Who misses the power trio

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Seems to me there were a lot in the early 70s

this piece has connections to a recent thread ....

https://youtu.be/l_4iQDYDVNo

Merry Christmas!!

name you favorite trios

 

1 experience

loudest and best duo for me was lee michaels and frosty at Oakland coliseum

prob opened for CCR

LOVE the Hammond B3

soul

can someones help me find a good youtube video of them playing live?

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=INgR2Q-MD-Q

 

ZZ Top 73. Tight, crunchy and clean like no other.

The Top was tops.  Good call

Hot Tuna

Woody's Gov't Mule

Jimi Hendrix of course.

 

&

 

ZIG ZAG POWER TRIO

FT. VERNON REID, WILL CALHOUN, & MELVIN GIBBS @ SF Jazz Center on January 25-26, 2020.

“A power trio that brings in the noise, the funk, the rock, and the jazz.” (New Yorker) The founding guitarist and drummer of rock icons Living Colour join legendary bassist Melvin Gibbs for two blistering evenings of virtuosity and infectious grooves. Vernon Reid and Will Calhoun’s trajectory together has been possessed of devastating power with Living Colour – a band rooted in the Black Rock Coalition whose multi-platinum, GRAMMY-winning 1988 debut Vivid and it’s crushing lead-off track “Cult of Personality” established them as arena-filling rock giants and an era-defining musical force."

I will be joined by Brother Blaise &  another Buddy.

They played SF Jazz last year as "The Band Of Gypsies" & you talk about blistering. Oh Mama. Kick it out & Keep it out.

 

I like Rush

 

CREAM

Watched some of that Royal Albert Hall reunion show on AXS the other day. Many deep jams surprisingly. Jack Bruce was a monster. Clapton taking back seat. And, GINGER the asshole wrapping it up tightly.

I saw Earthless last week.

 

>Clapton taking back seat<

 

That's one of the things I like about Cream.

Saw Cavetown recently. The act is often a three piece, but wouldn't call them a power trio. 

 

Not votes for Triumph?

Johnny Winter

I would vote 4 Jimi Hendrix or maybe electric Hot Tuna!

smiley

Stevie Ray & Double Trouble

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=kfjXp4KTTY8

Chris Layton

Tommy Shannon

image_1746.jpgimage_1744.jpg

 

 

 

Cream my first arena rock show in Oakland  Ginger was insane 

hot tuna winterland jack used to hold a tiny lead over mr lesh on my "scorecard" for a while 

hendrix Santa Clara county rock festival.  Words don't work, I have to explain by visually describing a facial twitch resulting in a wall of sound and color. A 12 out of 10

ZZ TOP cow palace with the dashboard with the gas gauge that ran out of gas at the last note

keep em comin...and merry Christmas 

I think I saw Stevie Ray at Keystone Palo Alto.  And US festival?

cant remember where I saw Johnny winter    />> right there !

gonna try to zig, then zag!

Does Emerson, Lake & Palmer count?

I've always thought of bands like Led Zeppelin & The Who as power trio's with a singer.

Speak up, I can't hear you. 

 

Tuna 75,76,77.

mule3.png

The original band 1994 - 2000 was an amazing experience to see live. I was fortunate enough to see 6 shows during those years and each time the power of the trio blew me away. Sadly everything changed after Allen's passing but in the strange twist of fate that is rock'n roll, Warren and the Mule achieved greater success. I'll always love this band and I've seen some truly legendary performances since then but if you ever saw them back in the day, you know exactly what I'm talking about.. "Where's My Mule?" 

RIP Allen Woody  sad   

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txZ2MR7tQOI

Gov't Mule 9/15/1995
The Cotton Club Atlanta, GA

Intro
Mule
Rocking Horse
Mr. Big
Temporary Saint
Trane
Third Stone From The Sun  Jam
St. Stephen Jam
Eternity's Breath
Pygmy Twylyte
Blind Man In The Dark
Grinnin' In Your Face
Mother Earth
Left Coast Groovies
World Of Difference
Don't Step On The Grass, Sam
Painted Silver Light
Monkey Hill
She's So Heavy Jam
The Same Thing
Just Got Paid
----------
The End of the Line
Look On Yonder Wall

Warren Haynes ~ guitar,vocals
Allen Woody ~ bass, vocals
Matt Abts ~ drums


Merry Happy Chirstmas Holidays Zonersheart 

Grand Funk was a power trio weren't they? They were good.

It seems the power trio was a 70's thing, are there any real ones now?

I guess Primus could count, how about Oysterhead?

I've always thought of bands like Led Zeppelin & The Who as power trio's with a singer.   <<<<<<<<<<<<

 

 

exactly -  and Cream ruled the roost. I saw both Kim Simmons/ Savoy Brown ....and Robin Trower in 1999 - both in power trio form and they were excellent.

Black Sabbath

Jeff Beck with Terry Bozzio and Tony Hymas touring the Guitar Shop album on a co-bill with Stevie Ray Vaughan was a pretty fucking outstanding evening at the Oakland Coliseum ('89?), though I believe SRV had added more players to his band by then.

And Lost Ticket was always a nice change of pace at WCZJs.

 

Trapeze kicked ass.

A power trio with a singer is called a quartet.

 

The “power” part is because the band can pull off the singing properly with three, or because the music is dynamic enough not to need vocals.

 

 

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The vintage SST power trios - Minutemen, Husker Du and the Meat Puppets - weren't half bad.

The format is doing fine these days as well - Sleep, Earthless (both already mentioned), Russian Circles, High on Fire, Dinosaur Jr., YOB, the Aristocrats, Hedvig Mollestad, etc.

 

image_1749.jpg

Zebra was an 80's variant from New Orleans.  Some decent playing if a little too 80s-slick compared to the Stoner Rock sound of groups like Sleep to come, and the Grunge Trios like Melvins and Nirvana.

Hot Tuna '76 was a force to be reckoned with.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJi9yJQ2GYw

Speed kills, but it can also make you play for almost 5 hours straight.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fc1FIRXyncE

 

All good

 

more!!!!

Holiday Power Trio - 

Season's Greeting from Tarzan, Tonto and Frankenstein 
https://youtu.be/80tzyxwElGI

Steve Morse Trio 1990 - one of my favs.

 

https://youtu.be/lG3KAh8HYi0

Fleck, Wooten, Futureman

Lochs of Dread

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWMh_WiEuAo

 

Damn Hall, that Jeff Beck/SRV pairing was pretty nuts. Saw at MSG.

Yeah, SRV had added keys long before then. 

And yeah, Steve Morse with Dave Larue and Rod Morgenstern.... whew!!

Moonalice often come across as a power trio, especially when Roger just steps aside and strums along passively watching Molo, Sless, and Sears do their thing.

Herbal Dave - I applaud your deep dig on Zebra. My friggin' brother was going out with a girl that just loved that Bears tune by them. I don't want to go all Lorne Greene's Animal Kingdom here - but where would you put the 80's stylings of White Lion up against the 'bra?

Being Canadian, I have to go Rush & Triumph.

SRV & Double Trouble in my youth when I was playing more guitar - but the Beastie Boys get plenty of play around here these days now that I'm a grown-up.

James Gang

 

Motorhead

 

Morphine

Story on trios published Oct of 2016. I noticed it on the site of the Linda Ronstadt movie trailer, thought it might relate. 

https://bestclassicbands.com/great-classic-rock-trios-10-30-1666/

Great article THANKS

never saw James gang , Motörhead grand funk or blue cheer live

but I did get them (missed out on  Motörhead I guess)

tried to cut and paste, but got this...

NE: THE CLASSIC ROCK LEGACY
Great Classic Rock Trios: 10 Powerful Threesomes

“When everyone is clicking, there’s nothing more powerful than a three-piece band.” That’s the assessment of Joe Walsh, who made the observation during a recent chat with this author about a certain beloved trio he played with in the early ’70s. Indeed, over the years, the notion of a three-piece band has found its way into several rock genres—from prog to punk to that most famous of three-man formats: the power trio. Remarkably, however, the number of three-piece ensembles that have found mainstream success is less than one might expect, at first blush. Below, we profile 10 trios that did achieve a perennial spot in rock history.

ZZ Top ZZ Top’s run of nearly five decades with the same lineup is classic rock’s equivalent of Joe DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting streak—both are records unlikely to ever be broken. During that stretch, band members Billy Gibbons, Dusty Hill and Frank Beard have crafted a remarkably consistent catalog of incendiary blues-rock combined with driving Texas boogie. Additionally, the trio doesn’t get enough credit for the synthesized blues-rock sound it pioneered in the ’80s, with songs such as “Legs” and “Sharp Dressed Man.” Few bands have found more ways to extract new permutations from a fundamental style.


James Gang For a time, it looked as though the James Gang was destined to carry the power-trio torch first fired up by Cream and the Jimi Hendrix Experience. Yer’ Album, the band’s 1969 debut, saw drummer Jim Fox, bassist Tom Kriss and guitarist-singer Joe Walsh establish a riff-driven sound that earned praise from the likes of Pete Townshend. With Dale Peters replacing Kriss, the trio went on to record two more classic LPs, Rides Again, and Thirds, before Walsh exited to launch his solo career. Thanks largely to Walsh’s distinctive style, tracks like “Funk #49” and “Walk Away” rank among classic rock’s most instantly recognizable songs. James Gang forged on for several years without Walsh, but nothing they produced afterwards matched the “thrill of the new” evident on those first three records.

Blue Cheer Blue Cheer underwent countless restructurings in personnel, but their late ’60s groundbreaking work was generally forged as a trio. Emerging from San Francisco’s psychedelic scene, founding members Dickie Peterson, Paul Whaley and Leigh Stephens helped create a template for the thunderous, primal sound later christened “heavy metal.” Indeed, more than one rock historian has cited the band’s volcanic 1968 cover of Eddie Cochran’s “Summertime Blues” as heavy metal’s ground zero. No less an expert than the Doors’ Jim Morrison once described Blue Cheer as “the single most powerful band

Rush No other band has merged hard rock and prog as effectively as Rush has. Especially on their breakthrough 1976 album, 2112, the Canadian trio fused Geddy Lee’s banshee wail, Neil Peart’s propulsive drum work and Alex Lifeson’s guitar versatility into a distinctive style that’s served them well for decades. The band’s progressive talents are on full display on 2112’s epic title track, while shorter pieces such as “Tom Sawyer” and “Limelight” (both from the 1981 LP Moving Pictures) have become staples of classic rock radio. Critical assessments of Rush’s catalog have been on an upward trajectory in recent years.


Grand Funk Railroad Few groups were more deserving of the “People’s Band” designation than Grand Funk Railroad in their heyday. Dismissed by many critics, the Michigan-based trio—Mark Farner, Don Brewer and Mel Schacher—took their music straight to their fans, touring incessantly and releasing platinum-selling albums chock full of working-class slogans and blues-rock swagger. Even today, tracks like “Mean Mistreater” and “I’m Your Captain” evoke the communal spirit central to the band’s appeal. Rechristening themselves “Grand Funk,” the band later added a keyboardist and earned critical favor with their We’re an American Band

The Police Of all the major bands to emerge during the late ’70s punk and new wave movement, the Police may well have been the most unique. While initially pegged to those genres, the gifted trio’s musical ambitions quickly took them in directions far outside those narrow parameters. Buoyed by Andy Summers’ intricate guitar arrangements and Stewart Copeland’s polyrhythmic percussion, bassist-singer Sting proved to be one of the era’s most polished, charismatic frontmen. Together, as demonstrated on songs such as “King of Pain” and “Don’t Stand So Close to Me,” the trio appeared ready-made for pop perfection—and for a time, they were.


Motörhead For nearly four decades Motörhead occupied a sweet spot where punk and metal collided. While the band’s lineup sometimes expanded beyond the trio format, both the early years and the later years saw frontman Lemmy Kilmister and his mates put forth their raging style as a threesome. Songs such as the thunderous “Bomber” and the classic “Ace of Spades” helped define thrash-metal and influenced scores of young bands that were drawn to similar sound and fury. Small wonder that Lemmy’s death earlier this year was mourned by fans—and fellow rockers—far and wide.


Emerson, Lake & Palmer No band embodied the grand-scale ambitions of the prog-rock movement more fully than Emerson, Lake & Palmer did. Weaving classical music flourishes into a contemporary rock fabric didn’t always yield seamless results, but at their best, band members Keith Emerson, Greg Lake and Carl Palmer gave rock ’n’ roll an element of high-brow credibility. The trio’s 1972 hit, “From the Beginning,” remains requisite learning for rock guitarists aspiring toward a classical approach, while “Karn Evil 9” did for rock keyboards what Jimi Hendrix did for electric guitar.


Cream Along with the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Cream established the template for nearly every power trio that came in their wake. Featuring a thunderous rhythm section in the persons of Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker, and a young guitar goliath in Eric Clapton, the band unleashed a new, adventurous sound that helped pave the way for the likes of Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath and the Jeff Beck Group. Tracks such as “White Room” and “Sunshine of Your Love” mixed blues, hard rock and psychedelia in ways previously unimagined.

Jimi Hendrix Experience Simply put, the Jimi Hendrix Experience expanded the possibilities for electric-guitar-based rock beyond anyone’s wildest dreams. Tethered to drummer Mitch Mitchell’s jazz-flavored grooves and bassist Noel Redding’s anchoring bass lines, Hendrix obliterated the line between lead and rhythm guitar, crafting six-string arrangements that were near-orchestral. Tracks such as “Purple Haze,” “Hey Joe” and “The Wind Cries Mary” framed traditional blues in otherworldly textures. At the time of his death, Hendrix was looking to expand his music and his band format, but the image of him onstage, flanked by just two sidemen, remains

Thanks LLTD. Lots of videos of the groups to check out in that article as well for folks who didn't see them. 

Wolf Bros-very funny!