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John Lee Straight Bourbon Whiskey, 70cl

£9.9£99Clearance
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Keller 2018, p.254: "John Lee Hooker rearranged the text a bit, recorded it [in] 1966, but it's still essentially Toombs' original." Unless mandatory applicable law provides otherwise, your use of and membership to the Service are exclusively governed by Dutch law. We shall first try to settle any dispute over a dram of whisky. Disputes that cannot be settled over multiple drams of whisky shall be solely submitted to the court of Amsterdam, The Netherlands unless mandatory applicable law provides otherwise. Laberge 2006, p.691: "[The Milburn release was] composed by Rudy Toombs. The song was later covered by John Lee Hooker ... and George Thorogood."

John Lee Hooker - IMDb John Lee Hooker - IMDb

House of the Blues (1988 reissue notes). John Lee Hooker. Hannover, Germany: Vogue Records. 1966. p.2. VG651 600115. {{ cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) ( link) Fahey, David M.; Miller, Jon S. (2013). Alcohol and Drugs in North America, Volume 1:A–L. Snta Barbara, California: ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-1598844795.Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. " George Thorogood & the Destroyers–Review". AllMusic . Retrieved May 25, 2021. McMichael 2015, p.289: "Rudy Toombs and Amos Milburn's 'One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer'[ sic] ... was covered in the 1960s by John Lee Hooker, and then again by George Thorogood in the late 1970s."

John Lee Hooker: 10 of the best from the blues legend John Lee Hooker: 10 of the best from the blues legend

Birnbaum 2013, p.248: "[Milburn's] 'One Scotch, One Bourbon, One Beer' (later revived by John Lee Hooker as 'One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer')" Regardless of whether the Service offers the functionality to contribute, you are solely responsible and liable for any content and information that you create, upload, post, publish, link to, duplicate, transmit, record, display or otherwise make available on the Service or to other Members, such as chat messages, text messages, videos, audio, audio recordings, music, pictures, photographs, text and any other information or materials, whether publicly posted or privately transmitted (“Contributions”). The Service has been prepared by us solely for information purposes to Members and the Service is based on information we consider reliable and we obtain the contents of the Service from a number of different third party sources (including Contributions), but we do not endorse, support, represent, warrant or guarantee the completeness, truthfulness, accuracy, or reliability of the Services and any information therein. Laberge, Yves (2006). "Amos Milburn". In Komara, Edward (ed.). Encyclopedia of the Blues, Volume 2: K–Z. New York City: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-92699-7.The song was recorded in Chicago in 1966 with Hooker singing and playing guitar. He was supported by pianist Lafayette Leake, guitarist Eddie Burns, drummer Fred Below, and an unidentified bass player. Hooker's song is notated as a medium tempo blues with an irregular number of bars in 4/4 time in the key of E. [15] It was recorded in Chicago in 1966 with Hooker on vocal and guitar, guitarist Eddie "Guitar" Burns, and unknown accompanists. [17] The song was released on the Chess Records album The Real Folk Blues (1966). [18] A live version with Muddy Waters' band recorded at the Cafe Au Go Go on August 30, 1966, has been described as "dark, slow, swampy-deep, and the degree of emotional rapport between Hooker and the band (particularly Otis Spann) [is] nothing less than extraordinary". [19] George Thorogood [ edit ]

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