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  1. Vor 5 Tagen · Biography. Maximum Rock’n’Roll duo His Lordship - The new project from guitarist James Walbourne (The Pretenders, The Pogues, The Rails) and Kristoffer Sonne (Chrissie Hynde, Willie Nelson). "A dose of helter-skelter outlaw energy from two of the best in the biz" - Clash Magazine.

  2. Vor 22 Stunden · Once tagged by Classic Rock magazine as a ram-jam barrage of 50`s Rock `n` roll mania shot through with punk venom, His Lordship are essentially James Walbourne and drummer Kristoffer Sonne, who usually add Dave Page on bass when they hit the road. Their self titled album was released in January and the fellas arrive […]

  3. Vor 22 Stunden · Maximum Rock’n’Roll duo His Lordship - The new project from guitarist James Walbourne (The Pretenders, The Pogues, The Rails) and Kristoffer Sonne (Chrissie Hynde, Willie Nelson) "A ram-jam barrage of 50s rock'n' roll mania, shot through with punk venom" - Classic Rock Mag

  4. Vor einem Tag · Maximum Rock’n’Roll duo His Lordship - The new project from guitarist James Walbourne (The Pretenders, The Pogues, The Rails) and Kristoffer Sonne (Chrissie Hynde, Willie Nelson) "A ram-jam barrage of 50s rock'n' roll mania, shot through with punk venom" - Classic Rock Mag

  5. Vor 4 Tagen · Maximum Rock’n’Roll duo His Lordship - The new project from guitarist James Walbourne (The Pretenders, The Pogues, The Rails) and Kristoffer Sonne (Chrissie Hynde, Willie Nelson). "A dose of helter-skelter outlaw energy from two of the best in the biz" - Clash Magazine

  6. Vor 5 Tagen · A maximum rock ’n’ roll trio conceived during lockdown to blow the cobwebs away and remind us of what music has been missing, the band are made up of the powerhouse duo of James Walbourne (The Pretenders, The Pogues, The Rails) and Kristoffer Sonne (Chrissie Hynde, Willie Nelson).

  7. Vor 4 Tagen · Yesterday I travelled to Manchester and went to see James Walbourne's band, His Lordship in a tiny venue. Paid £15 to watch 3 musicians play for an hour (plus support) = £5 per musician per hour! Therefore, Wednesday was a bargain (and in real terms, to me, it absolutely was). PS They were both great, but Bruce was greater, obvs.