Archive for the ‘fender’ tag
Fender Super
Fender Super
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Fender Super-Champ XD 120V Guitar Combo List Price: $419.99 Sale Price: $299.99 Average Rating: ![]() |
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Our Super-Champ XD takes the vintage Champ into a new era with classic styling, simple controls, a good variety of clean and distorted tones and unmistakable tube feel and performance at a remarkable price... |
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Fender Super-Sonic 60 60W 1x12 Tube Guitar Combo Amp, Black Sale Price: $1,399.99 |
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Fender '65 Super Reverb® 45W 4x10 Tube Guitar Combo Amp List Price: $1,989.99 Sale Price: $1,499.99 |
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This faithful recreation of the legendary BlackfaceTM Super Reverb® from the 1963-1968 era is a must-have for vintage enthusiasts and Strat® guitar slingers, but players of all styles enjoy its shimmering tone... |
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Fender 5Way Super Switch List Price: $24.99 Sale Price: $16.39 |
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Fender 5Way Super Switch Made by Fender Model Number: 099-2251-000 |
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Fender Super-Sonic 112 Guitar Combo Amp, Blonde¹ List Price: $1,779.99 Sale Price: $1,299.00 Average Rating: ![]() |
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After years of painstaking research and design, we're proud to introduce the Fender Super-Sonic amplifier-the first Fender all-tube amp to capture the highly desirable sparkly tones of the '65 Vibrolux®, the thick tone of the '66 Bassman®, and the smooth and creamy crunch of modern, high-gain amplifiers... |
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Fender 7250ML SUPER BASS NICKEL PLATED STEEL LONG SCALE BASS STRINGS MEDIUM LIGHT List Price: $39.99 Sale Price: $15.29 |
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Fender has been an instrument of choice for many of the greatest musicians since 1946. Fender's popularity through the generations is a result of their design innovations and commitment to quality. These electric bass strings reflect this legacy and are worthy of the Fender name... |
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Fender 3250 R 10-46 Bullet End, Electric Guitar Stings List Price: $11.99 Sale Price: $4.95 |
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The best of yesterday and today. We started with our pure nickel wound strings and added our newly improved patented Bullet end. Designed especially for your tremolo-equipped electric guitar, the Bullet end lends additional tuning stability to the warm full vintage sound of pure nick... |
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Fender Super-Sonic 112 Guitar Combo Amp, Black¹ List Price: $1,779.99 Sale Price: $1,299.99 |
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Serious players desiring modern high-gain tones AND industry-standard Fender clean tones often resort to carrying multiple amps to the show. Now they can enjoy this kind of flexibility with the tone, tradition, ease of use and affordable quality of ... |
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Fender Super-Sonic Head Guitar Amp, Blonde List Price: $1,699.99 Sale Price: $1,199.99 |
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Serious players desiring modern high-gain tones AND industry-standard Fender clean tones often resort to carrying multiple amps to the show. Now they can enjoy this kind of flexibility with the tone, tradition, ease of use and affordable quality of ... |
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Fender Super Sonic 412 Speaker cabinet with cover- Blonde List Price: $1,099.99 Sale Price: $699.99 |
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The Fender Super-Sonic 412 enclosure features 4 - 12" Celestion Vintage 30 speakers in a Baltic birch ply cabinet. Power handling: 240W. Cover included. |
Stevie Ray Vaughan
Early life
Stephen Ray Vaughan was born on October 3, 1954 at Methodist Hospital in Dallas, Texas to Jim and Martha Vaughan. His brother, Jimmie Vaughan, is three years older. At age 7, Vaughan acquired his first guitar, a Sears toy guitar with only three strings. Among the first songs that he learned to play were hits by The Nightcaps, a Texas garage rock band that had a national hit in 1962 with "Wine, Wine, Wine." In 1963, Vaughan got his first electric guitar, a hand-me-down from his brother.
Early career
Jimmie Vaughan's friend, Doyle Bramhall, heard Stevie Ray Vaughan playing a song called "Jeff's Boogie" by The Yardbirds, and was impressed. Bramhall would help Vaughan singing and songwriting development. In 1967, Vaughan first band, The Chantones, played an outdoor show at Robert E. Lee Park in Dallas and began to advance beyond school dances and private parties. During the summer of 1970, after falling into a barrel of grease while working for a fast food restaurant, Vaughan quit his job, formed his first relatively long-lasting band, Blackbird, and devoted his working life to music.
In 1971, Vaughan made his first studio recording, sitting in with a high school band called A Cast of Thousands for a compilation album named A New Hi. The two songs that were on the album showcased Vaughan's early burgeoning talent. During Christmas vacation, he dropped out of high school and moved to Austin, Texas with Blackbird. Their home base was a nightclub on the outskirts of town called the Soap Creek Saloon. In late 1972, he joined a rock band called Krackerjack, but quit a few months later when the lead singer decided that the band should wear theatrical makeup on stage.
In March 1973, Marc Benno added Vaughan to his band the Nightcrawlers, which was recording an album in Hollywood for A&M Records. The recording featured Doyle Bramhall on the drums, along with the beginning of a songwriting partnership with Vaughan. The album was not released, however, and the band traveled back to Texas. A year later, he found a battered 1963 Fender Stratocaster at a music store in Austin. It would remain as his favorite guitar for the rest of his life.
In late December 1974, Vaughan joined a popular Austin band Paul Ray & the Cobras, averaging approximately five shows a week. The Cobras released a record and won "Band of the Year" in an Austin music poll. Three years later, Vaughan left the Cobras and formed Triple Threat Revue with vocalist Lou Ann Barton, W. C. Clark on bass guitar, Mike Kindred on keyboards, and Fredde "Pharoah" Walden on drums. Later, Jackie Newhouse replaced W. C. Clark on bass and Chris Layton replaced Walden on drums. Vaughan and Lou Ann renamed the band Double Trouble, though Barton left in 1980 to sing for Roomful of Blues. On December 23, 1979, Vaughan and Lenora "Lenny" Bailey were married between sets at the Rome Inn nightclub in Austin.
Double Trouble
Tommy Shannon, the former bassist in Krackerjack, replaced Jackie Newhouse in 1981. In July, the band played a music festival in Manor, Texas and a videotape of the performance was given to Rolling Stones drummer, Charlie Watts. Double Trouble then played a private party for The Rolling Stones at New York's Danceteria nightclub. On July 17, 1982, Vaughan and Double Trouble played the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland, the first unsigned act to perform at the event. A few in the audience started booing the loud band throughout their performance since the event was predominately acoustical music. Vaughan later met David Bowie and jammed with Jackson Browne after the show, during an after party which lasted for hours into the morning.
Bowie asked Vaughan to play lead guitar on his new album Let's Dance. The album became Bowie's best-selling album of his career. Bowie also invited Vaughan to go on his Serious Moonlight Tour. During the rehearsal period, Vaughan decided to attend the funeral of Muddy Waters and, thus, could not be found for 5 days. When David Bowie expressed to Stevie that he wanted him to come down a flight of stairs with a liitle dance routine while playing his guitar, Stevie realized that this was not his gig. He was not a "pop" artist and refused to rehearse dance numbers like one, soon after he quit the tour with David Bowie, and went back to focus on his music and career with Double Trouble.
Browne offered Vaughan time in his recording studio in Los Angeles free of charge, and the band accepted the offer in November 1982. In the spring of the following year, music producer John Hammond heard a tape of the band's Montreux performance, and got the band a recording contract with Epic Records. Hammond is credited with discovering Bruce Springsteen and Bob Dylan, among others. On June 13, 1983, the recordings in Browne's studio morphed into Texas Flood, Vaughan and Double Trouble's debut album, and was released to glowing reviews, selling over half a million units. Along with making an appearance on Austin City Limits, readers of Guitar Player magazine voted Vaughan as "Best New Talent" and "Best Electric Blues Guitar Player", with Texas Flood as "Best Guitar Album".
On May 15, 1984, Couldn't Stand the Weather was released and hit number 31 on the Billboard charts. In October 1984, Vaughan and Double Trouble performed at Carnegie Hall. To celebrate his thirtieth birthday, Vaughan brought along an all-star supporting band, including Dr. John on keyboards and his brother, Jimmie, on guitar, who wore custom tailored velvet mariachi suits. His wife and parents flew in from Texas to share in his triumph. In November 1984, Vaughan won "Entertainer of the Year" and "Instrumentalist of the Year" at the National Blues Awards in Memphis, Tennessee.
Drug and alcohol addiction
On September 30, 1985, the band's third album, Soul to Soul, was released, featuring new band member, Reese Wynans, on keyboards. It became their third gold album and went to number 34 on the Billboard charts. In July 1986, the band recorded shows in Austin and Dallas for their fourth album, Live Alive. On August 27, 1986, Vaughan's father, Big Jim Vaughan, died of Parkinson's disease. In late September 1986, Vaughan became ill while on tour in Ludwigshafen, Germany. He managed to make it through three more shows with his illness. He was then admitted into a hospital in London before he was flown to a rehabilitation center in Atlanta, Georgia . Among his addictions were extensive cocaine use and an addiction to Crown Royal whiskey. After being released clean and sober, Vaughan's songs took on a theme of dealing with recovering from substance abuse. Songs such as "Tightrope" and "Wall of Denial", were written by Stevie Ray Vaughan and fellow musician Doyle Bromhill.
Recovery
Vaughan struggled through two more concerts, though the last thirteen dates on the tour were canceled while Vaughan was admitted to a hospital in London. He emerged clean and sober in Atlanta, Georgia. Tommy Shannon also came out clean and sober while in Austin. Live Alive was released on November 15, 1986.
In the spring of 1987, MTV broadcast the band show in Daytona Beach, Florida as part of its spring break coverage. Vaughan also appeared in the movie Back to the Beach, performing "Pipeline" with Dick Dale. He also appeared on B.B. King Cinemax television special with Eric Clapton, Albert King, Phil Collins, Gladys Knight, Paul Butterfield, Chaka Khan, and Billy Ocean. Later that year, Vaughan filed for divorce from Lenny.
In 1988, Vaughan appeared with Stevie Wonder on an MTV special called Characters. Double Trouble also headlined a concert at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. The show, featuring jams with Katie Webster, Albert Collins, and B.B. King, was filmed for a Showtime special called Coast to Coast. Vaughan's divorce from Lenny was finalized toward the end of the year.
On January 23, 1989, the band performed at an inauguration party in Washington, D.C. for George H. W. Bush. The band's fifth album, In Step, was released in June, and went on to win a Grammy Award for "Best Contemporary Blues Recording".
In the spring of 1990, Vaughan and his brother recorded an album together, one that would feature the music they had grown up with. They recorded at Ardent Studios in Memphis and were produced by Nile Rodgers. The brothers agreed to name it Family Style. That summer, Vaughan and Double Trouble went on tour with British soul singer Joe Cocker, touring places like Alaska and the Benson & Hedges Blues Festival.
Death
To complete the summer portion of the "In Step" tour, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble played two shows on August 25 and 26 at Alpine Valley Music Theatre in East Troy, WI, while on tour with Eric Clapton.
For travel to the next venue, the tour manager reserved four helicopters to circumvent congested highway traffic. In very dense fog, the helicopters, not certified for flight under instrument flight rules (IFR) lifted off at 12:40 A.M. Just past the lift-off zone was a 300-foot hill. Vaughan's helicopter pilot was unfamiliar with the area, and did not climb to sufficient altitude immediately after take-off. Vaughan's helicopter crashed into the hill.
According to the findings as reported by the National Transportation Safety Board, the cause of the accident was determined to be inadequate planning by the pilot, and failure to attain sufficient altitude to clear an obstacle. Fog and haze, as well as the rising terrain were listed as contributing factors. All occupants including Vaughan, the pilot and three members of Eric Clapton's travel group were killed on impact.
On August 31, 1990, funeral services were held for Vaughan at Laurel Land Memorial Park in the Oak Cliff area of Dallas, Texas. Brother Jimmie, mother Martha, and girlfriend Janna were in attendance. Among the mourners were Stevie Wonder, Buddy Guy, Dr. John, Bonnie Raitt, Jackson Browne, and Nile Rodgers.
Legacy
Vaughan memorial at Lady Bird Lake, in Austin, Texas. (301547.1774 97452.4228 / 30.263104833N 97.750673W / 30.263104833; -97.750673)
The 1991 album The Sky Is Crying was the first of several posthumous Vaughan releases to achieve chart success. Jimmie Vaughan later co-wrote and recorded a song in tribute to his brother and other deceased blues guitarists, titled "Six Strings Down". Bonnie Raitt's 1991 album Luck of the Draw was dedicated to him. Many other artists recorded songs in remembrance of Vaughan, including Eric Johnson, Tommy Emmanuel (the song Stevie's Blues), Buddy Guy and Steve Vai ("Jibboom" on the album The Ultra Zone, 1999) and guitarist Wayne Perkins ("Big Stratocaster", from the album Rambling Heart). Stevie Wonder included a song on his 1995 live album Natural Wonder titled "Stevie Ray Blues". On the album, Wonder refers to the song as "Stevie Ray Vaughan Blues".
Musicians such as John Mayer, Robert Randolph, Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Colin James, Jonny Lang, Los Lonely Boys, Mike McCready, Eric Johnson, John Petrucci, and Doyle Bramhall II have cited Vaughan as an influence.
In 1991, Texas governor Ann Richards proclaimed October 3, Vaughan's birthday, to be "Stevie Ray Vaughan Day." An annual motorcycle ride and concert in Central Texas benefits the Stevie Ray Vaughan Memorial Scholarship Fund.
In 1992, the Fender Musical Instruments Corporation released the Stevie Ray Vaughan Signature Stratocaster, which Vaughan had helped design. As of 2007, the model is still in production. In 2004, Fender also released a limited edition exact replica of "Number One". The last guitar that Vaughan played before his death is on display in the Hard Rock Cafe in Gatlinburg, Tennessee. During that same year, Vaughan's name is mentioned in Stephen King's You Know They Got a Hell of a Band, a short story about a town populated by late music legends.
In 1994, the city of Austin erected the Stevie Ray Vaughan Memorial Statue at Auditorium Shores on Lady Bird Lake, the site of a number of Vaughan's concerts. It has become one of the city's most popular tourist attractions.
In 2000, Stevie Ray Vaughan was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame. Stevie Ray Vaughan became eligible for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2008.
In November 2007, Fender Musical Instruments Corporation released a second tribute to Vaughan, an exact replica of his second beloved guitar: Lenny. This guitar was given to him by his wife Lenora ("Lenny") on his 26th birthday and Vaughan was very fond of it. According to Fender, the original Lenny was a 1965 Strat that he saw in the window of a pawn shop that he was unable to afford. The guitar is sold with a strap, a case with Vaughan's name embroidered in the fabric lining, a number of brochures and memorabilia and a leather bound certificate of authenticity.
In 2008, residents voted to rename Dallas' Industrial Boulevard, with Vaughan's name being one of the finalists alongside Stanley Marcus, Eddie Bernice Johnson, and Cesar Chavez.
Influences and style
Vaughan's blues style was influenced by many blues guitarists. Foremost among them were Albert King, Otis Rush, Eric Clapton, Buddy Guy, and Jimi Hendrix. He was also strongly influenced by early blues-rock guitarist Lonnie Mack, who, according to Vaughan, "really taught me to play guitar from the heart", Vaughan, who had idolized Mack since childhood,[citation needed] produced and played on Mack's 1985 Alligator Records album Strike Like Lightning and covered "Wham!", which was written by Mack, among others. Vaughan's older brother Jimmie Vaughan has stated that Johnny "Guitar" Watson was the guitarist he and Vaughan studied the most. Vaughan also cited his brother as an influence.
Vaughan's sound and playing style, which often incorporated simultaneous lead and rhythm parts, drew comparisons to Hendrix. Vaughan covered several Hendrix tunes on his studio albums and in performance, such as "Little Wing," "Voodoo Child (Slight Return)," and "Third Stone from the Sun." He was also heavily influenced by Freddie King,[citation needed] another Texas bluesman, mainly in the use of tone and attack; King's heavy vibrato can clearly be heard in Vaughan's playing.[citation needed] Another stylistic influence was Albert Collins.[citation needed] By utilizing his index finger as a pick la Albert Collins, he was able to coax various tonal nuances from his amplifiers. Vaughan also took considerable influence from jazz guitarists such as Kenny Burrell.[citation needed]
Main musical equipment
Guitars
Stevie's main guitar was a cherished, beat-up 1963 Fender Stratocaster he dubbed Number One. He always referred to Number One as a '59. "1962" was stamped on the neck, and "1963" was written in the body cavity. On the back of the pickups, "1959" was written on the back. The fretboard was a "veneer" board (curved on the underside), though all of Stevie's other rosewood-board guitars were slab-boards (flat on the underside).
Number One was 100% stock, except for the five-way toggle switch and the lefty vibrato arm. Around 1980, Stevie needed to have his vibrato arm repaired, and a lefty vibrato was the only one in stock. Number One was the only guitar with a lefty vibrato arm. All of his other guitars had righty vibrato arms. In the last tone position, a push-push pot with a dummy coil was installed in order to cut down on the hum from the single-coil pickups. Different value capacitors were also added so the tone would stay close to the original sound.
Number One had a very big neck and it may have been the biggest neck of any Strat ever made. Fender rated the necks in terms of size either A, B, C or D, D being the largest. The body was made of alder. Stevie preferred his fretwire to be as tall as it possibly could.
All of his other main guitars were vintage Strats or Strat-style guitars.
"Yellow" a single-pickup yellow Strat that had belonged to Vince Martell of Vanilla Fudge.
"Lenny" a brown-stain finish on natural wood and a 1910 mandolin pickguard behind the bridge with a maple neck.
"Butter" a 1961 Stratocaster with a slab-board
"Main" a custom-made Hamiltone guitar, which had his name inlayed on the fretboard
"Charley" a white Strat with "lipstick" pickups made for Stevie by Charley Wirz, for whom Stevie wrote "Life Without You"
Strings and picks
His string gauges, high to low, were usually .013, .015, .019, .028, .038, .058. Sometimes he'd use a slightly lighter high E string, like a .012 or .011. He always tuned down one half step.
Picks were always Fender Mediums, played on the side, round edge.
Amplifiers
Stevie used a combination of amps, all running at the same time.
Two "Blackface" Fender Super Reverbs
150-watt Dumble Steel String Singer with a 4x12 Dumble bottom
200-watt Marshall Major head with a 4x12 Dumble bottom
Two "Blackface" Fender Vibroverb amplifiers (numbers five and six off production line), with one 15" speaker, used to power a Leslie-type Fender Vibratone cabinet with a rotating speaker inside.
His amps were all upgraded to Electro-Voice speakers.
Pedals
He always used an Ibanez Tube Screamer, starting with the original first-issue 808, followed by the TS-9 and then the TS-10 Classic.
Vintage '60s Vox wah-wahs
Vintage Dallas-Arbiter Fuzz Face
'60's Tycobrahe Octavia
Grammy Awards and nominations
1984: Best Traditional Blues Album for Blues Explosion (various artists)
1986: "Say What!", from Soul to Soul, nominated for Best Rock Instrumental Performance (Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble)
1987: "Pipeline", with Dick Dale, nominated for Best Rock Instrumental Performance
1989: Best Contemporary Blues Album for In Step (Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble)
1990: Best Contemporary Blues Album for Family Style (The Vaughan Brothers)
1990: Best Rock Instrumental Performance for "D/FW" (The Vaughan Brothers)
1992: Best Contemporary Blues Album for The Sky Is Crying (Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble)
1992: Best Rock Instrumental Performance for his cover of Hendrix's "Little Wing" (Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble)
Discography
Main article: Stevie Ray Vaughan Discography
See also
Texas portal
List of guitars used by Stevie Ray Vaughan
Music of Austin
Chicago Blues Festival
Notes
^ Bluepower.com, Retrieved February 1, 2008.
^ "100 Greatest Guitarists of All Time". Rolling Stone Issue 931. Rolling Stone. http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/5937559/the_100_greatest_guitarists_of_all_time.
^ Hopkins, Craig. "Stevie Ray Vaughan: A Brief Chronology". http://www.stevieray.com/bio.htm.
^ "Stevie Ray Vaughan Chronology". http://www26.brinkster.com/jakapa/srv/chronology.htm.
^ Moser, Margaret, "Paul Ray & the Cobras", Austin Chronicle, http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/AMDB/Profile?oid=oid:115106
^ Moser, Margaret, "Triple Threat Revue", Austin Chronicle, http://www.austinchronicle.com/gyrobase/AMDB/Profile?oid=oid:501355
^ "Ely Band Gigs From 19771982". http://www.ely.com/ElyBandGigs1977-1982.htm.
^ "Stevie Ray Vaughan". VH1. 2007. http://www.vh1.com/artists/az/vaughan_stevie_ray/bio.jhtml.
^ "Texas Flood by Stevie Ray Vaughan Rhapsody Music". All Media Guide. 2008. http://www.rhapsody.com/stevie-ray-vaughan/texas-flood--epic-legacy.
^ Holden, Stephen (October 8), "POP: STEVIE RAY VAUGHAN, GUITARIST, AT CARNEGIE HALL", The New York Times, http://www.nytimes.com/1984/10/08/arts/pop-stevie-ray-vaughan-guitarist-at-carnegie-hall.html
^ http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/musician.php?id=11034
^ http://www.guitarnoise.com/artist/stevie-ray-vaughan/
^ "NTSB Identification: CHI90MA244". NTSB Aviation Accident Database. National Transportation Safety Board. 9/11/1992. http://www.ntsb.gov/NTSB/brief.asp?ev_id=20001212X23968&key=1. Retrieved 2009-07-05.
^ Crossfire, pp. 26364
^ Entitled "SRV", from the album Venus Isle
^ Stevie Ray Vaughan Remembrance Ride & Concert.
^ StevieRay.com Fender.
^ Future Rock Hall entry for Stevie Ray Vaughan.
^ "Stanley Marcus, Stevie Ray Vaughan make Industrial Boulevard list"
^ Davis, History of the Blues, DaCapo 2003, p. 246.
^ "Strike Like Lightning". http://www.answers.com/topic/strike-like-lightning.
^ Crossfire, p. 204
^ Crossfire, p. 228
^ Awards Tommy Shannon.
References
Patoski, Joe Nick & Bill Crawford (1993). Stevie Ray Vaughan: Caught in the Crossfire. Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 0-316-16068-7.
External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Stevie Ray Vaughan
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Stevie Ray Vaughan
Stevie Ray Vaughan at the Open Directory Project
Stevie Ray Vaughan at Sony Music
Official NTSB report about the crash in which Vaughan died.
Stevie Ray Vaughan at the Internet Movie Database
v d e
Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
Stevie Ray Vaughan Tommy Shannon Chris Layton Reese Wynans
Studio albums
Texas Flood Couldn't Stand the Weather Soul to Soul In Step Family Style (w/ Jimmie Vaughan) The Sky Is Crying
Live albums
Live Alive In the Beginning Live at Carnegie Hall Live In Tokyo
Compilations
The Real Deal: Greatest Hits Volume 2 The Essential Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble
Videos
Pride and Joy Live at the El Mocambo Live from Austin, Texas Live at Montreux: 1982 & 1985 A Tribute to Stevie Ray Vaughan
Tours
Texas Flood Tour Couldn't Stand the Weather Tour Fall Foliage Tour First Tour of Australia Japan Tour 1985 Soul to Soul Tour European Tour 1986 Live Alive Tour In Step Tour The Fire Meets the Fury Tour
Original songs
"Crossfire" "Lenny" "Love Struck Baby" "Pride and Joy" "Rude Mood" "Say What!" "Texas Flood"
Related articles
Discography Stevie Ray Vaughan Signature Stratocaster SRV guitars Jimmie Vaughan
Categories: 1954 births | 1990 deaths | People from Dallas, Texas | Stevie Ray Vaughan | American blues guitarists | American blues singers | American rock guitarists | Blues Hall of Fame inductees | Blues-rock musicians | Electric blues musicians | Victims of helicopter accidents or incidents in the United States | People self-identifying as alcoholics | Musicians from Dallas, Texas | Texas blues musicians | Grammy Award winners | Lead guitarists | Victims of aviation accidents or incidents in the United States | Accidental human deaths in WisconsinHidden categories: Articles with weasel words from January 2010 | Articles that may contain original research from January 2010 | All articles that may contain original research | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from September 2009
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Fender Musicmaster
Fender Musicmaster
Fender Bassman
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Fender '59 Bassman® LTD 50W 4x10 Tube Bass Combo Amp List Price: $1,849.99 Sale Price: $1,399.99 Average Rating: ![]() |
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The '50s Fender® Bassman® was the pro bassist's answer to amplifying a great new invention: the Fender® Precision Bass® guitar. This powerful 50-watt rig could easily compete with the common instrumentation of the day: horns, piano, four-piece drum kit with calfskin heads, and maybe even an electric guitar through a nice, new 10-watt amp! By the '60s and '70s, the original all-tube "Tweed" 4x10 Bassman® was popular with rock, country and blues guitarists as a reliably great-sounding and easy-to-use guitar amp... |
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Vintage style using only the finest tolex available.* Height: 24"* Width: 25.5"* Depth: 10.5" |
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Fender 65 Super Reverb Combo Amp List Price: $1,989.99 Sale Price: $1,499.99 |
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The Fender '65 Super Reverb Combo Amp is a long overdue addition to Fender's Vintage Reissue series. Here's a faithful re-creation of the legendary and highly collectible Blackface Super Reverb from the 1960s... |
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D2F Padded Cover for Fender Super Reverb Sale Price: $74.95 |
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D2F Padded Covers are "Designed 2 Fit" specific models of vintage and current model guitar amplifiers, bass amplifiers, and speaker cabinets. Each are handcrafted in the USA using a custom made 600x600 denier polyester exterior bonded to a 1/4 inch foam padding with a soft brushed nylon tricot interior... |
Back to the wolf den: Los Lobos on returning home, writing new album
Back to the wolf den: Los Lobos on returning home, writing new album
Stratocaster Strat
Stratocaster Strat
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Pink Floyd: The Black Strat: A History of David Gilmour's Black Fender Stratocaster (Guitar Reference) List Price: $32.00 Sale Price: $18.72 Average Rating: ![]() |
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The Black Strat book is the first and only accurate and knowledgeable account of David Gilmour's favorite Stratocaster guitar. Written by Phil Taylor - David's personal guitar technician since 1974 - to coincide with the release of the long awaited and much requested Fender 'David Gilmour Signature Strat': an instrument replicating the look, set-up, sound and feel of David's famous black guitar as it is today... |
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Fender Vintage Noiseless Stratocaster Pickups Set White, 3 Pickups List Price: $199.99 Sale Price: $110.00 Average Rating: ![]() |
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Single coil tone without the hum! Vintage Noiseless Strat pickups produce the brilliant clarity, definition, and harmonic attributes of a vintage Strat in a noiseless package. These pickups feature special beveled edge Alnico V magnets and enamel-coated magnet wire... |
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Fender Custom Shop Pickups Strat Texas Specials (Set Of 3) List Price: $249.99 Sale Price: Too low to display Average Rating: ![]() |
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This is the pickup that redefined the Texas blues sound. Texas Specials boast plenty of midrange chirp, crystal highs and tight bass, along with increased output. |
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Squier by Fender Standard Stratocaster with Rosewood Neck- Black List Price: $279.99 Sale Price: $179.00 |
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The Squier® Standard Stratocaster® is a great playing guitar with a traditional vibe and modern feel. Player-friendly features like a 22-fret fingerboard and a slimmer neck make for easier playing and choke-free bends... |
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Squier by Fender Affinity Stratocaster with Maple Neck- Black List Price: $279.00 Sale Price: $179.00 |
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Affinity Series guitars represent the best value in solid-body electric guitar design. Dressed in eye-popping finishes, the Affinity Series Stratocaster® features a bolt-on maple neck with either a rosewood or maple fingerboard, three single coil pickups and synchronous tremolo system... |
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Squier by Fender Standard Stratocaster with Maple Neck- Black Metallic List Price: $379.99 Sale Price: $229.00 |
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The Squier® Standard Stratocaster® is a great playing guitar with a traditional vibe and modern feel. Player-friendly features like a 22-fret fingerboard and a slimmer neck make for easier playing and choke-free bends... |
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Squier by Fender Affinity Stratocaster with Maple Neck- Metallic Red List Price: $279.99 Sale Price: $179.00 |
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Affinity Series guitars represent the best value in solid-body electric guitar design. Dressed in eye-popping finishes, the Affinity Series Stratocaster® features a bolt-on maple neck with either a rosewood or maple fingerboard, three single coil pickups and synchronous tremolo system... |
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Squier by Fender Affinity Stratocaster HSS with Rosewood Neck- Metallic Blue List Price: $279.00 Sale Price: $179.99 |
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The Affinity Series Strat® HSS features one humbucking pickup (bridge), two single coil pickups (neck and middle) and a bolt-on maple neck with a rosewood fingerboard.BodyBody Shape : Stratocaster®HardwareBridge : Synchronous TremoloHardware : ChromeNeckFret Size : Medium JumboHeadstock : Large '60s StyleNeck Material : Maple NeckNumber of Frets : 21Position Inlays : Dot Position Inlays |
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Squier by Fender Standard Stratocaster® HSS with Rosewood Neck - Metallic Black List Price: $379.99 Sale Price: $229.99 |
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Our Stratocaster® HSS guitar features the heavy tone of a high-output humbucking pickup in the bridge position, with classic single-coil pickups in the neck and middle positions. The Stratocaster® HSS features a '70s big headstock, a slim fast-action neck profile and 22 frets for enhanced playability... |
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Fender Scn Noiseless Strat Pickups (Set Of 3, White Covers) List Price: $229.99 Sale Price: Too low to display |
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Stick a set of these babies under your Strat's hood and take that checkered flag! Fender Mod Shop SCN pickups deliver souped-up fireball feel and time-honored Fender tone heritage with a noise-free design that'll let you guitar purr like a kitten or howl like a banshee... |
The Fender Stratocaster
An icon in the musical industry and one of the big 3 enduring guitars models, the Fender Strat was designed by Leo Fender, George Fullerton and Freddie Tavares in 1954 and has been manufactured since The Stratocaster is noted for its bright, clean and 'twangy' sounds. The neck pickup has a mellower, fuller and louder sound compared to the brighter and sharper tone of the bridge pickup. The Fender Strat's design was radically sleek and its contoured body shape marked a significant difference to the more solid design of the Telecaster. With Double cutaways it allowed players easier access to higher positions on the neck, combined with a single knob to control the volume on all 3 pickups it allowed for easier sound manipulation with the right hand whilst playing. Early finishes on the guitar on generally sunburst however in during the 70's there was a switch towards more natural finishes on the guitar.
The Strat features 3 single coil pickups, the output was originally selected by a 3-way switch, however guitarists were quick to discover that if you jammed the switch between the first and second position the bridge and middle pickups could be selected, and similarly, the middle and neck pickups could be selected between the 2nd and 3rd position. As this trick became widespread responded with their own 5 way pickup selector that has now been a standard feature since 1977.
Buddy Holly was one of the first users of the Strat and used it in almost all of his songs with The Crickets. During Peggy Sue Crickets rhythm guitarist Niki Sullivan wasn't required so he would stand by Buddy and switch the selector switch from the neck pickup to the bridge pickup for the guitar solo.
Since 1998, many high-end US-made Fender Stratocasters such as the American Deluxe, American, Hot Rodded American, American Special and American Standard series came with an HSH pickup rout instead of a "swimming pool" (or "bath tub") cavity to increase the total amount of wood that actually can resonate, producing a more complex tone.
When Fender was taken over by CBS in 1965 players noted a loss in quality of the guitars and they fell out of fashion for a period, however blues-influenced artists of the late 60's adopted the Stratocaster as their main instrument which helped to revive the guitars popularity. In recent times, some Stratocasters manufactured from 1954 to 1958 have sold for more than US$175,000.
Since 2007 Fender has offered a wide line of Stratocasters alongside vintage re-issues, as well as maintaining a custom shop that allows you to build custom guitars to order, but if you're looking for something sooner why no take a look at our collection of Strats here.
Also if you're looking for an interesting read on the Fender Strat we recommend this book called 'The Fender Stratocaster' it can be found at Google books by following this link if not come in to the Guitar Lounge for a free coffee and bit of a play.
About the Author
The Guitar Lounge is a specialist guitar store in Sydney stocking only Fender, it's a Fender players paradise.
Guitarist went ‘undiscovered’ while showing many the way
In a matter of days, Guitar Center’s King of the Blues Grand Finals will unveil the identities of the top five undiscovered blues guitar players in America. These hand-picked pickers will be welcomed into the spotlight by big-name guitarists Kenny Wayne Shepherd, Derek Trucks and the legendary Honeyboy Edwards.




































