Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I would have to say some of the young printers on here do not know who Steve Vai is. Great music in that one!
Love that movie, thats actually Vai playing both parts! Of course no one thought the karate kid was really playing.
Apropos of nothing, today I remembered what is probably my absolute favorite moment in movie music.Let me set it up for those unfamiliar:Ralph Machio plays Eugene, a classically trained guitar student at Julliard, who has a hankering to play the blues and find an unpublished lost song by Robert Johnson.He hooks up with an old friend of Johnson's (who sold his soul to the devil like Johnson had as legend has it) In this clip, Eugene has accepted a challenge to win his soul back in a fight to the finish with the Devil's guitarist (Steve Vai)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqdL36VKbMQ
Quote from: BP on February 08, 2019, 01:57:27 PMI would have to say some of the young printers on here do not know who Steve Vai is. Great music in that one!The same could probably be said of Robert Johnson
Quote from: Frog on February 08, 2019, 02:01:00 PMQuote from: BP on February 08, 2019, 01:57:27 PMI would have to say some of the young printers on here do not know who Steve Vai is. Great music in that one!The same could probably be said of Robert JohnsonRobert Johnson's step son (Robert Lockwood, went by Robert JR) used to live here in Cleveland. He played at a local Cajun restaurant for almost 20 years. He was a super nice guy, played the 12 string with very heavy jazz influence (still blues though). He passed away at 94 or so few years back. First funeral I went to since mid 80's. My favorite story was told by his wife. It was a New Year's Eve and Robert was in the basement practicing. His wife cam to get him so they can be upstairs for the ball drop. Robert said he was busy and would come up 15 before and that he still had an hour or so to work. WHen his wife said something about it, he replied that he was 90 and does not have much time left to practice and that he was going to take full advantage of the time he did have left! Before he passed away, I often told ppl there were two things worth coming to Cleveland for. The RnR hall of fame and seeing Robert play. They named a street after him while he was still alive. pierre