The 1980s: Mack's comeback decade
In the early 1980s, Mack resumed performing and touring, and adopted a hard-driving blues-rock/rockabilly fusion style that became the cornerstone of his sound for the rest of his career.
During this time, Mack recorded the accidental gem,
Live at Coco's. It is Mack's only mid-career roadhouse performance on tape. Initially an unauthorized recording by the club's sound engineer, Mack later acquired the rights to it and put it out on his own "Flying V" label as a 2-CD set.
Coco's shows Mack in fine form both vocally and instrumentally, performing in every genre at which he excelled. The sound quality of
Coco's is much better than that of most "bootleg" recordings, and, since Mack and his band didn't know they were being recorded, their performance was raw and spontaneous, leaving no doubt that they were enjoying themselves by doing what they did best.
In 1983, Mack relocated to Texas, where he played regularly at clubs in Dallas and Austin. One night, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck and
Jimmy Page (who were in town for a benefit concert) came to see Mack play, and Clapton took the stage to jam with Mack. A photo of that performance is found on Mack's website. During this period, Mack also entered into a performing collaboration with the late Stevie Ray Vaughan. Little known outside of Texas in 1980, Vaughan's own career took off during this period, and by 1985 he was an international blues-rock sensation. Mack and Vaughan had first met in the late 1970s, when Mack, acting on a tip from Vaughan's older brother, guitarist
Jimmie Vaughan, went to hear him play at a local bar. Vaughan recalled the meeting in a 1985 interview:
Mack and Vaughan became close friends after that first meeting. Vaughan came to regard the older Mack as "something between a daddy and a brother". (SRV interview,
Guitar World, Nov. 1985, p. 30). Mack felt the same way, and found that he played his best when challenged by Vaughan's virtuosity. He also benefitted from Vaughan's kindness and friendship: When Mack was stricken with a life-threatening illness, requiring a lengthy hospitalization and recovery, Vaughan put on a benefit concert to pay for Mack's medical bills.
In the musical sense, Mack's and Vaughan's relationship had begun long before they met. Vaughan had idolized Mack since his teen years, and often said that "Wham!" was "the first record I ever owned". An intuitive guitar-player who had never learned to read music, Vaughan said that "[Lonnie] taught me to play guitar
from the heart". Vaughan's Grammy-winning albums include covers of "Wham!" and another Mack tune, "If You Have To Know". Vaughan also recorded "Chicken-Pickin'" in his own unique style as a tribute to Mack, calling it "Scuttle-Buttin'". His live performances customarily included a stirring rendition of "Wham!"
Fully recovered from his illness, Mack signed with
Alligator Records in 1984, and began working on his blues-rock comeback album,
Strike Like Lightning. Mack and Vaughan co-produced the album, realizing their goal of recapturing the essence of Mack's original sound in an updated format.
Strike was released in early 1985. It was a major hit for an indie recording, and is still Alligator's all-time best-selling album.
Strike was a collection of back-to-back standouts, and contained some of Mack's most satisfying vocals and guitar-playing since the 1960s. Mack himself composed most of the tunes. Consistent with Mack's live performance style, most of the cuts featured his mature, gravelly vocals and driving guitar equally. Vaughan played rhythm guitar on most of the album, and traded leads with Mack on two cuts, "Double Whammy", and "Satisfy Susie". Both played acoustic guitar on Mack's "Oreo Cookie Blues".
Strike propelled Mack back into the spotlight at age 44. Much of 1985 found Mack occupied with a promotional concert tour for
Strike which included guest appearances by Vaughan,
Ry Cooder and both
Keith Richards and
Ron Wood of the
Rolling Stones, among others. Concert film footage of Mack and Vaughan playing cuts from
Strike is now accessible on
YouTube and similar websites. In 2007, Sony's Legacy label released an 11-minute "live" performance of Mack's "Oreo Cookie Blues" featuring Mack and Vaughan trading leads on electric guitar.
The
Strike Like Lightning tour culminated in a Carnegie Hall concert billed as
Further On Down the Road, a tip of the hat to Mack's 1964 recording by the same title. There, Mack shared the stage with two of his favorite guitarists, blues stylist
Albert Collins and blues-rock virtuoso
Roy Buchanan. The concert was marketed on home video and remains available on Mack's website.
Late 1985 found Mack in Memphis, recording with artist
Tim Krekel on the album
Over The Fence, produced by
Terry Manning. Mack's 1986 Alligator album,
Second Sight, attracted less attention than
Strike, but was consistently strong. In 1988, Mack moved to
Epic Records, where he recorded the rockabilly classic,
Roadhouses and Dance Halls.