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[–] 2 pts

Also congrats on getting red!

[–] 1 pt

Well crap, look at that. I guess the old saying is true - Better red than dead. :)

[–] 1 pt

Hey I can't wait to see you blue, you I will make sure gets the blueballs badge.

[–] 1 pt

This one is new to me never heard it before.

[–] 1 pt
[–] 1 pt

Its completely new to me, I enjoyed listening though. I'll have to read up on that later after I get a little more sleep.

[–] 0 pt

This was written in 1955, R&B classic number of the same name, which was later an American Top 20 hit for , The (which was the final Spencer Davis Group release to feature Steve Winwood, who left to form Traffic), as well as Chicago. Chicago's cover arrangement features an extended percussion and drum section with a total run time of 7 minutes and 40 seconds, and is based around the distortion-heavy blues-rock guitar of Terry Kath, the drumming of Danny Seraphine, the bass of Peter Cetera, the soaring Hammond organ of Robert Lamm and the horn players periodically switching over to auxiliary percussion instruments, such as claves, cowbell, maracas, and tambourine. Kath, Cetera and Lamm each sing a verse apiece (not singing the lyrics as they were originally written, but as they misheard and/or revised them), preluding Seraphine's extended drum solo before a return to the second and third verses with the horn section and choruses that bring the song to a climactic drum roll, and finally leading into a guitar solo to bring the song to a dramatic close. It is unclear if the maracas were performed by Lamm or overdubbed by Seraphine during his drum solo.