- Source: Third degree
- Source: Third Degree
General
"The third degree", a colloquial expression for torture or intensive interrogation
Arts, entertainment, and media
= Film
=The Third Degree (1913 film), American silent melodrama
The Third Degree (1919 film), American silent drama
The Third Degree (1926 film), American romance film
The Third Degree (2001 film), American crime television film by Steve Miner
Third Degree Films, American pornographic film studio
= Literature
=3rd Degree (novel), 2004, by James Patterson
Third Degree, a book by Tania Roxborogh
= Music
=Third Degree, a 1986 Johnny Winter album
Third Degree (Flying Colors album), a 2019 Flying Colors album
Third Degree (styled "THIRD D3GREE"), predecessor to Australian pop duo The Clique
= Television and radio
=3rd Degree (game show), an American TV show
3rd Degree, a South African current affairs TV show on eNCA
The 3rd Degree (radio series), a BBC Radio 4 quiz show
The 3rd Degree, a series of stage shows which became the Australian TV series The Ronnie Johns Half Hour in 2005
Ranks
Third degree, a level of black belt in martial arts
Third degree or Master Mason, a rank of Freemasonry
Third degree, the highest rank in British Traditional Wicca
Other
"Third Degree" - Funhouse franchise in the early 1900s
See also
First degree (disambiguation)
Second degree (disambiguation)
The Three Degrees, an R&B vocal group
All pages with titles beginning with Third degree
Third Degree is a 1986 album by Johnny Winter and the final one of the trilogy he made for Alligator Records. Following disagreements with Alligator's boss Bruce Iglauer during the production of Winter's previous album, Serious Business, the album was produced by Dick Shurman with Iglauer taking on an Executive Producer role.
Next to Winter's previous album, Third Degree presents more variety. Winter chose not to provide original material, focusing instead on blues standards. For three of the tracks, Winter reunited with bassist Tommy Shannon and drummer Uncle Red Turner, who were Winter's backing band on his first three albums in the late 1960s/early 1970s. Another notable guest on the record is Doctor John, who performed on "Love, Life and Money" and "Tin Pan Alley". (Dr. John and Winter had previously performed together on the occasion of an episode of "In Session TV" in 1983) Winter also included two solo acoustic numbers, "Evil on My Mind" and "Bad Girl Blues", practicing for months with a National Steel Guitar.
Track listing
"Mojo Boogie" (J.B. Lenoir) — 4:52
"Love, Life and Money" (Willie Dixon, Henry Glover) — 5:20
"Evil on My Mind" (Johnny Winter) — 2:17
"See See Baby" (Freddie King, Sonny Thompson) — 3:10
"Tin Pan Alley" (Jerry Jones) — 5:48
"I'm Good" (Bill Collins, Bonnie Lee) — 3:49
"Third Degree" (Eddie Boyd, Willie Dixon) — 6:34
"Shake Your Moneymaker" (Elmore James) — 2:40
"Bad Girl Blues" (William Borum a.k.a. Memphis Willie B. ) — 4:33
"Broke and Lonely" (John Jacob Watson a.k.a. Johnny Guitar Watson) — 4:50
Personnel
Johnny Winter — electric guitar, National steel guitar, vocals
Ken Saydak — piano
Doctor John — piano on 2 and 5
Johnny B. Gayden — bass
Tommy Shannon — bass on 4, 8 and 10
Uncle Red Turner — drums on 4, 8 and 10
Casey Jones — drums
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Conor McGregor
- Marc Bolan
- Mia Khalifa
- Eugene Mullin
- Brazzers
- L. Rogers Lytton
- Kate Price (pemeran)
- Ava Addams
- Daftar episode Happy Tree Friends
- Day6
- Third degree
- Third Degree Films
- Burn
- Murder in United States law
- Third Degree
- Third-degree atrioventricular block
- Third degree (interrogation)
- British undergraduate degree classification
- First-degree atrioventricular block
- Coefficient of relationship