, on the blues rock guitar legends of the same name, with plans to release it across VOD platforms on March 21st.
Brothers Jimmie and Stevie went from a small, post-war house in Oak Cliff, Texas to selling millions of records and playing alongside the likes of David Bowie, Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jackson Browne, Carlos Santana and more. A portion of the Vaughan brothers film written, directed and produced by
is devoted to Jimmie and Eric Clapton’s first ever on-camera interviews about the night that Stevie died. Brothers in Blues takes a deep dive into the tragedies and the glory of the Vaughan brothers as told by musicians, bandmates, and friends from the early days. Those joiningfor interviews as part of the doc include Clapton, ZZ Tops Billy Gibbons, Browne, the late David Bowie, Nile Rodgers, Mike Buck, Double Trouble, The Fabulous Thunderbirds and actor Stephen Tobolowsky, among others.
“This film is the compilation of what I saw after more than 45 years of watching and writing about the Vaughan brothers,” Warnock told Deadline. “With the full blessing and all-access cooperation from Jimmie Vaughan, I am privileged to share with the world the depths of their life story, and fans will hear tales that have never been made public as told by people who were actually there when it all happened.”The Mojo Manifesto, which is set for release on VOD on March 17.
Stevie Ray Vaughan, the greatest guitar player.