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"Still Got the Blues (For You)" is a song by Northern Irish guitarist Gary Moore. It was originally released as the title track of the album Still Got the Blues. [2] The song was released as a single and reached number 31 on the UK Singles Chart in May 1990. [3]
Over a year earlier, this song had been recorded by Gene Phillips – Jack McVea, and released on Modern (20–733). It was a fast blues with Phillips delivering in a Louis Jordan-like style. [6] A version by J. Lewis and Trio was released on Atlantic (927) in early 1951. [7]
Still Got the Blues (For You)" "Cold Day in Hell" "Oh Pretty Woman" "Story of the Blues" "Separate Ways" "Since I Met You Baby" "I Loved Another Woman" "Woke Up This Morning" "Further on Up the Road" "The Sky Is Crying" "Left Me with the Blues" "Mean Cruel Woman" "The Blues Is Alright" "If You Be My Baby" "Need Your Love So Bad"
Still Got the Blues "Still Got the Blues (For You)" 31 18 17 28 28 — 3 4 97 9 "Walking by Myself" 48 55 — — — — — — — — "Too Tired"
Still Got the Blues is the eighth solo studio album by Northern Irish guitarist Gary Moore, released in March 1990. [2] It marked a substantial change in style for Moore, who had been predominantly known for rock and hard rock music with Skid Row, Thin Lizzy, G-Force, Greg Lake and during his own extensive solo career, as well as his jazz fusion work with Colosseum II.
If you've got an expressive style and can express your emotions through your guitar, and you've got a great tone, it creates a lot of tension for the audience. It's all down to the feel thing. If you've got a feel for the blues, that's a big part of it. But you've got to leave that space."
Blues Alive is a live album by Northern Irish guitarist Gary Moore, released in May 1993. [3] It is a collection of recordings taken from his 1992 tour and draws most of its material from Moore's then-recent Still Got the Blues and After Hours albums.
"For You Blue" is a country blues song [3] [15] in the musical key of D. [16] Aside from the introduction, it is one of the few original songs by the Beatles in which every section follows the twelve-bar blues (I-IV-V) pattern.