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George Thorogood and the Destroyers

George Thorogood & The Destroyers

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iTunes Review

Delaware-born George Thorogood muscled his way onto the charts thanks to the sheer ferocity of his blue-revivalist attack. Not one for subtlety, he firmly grasped the essentials of the Delta-cum-Chicago sound and squeezed them for their primal juices. His scalding slide guitar work and surly vocalizing bring out the naked lust and resentment in tunes like Elmore James’ “Madison Blues” and Bo Diddley’s “Ride On Josephine.” George slows down the tempo for Robert Johnson’s “Kind-Hearted Woman” and his own “I’ll Change My Style,” darkly stewing over life’s conundrums. Acknowledging his greatest influence, he rips into John Lee Hooker’s “One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer” with hooch-fueled gusto, turning this archetypical slice of blues-rock into his signature song. The Destroyers provide solid and sympathetic backup, with second guitarist’s Ron Smith’s scratchy rhythm lines worth special mention. Many blues purists turned up their noses at Thorogood’s rough-cut boogie riffs and brash barroom growl. He didn’t care, and you shouldn’t either. His first — and arguably best — album is an unpretentious classic of sweat-drenched, crowd-rousing showmanship.

Customer Reviews

Early Thorogood and The Destroyers At Their Best

This is one of the best George Thorogood and The Destroyer albums ever. Each song stands out on it's own and is well worth the price of payment. This is a basic Thorogood album: two or three originals and a hand full of covers with rockilling blues and tremendous slide guitar work to make you wanna jump up and move. Highlights of this album include the Earl Hooker cover of "You Got to Lose".The Elmore Jame's tune "Madison Blues". Thorogood's ever famous cover of John Lee Hooker's "One Burbon, One Scotch, One Beer"(which is actually two JLH songs in one but more on that later) and the two Thorogood Originals of "I'll Change My Style" and "Delaware Slide". "Delaware Slide" in my opinion is a essential for any slide guitar fan, cause my goodness folks the guitar on this song is great! So remember you can't go wrong with George Thorogood and The Destroyers and you can't go wrong with spending money on this album.

Slide Guitar Heaven

This is where it all started and it's a suprisingly good effort. Some of GT's best songs are on this album. Check out tracks 2, 3, 6, and 9. This is why George can still have people show up to his shows after all these years. The guy really can play a mean guitar.

A Thoroughly good album!

George and The Destroyers made a few great covers on this album as well as some awesome original work! These blues don't make you feel blue they are really kickin'!! I recommend the whole album!

Biography

Born: December 24, 1950 in Wilmington, DE

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '70s, '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

A blues-rock guitarist who draws his inspiration from Elmore James, Hound Dog Taylor, and Chuck Berry, George Thorogood never earned much respect from blues purists, but he became a popular favorite in the early '80s through repeated exposure on FM radio and the arena rock circuit. Thorogood's music was always loud, simple, and direct — his riffs and licks were taken straight out of '50s Chicago blues and rock...
Full Bio

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