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--has ever captured the chuck Berry spirit of rock and roll like the Hollies did with "Long, Cool Woman in a Black Dress". Agree? Disagree? Have a better example? Let's hear it.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lP94PlEtsEQOverall, I'd say the British have contributed more to rock and roll than the Americans.
that all depends on what you mean by Rock and Roll, as opposed to rock music. To some people they are not the same... If, on the other hand, you don't believe there is any distinction between the two then you may have a point.
Quote from: macrojack on 19 Nov 2009, 05:44 pm--has ever captured the chuck Berry spirit of rock and roll like the Hollies did with "Long, Cool Woman in a Black Dress". Agree? Disagree? Have a better example? Let's hear it.As I recall Long Cool Woman (In a Black Dress) was Alan Clarke's way of showing his critics that British rock groups could write and perform music in the vein of Creedence Clearwater Revival. It was pretty much a one-off oddity for The Hollies and they never did anything remotely like it again. When I hear the song I think of John Fogerty, not Chuck Berry. I think Clarke proved his point. If anything, the reason that British bands of that era didn't do a lot of roots rock is because they chose to pursue other musical goals. It wasn't because they were incapable of doing rootsy rock and roll. --Jerome
What is the difference between the two? I always though "rock" was just short for "rock and roll".