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Etymologies
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Examples
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When his turn was up, Mr. Anderson's theme song—George Thorogood's "Bad to the Bone"—began to play inside the arena.
The Maestro of the Monster Truck Carrick Mollenkamp 2011
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These attitudes, from well-meaning friends and family, are so common that most successful people cite them in their autobiographies or in interviews or in songs (my favorite of which is by George Thorogood and the Destroyers, “Get a Haircut and Get a Real Job.”) These phrases add to the idea that success is illusory, impossible, and unattainable.
Kristine Kathryn Rusch » Freelancer’s Survival Guide: Role Models 2010
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Especially at a honky tonk bar, so they can duet George Thorogood's "One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer" and ride the mechanical bull.
'Glee' blames it on the alcohol: We watch so you don't have to [updated with video] 2011
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Produced and mixed by Tom Hambridge, who oversaw recent solid albums by Buddy Guy and George Thorogood, "Hellfire" presents Mr. Walker playing jump blues; slow, searing blues; Rolling Stones-style rockin' blues; electric country blues; Chicago blues—that's Mr. Walker wailing on harmonica on "I'm on to You"; and gospel blues featuring the Jordanaires, the vocal quartet that supported Elvis Presley.
Aggressively Spanning the Blues Jim Fusilli 2012
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There has also been a generation of artists, like Stevie Ray Vaughan and George Thorogood, who have almost pushed the genre into more of a "joyful" blues.
Mike Ragogna: Neil Young's Bridge School Exclusive: Dave Matthews' "Too Much," Plus Chatting with Johnny Winter, Queen's Roger Taylor and Yes' Steve Howe Mike Ragogna 2011
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And to Matthew Peterson: Should someone tell George Thorogood that it should be “Whom do you love?”.
Who Do You Trust? | Major Spoilers - Comic Book Reviews and News 2009
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These attitudes, from well-meaning friends and family, are so common that most successful people cite them in their autobiographies or in interviews or in songs (my favorite of which is by George Thorogood and the Destroyers, “Get a Haircut and Get a Real Job.”) These phrases add to the idea that success is illusory, impossible, and unattainable.
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There has also been a generation of artists, like Stevie Ray Vaughan and George Thorogood, who have almost pushed the genre into more of a "joyful" blues.
Mike Ragogna: Neil Young's Bridge School Exclusive: Dave Matthews' "Too Much," Plus Chatting with Johnny Winter, Queen's Roger Taylor and Yes' Steve Howe Mike Ragogna 2011
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Someone claiming to be Paul Thorogood, the candidate of the Cut Tax on Petrol and Diesel Party in the Crewe and Nantwich by-election, has just left a comment on this blog promoting his candidacy.
Archive 2008-05-01 2008
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“Who Do You Love” (most recent version by George Thorogood, also the Stones, Quicksliver Messenger and my favorite version, Tom Rush) was first recorded by Bo Diddley.
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