Took an audio assimilation of that there drinkin' music sweated out by a one Fisherman Bob - taking on Stevie Ray Vaughn with the Strat toggle set in the mid position for that Texas Twang and, well, ain't no slouching going on, just needs a real HOT SHOT soloist to "kiss the sky" - I envision a '68 American Blonde with SD hot rails through a classic Boss DS-1, CE-1 and a RV-1 into a 100 watt SuperLead Plexi to achieve sonic euphoria. But I digress, it may not be what this here blues man is concerned about. Us guitarists who have decades of recording and live performance experience tend to throw out these "electric recipes" for the shear hell of it. I play metal in a band called MEDUSA however have moved away from light speed ascending / decending leggatos and arpeggios in favor of "song theme" solos one can actually remember as a hook i.e. Neal Schon, Hendrix, Vaughn, Sabbath. That's what is so cool about the blues, it expresses one's tortured heart and soul and translates to other generes if ya do it right. Stevie also worked VERY hard on his vocals as they were rather lackluster in the early 80s during sessions with Bowie's "Let's Dance". I can hear F"M BOB doing the same gig on these songs, working that diaphragm to get some grit n' sh*t a blasting out the 'ol cake hole. For whatever reason, when I sing in the lower registers, my voice reverts back to its British glam tone, then anything above A440 octaves its Motorhead Lite. Ray Charles on Meth. Hmmmm.
