I have been a huge fan of Robben since 1988's Talk to Your Daughter. I had seen him on the Court and Spark tour with Joni Mitchell in 74. I finally got to see him Wednesday with Blue Line bassist Roscoe Beck and Austin session man Brannon Temple on drums. Robben did not dissapoint. Everything I thought he would be live and more. I got to speak with him after the show. I said something about him being a blues guy. He seemed shocked to be considered blues. I told him kind of in the same vein of Robert Cray, sophisticated blues, only Robben plays more shuffles than Robert. Contempory blues at its best.
He is one of the most overlooked players out there. He has his own recognizable sound that all players strive for. He has done stints with not only Joni Mitchell, but George Harrison, Miles Davis, Gregg Allman, John Mayall
Jimmy Witherspoon, Tom Scott. He does a fussion thing calle Jing Chi with Vinnie Caulutta on drums and Jimmy Haslip on bass.
Although I have been a fan for a long time of Robben's and put seeing him right up there with anybody I have ever seen. He is a great dynamic player but he lacks the over all power Joe displays.
Joe told me of sharing the stage with Robben when he was 16 and how it was a humbling experience. I would give anything to see that again today. I think Joe B would wow Robben a bit now.
As loong as we keep mentioning Joe in this thread we won't have to move it to Other Artists.