Happily, it doesn’t take too long for the band to settle down and loosen up after “Testify.” After one more wordless jam (“So Excited”), Double Trouble turns to their tried and true cover of Hendrix’ “Voodoo Child” and starts stretching out and, by the time SRV is ready to step up to the mic for the side-closer “Pride and Joy,” he’s good and limber. Here, the guitarist just flies up the fretboard of his road-word Stratocaster and does not spare his voice, and the band just wails out a classic performance of one of SRV’s greatest hits – it’s instantly satisfying.
Warmed up as they are at the end of the A-side, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble fire up their magic machine on the B-side as well as on the second platter as well. Soon-to-be hits “Mary Had A Little Lamb” and “Texas Flood” weigh in beautifully on Side Two of A Legend in the Making, but the real thrills are manifest in lesser-known songs like “Tell Me” – which features a truly great, raucous and surly performance by SRV – and a fantastic, carousing rendition of “Love Struck Baby” which hops hot, fast and in a surprisingly similar manner to Flat Duo Jets in its idiosyncratic presentation as it closes the side. That closer leaves listeners hungry for more (“Love Struck Baby” is better bait than anything else) but, happily, they have a whole other 33 1/3 RPM plate after this one to hurriedly put on their turntables.
While the C-side of A Legend in the Making is a bit of a challenge to get though (there is always a doughy part of a blues set, and this is this one’s), the cover of Hendrix’ “Little Wing” goes a long way to helping it along and, by the time the D-side starts, all problems are forgotten. There, SRV and Double Trouble illustrate just how ready they are to be discovered as “Lemmy” cross-wires a Hendrix chord progression with SRV’s own articulate, evocative soloing style before “Wham” lives up to its name and blows the hinges off the album’s doors. True, there is one more song left on the D-side before it closes out, but the climax represented by “Wham!” completely overshadows “Rude Mood,” making it the last afterglow before exhaustion sets in and leaves those listening in a heap.
“So does A Legend in the Making really live up to its decades-old hype,” you ask (as if this review doesn’t prove it)? Yes reader, yes it does. A Legend in the Making proves beyond the shadow of a reasonable doubt that not only did Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble arrive at the El Mocambo armed with both their hit debut album and a bunch of other hits they simply hadn’t gotten around to recording yet, they were locked tight and ready to take over the world. It’s fantastic and while the music has also already been included for prosperity in a box set, having it stand alone on vinyl makes for another great and worthwhile option for those who already have all the other albums.
Artist:
www.srvofficial.com/
www.facebook.com/stevierayvaughan
Album:
The A Legend in the Making LP is out now. Try to track a copy down at your local independent record store.