Voorbeelden van het gebruik van Lee hooker in het Engels en hun vertalingen in het Nederlands
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Colloquial
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Official
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Ecclesiastic
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Medicine
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Financial
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Computer
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Ecclesiastic
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Official/political
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Programming
Johnson, Hopkins, John Lee Hooker.
John Lee Hooker concert with Donna.
I'm going to the John Lee Hooker concert.
especially John Lee Hooker.
I'm going to the John Lee Hooker concert with Donna.
Traveling Wilburys. Chuck Berry, John Lee Hooker.
I'm going to the John Lee Hooker concert with Donna.
In 1998 Roland got to interview his idol John Lee Hooker.
Chuck Berry, John Lee Hooker, Traveling Wilburys.
music go back to blues legends like Willie Dixon and John Lee Hooker.
Shrimp, crayfish& crab met John Lee Hooker op de voorgrond.
Lightnin' Hopkins or John Lee Hooker.
He also produced BluesWay recordings by John Lee Hooker, T-Bone Walker, and others.
Sheraton II were the main guitars used by blues legend John Lee Hooker.
It's John Lee Hooker time. Too hot,
Too hot, too cold, too happy, too sad, thirsty, hungry, bored… it's John Lee Hooker time.
Roland discovered this genre when he saw John Lee Hooker perform in café De Muze in Antwerpen.
to be reincarnated as John Lee Hooker.
Too hot, too cold, too happy, too sad, it's John Lee Hooker time. thirsty, hungry, bored.
shared the billboards with the legendary John Lee Hooker, B.B.
Years ago I had a VH1 TV show and John Lee Hooker once told me,"Always wear your sun glasses indoors.
hungry bored… it's John Lee Hooker time. Boom, boom.
He recorded with John Lee Hooker, Eubie Blake, Ella Fitzgerald, Illinois Jacquet, Ray Charles, Mahalia Jackson and Big Joe Turner.
He returned to Donaldsonville by 1948 and, inspired by Muddy Waters and John Lee Hooker, began taking guitar lessons from a cousin.
At the age of twelve, he decided to concentrate on learning the guitar after hearing"Boogie Chillen'" by John Lee Hooker.
When he discovered the album Live at Newport by John Lee Hooker, he decided that he also wanted to make this kind of music.
including Lefty Bates and John Lee Hooker.
Blueslegend John Lee Hooker the artist that inspired him to go into music-making with his concert in the legendary Antwerp café De Muze,
Boom Boom" is a song written by American blues singer/guitarist John Lee Hooker and recorded in 1961.
As the first African bluesman to achieve widespread popularity on his home continent, Touré was often known as"the African John Lee Hooker.