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Creativity Quote by Stevie Ray Vaughan

"But between sets I'd sneak over to the black places to hear blues musicians. It got to the point where I was making my living at white clubs and having my fun at the other places"

About this Quote

He’s confessing to a kind of double life that was common in American music and still feels damning: profit on one side of town, oxygen on the other. Vaughan’s wording is deceptively casual - “sneak,” “black places,” “the other places” - but it’s loaded with the everyday mechanics of segregation. Nobody needed a sheriff at the door; the social rules were already internalized. “Sneak” implies both desire and risk: the music is magnetic, the boundary is policed, and he knows he’s crossing it.

The sentence splits cleanly into commerce and pleasure. “Making my living” at white clubs isn’t just about audience demographics; it’s about which venues had money, publicity, and safety for a white guitarist coming up. “Having my fun” elsewhere is a small, sharp indictment of the market: the places where the blues is most alive aren’t where the checks are. Vaughan is admitting that the culture that fed him wasn’t the culture that paid him.

That tension is the subtext of a huge swath of rock history. Blues as an art form is treated as a resource to be mined, then sold back through whiter, more “bookable” channels. To his credit, he doesn’t romanticize himself as a savior; he frames it as appetite, learning, and escape. The quote lands because it’s honest about the bargain: authenticity often requires proximity to Black spaces, while success in a segregated industry often requires distance from them.

Quote Details

TopicMusic
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Stevie Ray Vaughan: blues, commerce and authenticity
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Stevie Ray Vaughan (October 3, 1954 - August 27, 1990) was a Musician from USA.

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