Triple Threat Revue
Stubb's BBQ, Lubbock, TX
1978-06-??

-source:audience(this source was transferred to CD from mudsters audio cassette)
-lineage:CDR(x2)->PX-W4824A->EAC(Secure with C2,read offset: +98)->WAV->flac frontend v1.7.1(lvl 6)
-audio cassette tapes digitally mastered w/Cool Edit Pro by Clay D.
-sector boundries verified w/shntool
-extraction log file included
-some flaws,some tracks cut short or fade in and out,this was not due to the digital transfer.


CD-1 <67:42.62>
01. Last Night
02. Intro Lou Ann Barton->Natural Born Lover
03. Tell Me Why
04. All Through The Night
05. Ti Na Nina Nu
06. St. James Infermary
07. Kansas City
08. I'm A Good Women
09. Will My Man Be home Tonight(SRV on slide)
10. Alberts Alley(fades)
11. Stevie's Blues
12. Green Onions
13. One Way Out
14. Shake and Rock and Roll
15. You Are My Girl

CD-2 <68:11.70>
01. Every Day I have The Blues
02. Sweet Little Angel
03. I Tried
04. Don't You Lie To Me
05. Texas Flood(cuts at very end)
06. Dimples
07. A Little Thang - same as disc 1 track 11
08. I Go Crazy?
09. Shake And Rock And Roll - same as disc 1 track 14
10. I Don't Know
11. Baby Your to Cold
12. Part Time Lover
13. Next Time You See Me
14. Aint No Big Deal
15. Medley->Stranded In St. Louis->Five Long Years (fade out)

CD-3 <43:00.04>
01. I Tried - same as disc 2 track 3
02. Don't You Lie To Me - same as disc 2 track 4
03. You Done Lost A Good Thing Now
04. I'm Crying
05. Instrumental
06. Last Night - same as disc 1 track 1
07. Come on Baby
08. Roll All Night long
09. Tell Me You Love Me
10. Lucille

Triple Threat Revue Is,
Stevie Ray Vaughan(guitar)
W.C. Clark (bass)
Lou Ann Barton (vocals)
Freddie "Pharoah" Walden (drums)
Mike Kindred (keyboards)

SRV: Actually, what happened...there's two sides of it actually. It's not two different stories it's just two different things that went together.
Myself, Lou Ann Barton, Mike Kindred, W.C. Clark, Freddie Pharaoh, and Johnny Reno were in a band called Triple Threat Revue,
which was another nickname that I'd gotten sitting in at a little barbecue place outside of Austin called Alexander's.
It was a gas station, barbecue, and beer and dancing, bands-on-the-weekends place.
I'd been taking turns...whatever came to mind, playing drums, singing, playing guitar, playing bass whatever,
and somebody started calling me "triple threat". And uh, I left a band that I was with called the Cobras,
and started this band Triple Threat Revue because...we looked at it as a revue because there were actually five different people in the band doing vocals,
doing their little sections of the thing...of the show. So it was like a revue.
That band...of course we had too many leaders...it went off into a bunch of different bands.
Lou Ann and I stayed together and the obvious thing to do was to call it instead of Triple Threat Revue,
call it Double Trouble, because we were both trouble and there was just two of us.
(laughs) And at the same time, my favorite song was "Double Trouble" by Otis Rush. Man...it just made sense

W.C. Clark: I was married and I had to have money coming in at all times. I was still playing as much as possible.
Since I didn't have a regular income playing, I took a job as a mechanic. I am a mechanic by trade, if I want to -- which I don't want to.
[laughs] When Stevie first came to Austin, he'd sit around and play with me, visit us, come over to my house.
He was a real nice, music-seeking type of guy, and he was playing with the Cobras during that time.
He would come and sit in with my group. After that, I started to work. He came down one day where
I was working and started complaining about the way I was treating my hands -- grease and stuff all over my fingernails,
things like that. He said he was putting together a band: him, Mike Kindred, Freddy Walden and Lou Ann Barton.
I said, "Sure." We started rehearsing and put the band together, called it Triple Threat.
We played and had a wonderful time. Then that band? Same thing; everybody started goin' off in different directions.
Stevie formed Double Trouble. By that time I had the group I've got now.

In 1978, Stevie Ray Vaughan left Paul Ray & the Cobras and approached Clark to lay down the monkey wrench and pick up a bass again