Kenny Vaughan Compilation! Part three. Ways to support this channel. / otisgibbs / @otisgibbs Tip jar for anyone who wants to help support this channel. paypal.me/otis.... www.venmo.com/OtisGibbs Paypal: @otisgibbs Venmo: @OtisGibbs
This is part 3 of a compilation of Kenny Vaughan interviews. I'm hoping this will make it easier for people to find all of these stories. These are clips from interviews I've done with Kenny over the years, so feel free to share this video with anyone who might enjoy it. Here's Part one: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dN3wIgpXijU.htmlsi=610qEfyh8Jl20hYJ Here's part two: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-pQ_0xefROTc.htmlsi=VHyF6aXd-dpajE6-
Ottis,if you could ever get,the Boys from Jason and the (Nashville) Scorchers,(yes I go back to their first tour in California),Us ole friends would be happy as clams!Thank you for all the great story tellin',great stuff Man!
Thank you for these Otis. And thank you Kenny. As weird as today's technology has made the world, it gives the everyman of music access to our heroes like we are in the room.
Kenny is such a cool dude and a truly amazing musician. Could listen to his stories all day long. Thanks to you both. This is important as well in a historical context.
Same,,, such a wonderful way to spend some time. Great story tellers have great memories and attention to detail, and timing, Come to think of it ,, so do great musicians !
I love watching Marty Stewart and the Fab Superlatives. Never saw Kenny smile til now. I'm a huge Kenny Vaughan fan NOW after watching these videos. What a cool dude and a wonderful smile and warm spirit. Love the stories
We saw MS & the FS at UofR a few years ago. Kenny leaned into the mic and said in a conspiratorial tone “ Mavis Staples calls me Muscles” 🤣🤣🤣 if you don’t laugh at that you’re probably dead….
Autotune is the worst thing to happen to music. It is truly "no player left behind". Everything you say is true. Thank you for such great music and wonderful stories.
These are all great. He's one of the very best interviews out there. Always interesting, thoughtful, often humorous, and so many great stories to hear. You can tell he's a genuine music 'nut' and always has been. I never knew about Kenny until I accidentally came across reruns of The Marty Stuart show on cable and saw The Fabulous Superlatives play. Besides all the great interviews the guy is a phenomenal guitarist and a good singer as well.
Kenny Vaughan is such a tasty guitarist but he's maybe an even better story teller! When is going to write that book?? I'd stay up all night reading that!!
Kenny Vaughn talks about music from the standpoint of my generations time frame and travels further into the country influence behind most of the players of the mid and late sixties and on. I really appreciate it!
Shocking how much inside detail KV has about a player's rig (ie Bill Black). He's an encyclopedia (as are you). Thx. Fantastic piece on Billy Joe Shaver's honesty as a person and writer.
Excellent interview. Neil, Billy Joe and Waylon. Met Waylon and Johnny in DC at the Willard hotel during the highway men tour. Two huge men. Saw Billy Joe in Tucson shortly after Eddie passed. Tiny little dive. Talked to him for about 10/15 minutes. Very cool. Approachable. Wrote a bunch of excellent music. Saw Neil in Cincinnati on his garage tour. Copped a ticket on day of show at window. band returned their tickets. 15th row from stage. Crazy horse in tow.! What show! Thanks Kenny and Otis for the memories!
Thanks. Great to put the shorter videos together. Just love listening to Kenny's stories. Takes me awhile to get throughout them because he is so knowledgable I end up looking up and educating myself on a lot of what he shares--the musicians, the songs, the equipment, the venues, the times, like Bar Stool Blues, which I had never heard before.
Once again, thanks to your efforts gathering and recording great story tellers, along with Kenny Vaughn's time tested experience and unique insight, I have learned of another great band about whom I might well have otherwise remained unaware.... Fontaines D.C. Always sharing the joy music brings and its related treasures.... much obliged, Otis!!!
I was at a Marty Stuart/Merle Haggard Tour Concert 2013 and I was watching their buses and watched a Hell's Angels member ride up on his harley and go in Haggard's Bus. Seen the Hell's Angel sit down in the Audience before the Show started. I always wondered how that friendship was started.
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Great to Geek out and hear, thanks. glad the stories are being archived. Hoping our younger generations will one day look at this and realize the great times we lived that has passed. Ostrich tuning! Stones: 29 November 1965 at Denver Col, playlist for 65' . they played so many shows, every month shows. Only August was 3 dates. Friggin awesome. Keith would say, he was touring so much, he had no time to relax and focus on playing and learning, which triggered him to the Beggars sessions to push more into the open tunings. "She Said Yeah" "Hitch Hike" "Heart of Stone" "Mercy, Mercy" "That's How Strong My Love Is" "Play With Fire" "The Last Time" "Good Times" "Oh Baby" "Get Off Of My Cloud" "I'm Moving On" "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"
Amen to what he says about Mojo and Uncut magazines and their articles - those are the only two music-related magazines or what have you that are really worth their salt these days and you never know what articles will turn up in them and they're always good.
Kenny's right Mojo is great I've been reading that mag for over twenty years,and it' often has fascinating interviews and articles about very interesting artists,from the past,if you love sixties and seventies music it's the best magazine around, there are other good magazines but Mojo has had consistent quality ever since they began, they have articles about those weird obscure groups and musicians that collectors love. They are just the best
Otis, I can't thank you enough for these interviews. I always admired Kenny's playing and stage presence but he's a fucking encyclopedia of popular music from the last 50 years. Whenever I can, I get to hang with my buddy Earl Poole Ball who played with and produced Johnny Cash (with Marty), Buck Owens, Gram Parsons, the Byrds, Merle, etc. He tells stories like that.
Thank you Otis so much for putting this up. I love real stories, I love the craft. Reminds me of the Don Marshall stories I’ve heard over the years. I worked with Don in a club level 2 piece, and it was great. Don was the drummer in the Esquires with Young when they were kids in Winnipeg.
Kenny has the best stories on your channel, Otis. Thanks for the always, interesting info! Any stories of Jim James and his short time with John Prine? Thanks
I met Kenny at Gruene Hall in 2006. He is genuinely a music fan. He came back after his Superlatives set, in his Nudie suit, to watch Robert Earl Keen and Cross Canadian Ragweed.
I loved hearing Kenny talk about how good Bill Wyman was. It's a shame that Mick and Keith don't acknowledge him. I worship them, but acknowledge their pettiness.
I dig Kenny telling stories, because even though he's the best of the best,and been around the best of the best,its clear that hes still,a huge fan,of those he speaks of.I saw him play with Marty,I believe,the Marty party (forgive me,many years,and many beers,ago),and he was a hell of a picker then,and has only gotten better...Thank you Kenny for being part,of whats left of my memory bank!
Wonderful, human stories. He probably knows it already, but the story is as much in the Story Teller's telling as it is in the Story itself and this man is a fine story teller.
My Mum said she saw the Stones in 63 before they released an album. Met them backstage etc. whatever.. have a look at the new Nick Broomfield documentary on Brian Jones. He played really marvellous slide on a few early numbers. He was the one who insisted Howlin Wolf performed on American television. “Either he plays too, or we don’t”. Taught Keith a lot. Hendrix’s best friend at the time, Compared Monterey, helped the Byrds write 8 miles…etc
Hey Otis. I was listening to one of your recent videos when I heard you bring to my attention some discussion of people who take initiatives on themselves when they want something cool to happen in their community. With that in mind, I am planning to start a music festival in my area. Something smaller and manageable to start off. Maybe scale up if it turns into something successful. Anyway, I just wanted to share my idea and give a thank you for inspiring me to give it a try. It’s the first time for me. In any event, hope you are well. Sending love to ya. Cheers 🍻
Saw the Stones on that 65 or 66 tour at the Long Beach Arena. In the round. Byrds opened. Only one girl really stormed the stage by climbing down the curtain from behind. Cops dragged her off. I took an 8mm movie but, of course, lost it.
The "Merle wasn't a big drinker" surprised me to hear. I recorded an overdub of Merle singing on a client's project a number of years back....early-ish days of laptop recording. Merle was on tour with Willie and Ray Price, so the client and I went down to the venue and cut Merle singing his part backstage in a quiet room somewhere before the show. Was pretty uneventful other than Merle being a little nervous. Anyway, we hung around for the show.....Ray was great. Then came Merle, and man, when he hit the stage, he was blitzed, as was my client....apparently they had been hanging in Willie's bus getting schnockered. So I just assumed that Merle being wobbly was a typical thing at his shows.....just part of his schtick.
Neil Young and Crazy Horse did a soundcheck gig at the dance hall, Frank Torrres in Montara, where we were the house band in November ‘75. They stole some of our equipment which pissed us off, so we decided to leave for Amsterdam.
Cool to hear about shows before pa's existed...arena shows especially became too bottom heavy as time went on! Even to this day the bottom end is just too much, even in smaller theater settings..
Listening to one of the top guitarists on the planet from the country band that pound for pound has the best talent on the planet (fronted by the other heir to greatest guitarist on the planet) talk about Fontaines DC as his favorite band (one of mine as well) and comparing Neil Young’s use of tuning to the 1st Velvets album blew me away. KV is an encyclopedia-an encyclopedia with technical knowledge that is equaled by his great taste. Someone needs to put him in front of a microphone (Otis is doing a great job) and preserve his knowledge for the Library of Congress. Musicians and historians decades, if not centuries, from now should be able to study this stuff. Vaughan exemplifies the famous aphorism attributed to Ellington and Armstrong-“there are simply 2 kinds of music, good music and the other kind”
Man, I've always liked Kenny, but these interviews are solid gold. In the "Coolest cat on the planet" race, he is right there with Ray Wylie Hubbard. I wonder if they ever worked together.