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In Step album cover
01
The House Is Rockin'
2:24
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02
Crossfire
4:10
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03
Tightrope
4:39
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04
Let Me Love You Baby
2:43
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05
Leave My Girl Alone
4:16
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06
Travis Walk
2:19
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07
Wall Of Denial
5:36
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08
Scratch-N-Sniff
2:42
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09
Love Me Darlin'
3:21
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10
Riviera Paradise
8:50
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11
SRV Speaks
1:33
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12
The House Is Rockin'
2:48
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13
Let Me Love You Baby
3:47
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14
Texas Flood
7:18
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15
Life Without You
13:28
Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 69:54

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The Greatest???

Stevil47

Kept hearing this one track from the jukebox at a joint we used to frequent. It was incredibly soothing. Finally got up and found it was Riveria Paradise. Joined eMusic, and downloaded. The album, as a whole, is very, very good. However, Riveria Paradise is the track that is getting grooved from so many replays. Great music.

user avatar

Awesome!!!

flabio82

I received this disc for a x-mas present inside a Jack Daniels tin/bottle of Jack and thermometer back in 90'. Still haven't opened that bottle and love this cd!!!!

user avatar

So Many Classics!

TxHillCntryFan

I will agree that if you only have one SRV in your collection that this should be it. It has to be his finest, with great hits like Crossfire and the haunting Riviera Paradise.

user avatar

Not so bitter end

TehDude

This was the last studio recording for Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble, and boy did they go out with a bang. Stevie comes out of the gate really grooving with "The House is Rockin'" and acknowledges his substance abuse issues head on with "Crossfire." There's a clearly renewed energy and life to this recording. As others have stated "Riveria Paradise" is masterful instrumental, jazzy and emotion filled. This is music from a man that loves music and makes you love it with him. The only downside to this disc is that it was the last. As such it makes you yearn for what might have been. We can't bring him back, but thankfully we do get to enjoy his work.

user avatar

If You Only Pick One

cur3t

If you pick only one recording this is it; from the sophisticated Riveria Paradise to the down right fun of If the House Is Rockin' each trak is a gem.

user avatar

One of SRV's best

Troy-J

I have all of Stevie's albums and I think this is one of, if not the best. Really do miss SRV.

user avatar

Our Loss was God's Gain

EMUSIC-00E3F3B7

Just when Stevie had made his peace with his genius he's taken to the next level to entertain the gods. Stevie's playing on In Step was the best of his career, melding the smoothness of Clapton with the Blues of Albert King and mixing it up into his own brand of boogie stew. You can love me anytime Stevie, our loss is God's gain.

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They Say All Music Guide

Stevie Ray Vaughan had always been a phenomenal guitarist, but prior to In Step, his songwriting was hit or miss. Even when he wrote a classic modern blues song, it was firmly within the genre’s conventions; only on Soul to Soul’s exquisite soul-blues “Life Without You” did he attempt to stretch the boundaries of the form. As it turns out, that was the keynote for In Step, an album where Vaughan found his own songwriting voice, blending blues, soul, and rock in unique ways, and writing with startling emotional honesty. Yes, there are a few covers, all well chosen, but the heart of the album rests in the songs he co-wrote with Doyle Bramhall, the man who penned the Soul to Soul highlight “Change It.” Bramhall proved to be an ideal collaborator for Vaughan; tunes like the terse “Tightrope” and the dense “Wall of Denial” feel so intensely personal, it’s hard to believe that they weren’t the product of just one man. Yet the lighter numbers — the dynamite boogie “The House Is Rockin’” and the breakneck blues of “Scratch-n-Sniff” — are just as effective as songs. Of course, he didn’t need words to make effective music: “Travis Walk” is a blistering instrumental, complete with intricate fingerpicking reminiscent of the great country guitarist Merle Travis, while the shimmering “Riviera Paradise” is every bit as lyrical and lovely as his previous charmer, “Lenny.” The magnificent thing about In Step is how it’s fully realized, presenting every facet of Vaughan’s musical personality, yet it still soars with a sense of discovery. It’s a bittersweet triumph, given Vaughan’s tragic death a little over a year after its release, yet it’s a triumph all the same. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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