Re: "Albert King Stop Sequence" ???
I'm thinking that there is a part of the song that has stops on it on the first beat of whatever measure the stops are in (with singing, not behind a solo). Sometimes in the stops section of a blues song, the song stays on the I longer than normal too. Like in B.B. King's "How Blue Can You Get," for instance, with stops on each set of lines (all on the I): "I bought you a brand new Ford; you said you want a Cadillac. I bought you a ten dollar dinner; you said thanks for the snack. I let you stay in my penthouse; you said it was just a shack. I gave you seven children; now you wanna give 'em back," and then ramps up into the IV, and continues the standard blues progression out from there. It's hard to describe in words, but if you have listened to any proper blues at all, you know what it is.