John wrote:PS, the unknown friend who edited it together knows that the other line was in there given that he edited it.
So, why couldn't he admit that I was right in 2015 ?
John wrote:PS, the unknown friend who edited it together knows that the other line was in there given that he edited it.
John wrote:That was a speedy reply. Over 2 years.
Colin B wrote:John wrote:PS, the unknown friend who edited it together knows that the other line was in there given that he edited it.
So, why couldn't he admit that I was right in 2015 ?
Suspicious Minds wrote:...The phrase ‘Shake, Rattle & Roll’ - not the song itself - was already used in 1912, by vaudeville performer "Baby" Franklin Seals, who published ‘You Got to Shake, Rattle and Roll’, a ragtime tune about gambling with dice...
Colin B wrote:Suspicious Minds wrote:...The phrase ‘Shake, Rattle & Roll’ - not the song itself - was already used in 1912, by vaudeville performer "Baby" Franklin Seals, who published ‘You Got to Shake, Rattle and Roll’, a ragtime tune about gambling with dice...
Thanks, that's interesting !
I'd always imagined that the term 'Shake, Rattle & Roll' was a euphemism for something a bit naughtier than rolling dice !
Colin B wrote:
But member Jukebox has recently posted the lyrics of the 4:02 hybrid version [which some unknown 'friend' has edited together]
John wrote:Colin B wrote:Suspicious Minds wrote:...The phrase ‘Shake, Rattle & Roll’ - not the song itself - was already used in 1912, by vaudeville performer "Baby" Franklin Seals, who published ‘You Got to Shake, Rattle and Roll’, a ragtime tune about gambling with dice...
Thanks, that's interesting !
I'd always imagined that the term 'Shake, Rattle & Roll' was a euphemism for something a bit naughtier than rolling dice !
You got a dirty mind Willie, err, Colin.
(actually so did I, and I still do)
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