Jeff Healey

Most Popular Jeff Healey Trailers

Total trailers found: 9

Road House Trailer (1989)

19 May 1989

The Double Deuce is the meanest, loudest and rowdiest bar south of the Mason-Dixon Line, and Dalton has been hired to clean it up.

The Jeff Healey Band - See The Light - Live From London Trailer (2004)

01 January 2004

See The Light: Live From London captures The Jeff Healey Band in their natural element: onstage. Guitar Magazine has said that witnessing Jeff live is an experience few will ever forget.

The Jeff Healey Band - Live at Montreux 1999 Trailer (2005)

01 June 2005

Captured here for the first time ever is the Jeff Healey Band’s 1999 performance at Montreux. Featuring 10 songs from their set, the band (Healey, Joe Rockman on bass, Pat Rush guitar, and Tom Stephen on drums) whips the crowd into a frenzy with a high energy, minute blues jam.

Let It Rock - The 60th Birthday Concert Trailer (1995)

08 January 1995

The 60th Birthday Concert of Ronnie "The Hawk" Hawkins, featuring guest stars Jerry Lee Lewis, Carl Perkins & Jeff Healey.

The Jeff Healey Band: Live in Belgium Trailer (2012)

30 March 2012

Recorded on July 18, 1993 at Peer Blues Festival in Peer, Belgium whilst touring in support of the "Feel This" album.

Healey's Hideaway Trailer (2015)

03 September 2015

A documentary about the Famous Jeff Healey Club which opened in downtown Toronto, Canada in 2001 until its closure in 2008.

Jeff Healey - Live From House Of Blues, Atlanta Trailer (1996)

01 January 1996

Jeff Healey Live from House Of Blues Atlanta 1989. Includes Jeff Healey band member and Andy Scott ft

Jeff Healey and the Jazz Wizards: Beautiful Noise Trailer (2009)

01 January 2009

Originally recorded for the Canadian TV show "A Beautiful Noise", this program includes additional interview and musical footage.

The Jeff Healey Bluesband - Live Blues Festival Norway 2006-08-05 Trailer (2006)

05 August 2006

Jeff Healey Bluesband Live At Notodden Blues Festival Norway, 2006-08-05. What makes Jeff Healey different from other blues-rockers was also what keeps some listeners from accepting him as anything other than a novelty -- the fact that the blind guitarist played his Fender Stratocaster on his lap, not standing up.