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歌词

Statesboro Blues - The Allman Brothers band
Wake up momma, turn your lamp down low;
Wake up momma, turn your lamp down low.
You got no nerve baby,
to turn Uncle John from your door.
I woke up this morning, I had them Statesboro Blues,
I woke up this morning, had them Statesboro Blues.
Well, I looked over in the corner,
and Grandma seemed to have them too.
Well my momma died and left me,
My poppa died and left me,
I ain't good looking baby,
Want someone sweet and kind.
I'm going to the country,
baby do you wanna go?
But if you can't make it baby,
your sister Lucille said she wanna go.
(and I sure will take her).
I love that woman,
better than any woman I've ever seen;
Well, I love that woman,
better than any woman I've ever seen.
Well, she treat me like a king,
yeah, yeah, yeah,
I treat her like a doggone queen.
Wake up momma, turn your lamp down low.
Wake up momma, turn your lamp down low.
You got no nerve baby,
to turn Uncle John from your door.

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最新评论12

听着前奏就疯了

2019-04-17 08:56:37
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好听

2019-02-13 13:21:16
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酒馆

2018-11-02 09:17:50
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脑补飙车现场

2017-08-07 14:06:06
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1
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飙的

2019-01-02 23:56:29
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不如跳舞

2016-11-18 09:34:39
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来首经典的!!!

2016-04-14 19:30:31
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!。。

2015-11-07 16:43:16
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walking by myself的赶脚

2014-04-05 12:25:20
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布鲁斯、即兴爵士,奥尔曼兄弟创造了南方摇滚的传奇...

2013-07-31 21:30:47
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@Still_S 又一传奇乐队的经典喔

2012-04-05 00:06:24
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guitar hero 在弹这个的 expert 【各种手抽筋。。。

2011-11-16 15:24:11
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In 1968, Gregg Allman went to visit his older brother, Duane, on his 22nd birthday. Duane was sick in bed, so Gregg brought along a bottle of Coricidin pills for his fever and the debut album by guitarist Taj Mahal as a gift. "About two hours after I left, my phone rang," Gregg remembers. " 'Baby brother, baby brother, get over here now!' " When Gregg got there, Duane had poured the pills out of the bottle, washed off the label and was using it as a slide to play "Statesboro Blues," the old Blind Willie McTell song that Taj Mahal covered. Duane had never played slide before, says Gregg, but "he just picked it up and started burnin'. He was a natural." The song quickly became a part of the Allman Brothers Band's repertoire, and Duane's slide guitar became crucial to their sound. "Statesboro Blues" was the opening track on their legendary 1971 live double album, At Fillmore East, and ever since, the moaning and squealing opening licks have given fans chills at live shows. "It wasn't something that Duane would play the same way every night," says current Allmans guitarist Warren Haynes, one of many guitarists who have filled Duane's shoes since he died in late 1971. "But in all of our heads, that's the way it goes." There's one thing the current band doesn't try to replicate from the Fillmore East performance: At the end of Duane's sublime "Statesboro" solo, the guitarist hits an off-key note that Gregg calls the "note from hell." "He left it in because he knew I hated it," says Gregg, claiming that the mistake only adds to the song's legend. "It was live. It was something that happened."

2011-11-05 22:21:27
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