Juke
- Juke
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Juke est un morceau instrumental d'harmonica enregistré le 12 mai 1952 par Marion Walter Jacobs, dit Little Walter
Le morceau a été enregistré avant (et pas à la fin comme on le dit parfois) une session d'enregistrement en studio de Muddy Waters avec Muddy Waters et Jimmy Rogers à la guitare, Elga Edmunds à la batterie, en plus de Little Walter à l'harmonica.
Catégories :
- Chanson de blues
- Single numéro un dans le Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs
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Juke — bezeichnet: Juke (Lied), Instrumentalhit von Little Walter Juke Joint, einfache Kneipe im Süden der USA ein japanisches Automobil, siehe Nissan Juke Juke ist der Name folgender Personen: Juke Boy Bonner, afroamerikanischer Musiker JUKE steht für … Deutsch Wikipedia
Juke — can refer to: * Juke (song), a harmonica instrumental recorded by Little Walter Jacobs * Juke house, a form of electronic dance music originating from Chicago, sharing similarities with Ghettotech and Miami bass. * Juking, a form of grinding, a… … Wikipedia
Juke — Juke, v. i. [from Scottish jouk to bow.] To bend the neck; to bow or duck the head. [Written also {jook} and {jouk}.] [1913 Webster] The money merchant was so proud of his trust that he went juking and tossing of his head. L Estrange. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Juke — Juke, n. The neck of a bird. [Prov. Eng.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Juke — Juke, v. i. [F. juc a roost, perch, jucher to roost, to perch.] To perch on anything, as birds do. [Obs.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
juke — juke·box; juke; … English syllables
juke — ☆ juke [jo͞ok ] [orig. uncert.] [Slang] SportsSports Slang vt. juked, juking to outmaneuver by a feint or other deceptive movement vi. to outmaneuver someone in such a manner … English World dictionary
juke — Ⅰ. juke1 also jook (jo͞ok, jo͝ok) Southeastern US n. ▸ A roadside or rural establishment offering liquor, dancing, and often gambling and prostitution. Also called juke house, juke joint. intr.v. juked, juk·ing, jukes also jooked or jook·ing or … Word Histories
juke — {{11}}juke (n.) roadhouse, 1935; see JUKEBOX (Cf. jukebox). {{12}}juke (v.) to duck, dodge, feint, by 1971, variant of JOOK (Cf. jook) (q.v.). Related: Juked; juking … Etymology dictionary
juke — To twitch uncontrolably. Akin to a seizure without the tongue swallowing. A juke will usually begin in the thumb of one hand and often occurs wile face down on the floor. Cleatus didnt pull the 720 so he layed on the ramp and started to juke … Dictionary of american slang