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1-6 of 6
- The story of Jimmie and Stevie Ray Vaughan, as told by those who knew them best: brother Jimmie, Eric Clapton, Nile Rodgers, Jackson Browne, Billy Gibbons and their early band mates.
- In 1915 a group of Mexican banditos raided the McAllen Ranch, one of the largest in the area. The next day a group of Texas Rangers supposedly arrived and eliminated the perpetrators. However, the real story is not as tidy as it has been portrayed. Roland Warnock, a 19-year-old cowboy working on the Guadalupe Ranch near present-day Edinburg, witnessed two of these killings when he saw Texas Rangers from Company D shoot two unarmed men in the back and leave their bodies by the side of the road. The effects of these killings by the Rangers are being felt in south Texas some 80 years later.
- From the 50s to the 70s, Dallas was the music capital of Texas and the entire Southwest because of radio, records and the blues. A look back at when Big D dominated rock music, with interviews with the people who were there, rare backstage photos and some "lost' video.
- With the full cooperation of Jimmie Vaughan, Eric Clapton, Nile Rodgers, Jackson Browne and Billy Gibbons, BROTHERS IN BLUES is the best and most revealing documentary on Stevie Ray Vaughan produced to date. The film starts with their Jimmie and Stevie's youth in the Dallas neighborhood of Oak Cliff, and traces their early junior high bands with interviews with their then-13-year-old band mates. It then tracks their move from Dallas to Austin, and the small nightclubs they performed in, giving a history of the Austin music scene in the 1970s, well before it became established as the "live music capital". Their eventual signings to a major record label propelled both of them to the spotlight, but exacerbated some drug and alcohol problems that were witnessed by their band mates. Stevie's recording of TEXAS FLOOD is recounted by Jackson Browne, and his eventual sobriety is detailed by older brother, Jimmie and Eric Clapton. The night that Stevie died in a helicopter crash is recounted on-camera for the first time by Jimmie and Eric Clapton.
- In the summer of 1955, an army of cameramen, lighting techs and movie stars descended on the small, west Texas town of Marfa to film what has become, "the national movie of Texas."
- The mysterious town of Marfa, Texas, is Jack and Katrina's next stop as the team investigates the Hotel Paisano. This haunt is a well-known paranormal hot spot, but without known incidences of death on the property, they have their work cut out for them.