When the Rain Stops Fallin'" was gone -- and it's still gone. iTunes sells only the 1986 version of the album.


02. Lonnie Mack, "If You Have to Know," from Strike Like Lightning (1985)
(Buy it on iTunes)

Serious Vaughan fans got a nice bonus in 1985: Alligator Records released Lonnie Mack's masterful Strike Like Lightning album, which was co-produced by Vaughan and Mack, one of SRV's many guitar idols (Be sure to check out Mack's classic 1964 album, The Wham of That Memphis Man!).

Vaughan plays on several tracks on the album, but he actually plays and sings on "If You Have to Know," making the song the closest thing to a straight-ahead bonus SRV track. Check it out below.

WHILE YOU'RE AT IT: From the same album, be sure to get a taste of "Oreo Cookie Blues," which features Vaughan on acoustic guitar, predating "Life By the Drop" and his Unplugged appearance by five years ...

... and don't forget "Double Whammy" (a new recording of Mack's early instrumental hit "Wham!" featuring Vaughan and Mack duking it out in E), "Hound Dog Man" and "Satisfy Suzie," which you can hear below.


01. David Bowie, "Cat People (Putting Out the Fire)," from Let's Dance (1983)
(Buy it on iTunes)

Come on, you knew something from David Bowie's Let's Dance album had to be No. 1 on this list.

Let's Dance served as the world's introduction to Vaughan, who, with Bowie, invented something new by adding Texas-style blues guitar to contemporary, dance-based pop music -- raising eyebrows, expectations and bank accounts for all involved.

Vaughan plays lead guitar on several tracks, including two of the album's many mega-hits ("Let's Dance" and "China Girl"), but guitar-wise, the song that truly kicks collective a-- is the less-famous "Cat People (Putting Out the Fire)." It's also got the album's healthiest serving of SRV; he solos in the middle, adds Albert King-style bends throughout and then solos near the end of the song.

Note that Bowie recorded two studio versions of this song in the early '80s; be sure to seek out the Let's Dance version (not that there's anything wrong with the other one).

WHILE YOU'RE AT IT: It just feels wrong to leave out the album's title track -- which millions of people can credit as the first time they heard Stevie Ray Vaughan.

Click here to see three more songs featuring SRV!


Welcome to the bonus page! There are supposed to be only five songs on this list, but I wanted to include three extra tunes, each one interesting in its own way.

Teena Marie, "You So Heavy," from Emerald City (1986)
(Buy it on iTunes)

Some people (me) find it painfully difficult to listen to over-produced pop music from the mid- to late '80s -- songs like "You So Heavy" by Teena Marie, for instance.

This particular tune, however, benefits from Vaughan's guitar playing, which starts in earnest around 3:12 (Be patient, it gets better as it goes along) and continues till the end of the track -- as all the other instruments eventually disappear around it.


Stevie Wonder, "Come Let Me Make Your Love Come Down," from Characters (1987)
(Buy it on iTunes)

While the Vaughan-heavy video below is promising, it's also misleading. The finished studio recording of this 1987 Stevie Wonder track features -- sadly -- very little of Vaughan's playing, although he still can be heard, closer to the end of the song. So make the most of the video!


Don Johnson, "Love Roulette," from Heartbeat (1986)
(Buy it on iTunes)

What's interesting about this one? First of all, Miami Vice star Don Johnson released an album in 1986. Second of all, he got Vaughan to play on it. Third of all, the album reached No. 17 on Billboard's Hot 100.

The album, Heartbeat, was a star-studded affair that also featured Dickey Betts of the Allman Brothers Band, Ron Wood of the Rolling Stones, Dweezil Zappa and Willie Nelson. Johnson eventually recorded one more album, 1989's Let It Roll.

Vaughan's solo on "Love Roulette," which you can check out below, starts around 2:51.

Photo: From Martin Scorsese Presents The Blues: Stevie Ray Vaughan album cover

Damian Fanelli is the online managing editor at Guitar World.

[[ Stevie Ray Vaughan was only 35 at the time of his death, but in his brief lifetime he managed to revitalize the blues, influence a generation of guitarists and produce a phenomenal body of work. His story is told in Guitar World Presents Stevie Ray Vaughan, a newly updated and expanded collection of articles about the guitarist from the pages of GW. It's available now at the Guitar World Online Store. ]]


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