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Pacific Street Blues & Americana Spotlight Show Podcasts
John Lee Hooker (part 2 of 2)
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John Lee Hooker (part 2 of 2)

The man from Money

21. Buddy Guy & Jeff Beck / Mustang Sally

22. John Lee Hooker / Mustang Sally-GTO

23. Woody Guthrie / This Land is Your Land

24. John Lee Hooker / This Land is Nobody's Land

25. Bonnie Raitt & John Lee Hooker / I'm in the Mood

26. Jimi Hendrix / Catfish Blues

27. Muddy Waters / Rollin' Stone

28. Stevie Ray Vaughan / Voodoo Chile (Slight Return)

29. The Rolling Stones w/John Lee Hooker, Eric Clapton / Boogie Chillen

30. Van Morrison / Baby, Please Don't Go (featuring Jimmy Page on Guitar)

31. Mick Taylor & Max Middleton / This is Hip

32. Buddy Guy & John Lee Hooker / Motor City Burning

33. John Lee Hooker and Canned Heat / Bottle Up and Go

34. Jim Morrison / Roadhouse Rap

35. The Doors w/ John Lee Hooker / Roadhouse Blues

36. Aerosmith/ Baby, Please Don't Go

37. The Rolling Stones / Money, That's What I Want

38. John Lee Hooker / I Need Some Money

39. Charlie Musselwhite / Hobo Blues

40. John Lee Hooker / Anybody See My Baby

41. The Rolling Stones / Anybody See My Baby

42. Hank Williams / I'm Never Gonna Get Out of This Life Alive

43. Bob Dylan / It's All Over Now, Baby Blue (Bill Lee)

44. John Lee Hooker / TB Sheets (Van Morrison)

45. Bruce Springsteen / Boom, Boom

46. Gary Moore / Memory Pain

47. Led Zeppelin / Whole Lotta Love

In this live version of Whole Lotta Love, Led Zeppelin pays homage to many of the band’s influences. For example, the song, Whole Lotta Love is based upon the Muddy Waters track, written by Willie Dixon, You Need Love. In the middle of the song, they reference Hooker's track Boogie Chillen when Plant sings about "mama and papa talking, you gotta let that boy rock n roll," They reference Etta James, Just a Little Bit with the line, "I don't want much, I just want a little bit of your love," Wanda Jackson and thereby Elvis Presley when they break into, Let's Have a Party, Howlin' Wolf's, Going Down Slow, with the lines, 'Write my mother and tell her the shape I'm in,' and finally, Willie Dixon's Back Door Man. There may be other references in the song - if you find some, please let me know.

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