Tim Carter, and Dave Hagerman on “Keep on Smilin’” by Wet Willie
1 Rockin’ Songs of the South: Freebird Night By Deroy Murdock Bohemian Club January 28, 2009 January 29, 2009 (Ladies’ Night) Draft I (Separate Thursday, Head Table and Friday scripts to follow) [The Jinks Theater’s curtain rises as we hear…] [Song: “South’s Gonna Do It Again”] Sire: Thank you very much, Michael Lee Firkins and Carlos Reyes with the Charlie Daniels Band’s hit, “The South’s Gonna Do it Again.” [Applause.] I’m Haley Barbour, and I’m your Sire tonight. This is my first time to be a Sire, but with my accent, Rich Garlinghouse, the Imperial Potentate around here, thought I’d be perfect . 2 . and, Rich, thanks for letting me do it without an interpreter. Rich says I’m the only member of the Club who pronounces his first name with three syllables. [For Thursday continue with head-table remarks, then end; Resume remarks after first musical number in Jinks Theater Thursday night. Downstairs script begins with thank yous after “South’s Gonna Do It Again.] [For Friday Night, continue straight through.] -- 3 We are here tonight to honor and appreciate Southern Rock. One of this genre’s pioneers, Greg Allman, believes the term “Southern Rock” is redundant. “Sort of like ‘rock rock.’” After all, rock & roll began as southern music. There’d be no rock without the blues, created in the Mississippi Delta by the original bluesmen, like Charlie Patton of Dockery Farms, and Hazlehurst’s Robert Johnson, who, legend has it, sold his soul to the devil to learn to play the blues guitar, down where Highway 49 intersects with US 61.
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