In Session

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In Session album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 63:48

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The One Album To Have

Friar_Tuck

If there is one album to have in your Blues collection it is this one. Albert King will keep you spellbound with his take on the Blues. Sit back, chill and enjoy.

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What a FIND!

HeyStarr

I'm blown away at how great this album is! SRV is already one of my all-time favorites. Hearing Albert King play and sing with Stevie equals pure genius.

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What a two-fer!!!

cnpondy

What an outstanding live recording between legend and soon to be legend! You can tell by the conversation between songs that Stevie Ray was in the presence of one of his mentors, and someone who inspired him a great deal! I have a feeling that Albert King left the show with a great deal of respect for Stevie Ray as well!

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Musical Honesty

GIMPFan

This album is wonderful for the musical collaboration alone, between a long-time blues master and one much younger who left too soon. But the honesty of this album gives it that additional joy. This kind of music should be in music appreciation classes to teach how real musicians practice their art.

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Blues the way it oughta be...

gregorybyerline

....recorded live by amazing musicians. This album is a definite must-have.

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Super good

martuccij

Perhaps my absolute favorite blues album on emusic. Rock influenced blues at it's best.

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great album

lewsurfer

This album is a must for fans of the blues. Just listen to these two masters. You will not be disappointed.

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They Say All Music Guide

Recorded in December 1983, In Session captures an in-concert jam between Albert King and Stevie Ray Vaughan, the latter of whom had become the hot blues guitarist of the year thanks to his debut Texas Flood, as well as his work on David Bowie’s hit Let’s Dance. Vaughan may have been the new news, but King was not suffering, either. He had a world-class supporting band and was playing as well as he ever had. In other words, the stage was set for a fiery, exciting concert and that’s exactly what they delivered. Vaughan was clearly influenced by King — there are King licks all over his first two recorded efforts, and it was an influence that stayed with him to the end — and he was unafraid to go toe-to-toe with his idol. King must have been impressed, since In Session never devolves into a mere cutting contest. Instead, each musicians spurs the other to greater heights. For aficionados of either guitarist, that means the album isn’t just worth a listen — it means that it’s a record that sounds as exciting on each subsequent listen as does the first time through. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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