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  1. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1974 Vinyl release of "Desitively Bonnaroo" on Discogs.

  2. Desitively Bonnaroo (1974) Hollywood Be Thy Name (1975) City Lights (1978) Tango Palace (1979) Take Me Back To New Orleans (1980) Dr. John Plays Mac Rebennack (1981) The Brightest Smile in Town (1983) In a Sentimental Mood (1989) On a Mardi Gras Day (1990)

  3. It might be a hair behind its' better-known predecessor, but just a hair. If you are a fan of Dr. John and The Meters (and if you're not, I think you may be depressed), then you will definitely enjoy this disk. In fact, the only shortcoming is the slightly corny lyrics on a couple of tunes, but you'll be shaking your ass so much you'll hardly ...

  4. For the love of Bonnaroo ... Desitively Bonnaroo For the love of Bonnaroo. 2024 Bonnaroo Lineup Poster. Comment. Tweet. Play It Baby "It's a gonna bonnaroo." - Dr. John. Comment . Tweet. Subscribe by email. Get email alerts about new posts. Unsubscribe an ...

  5. Desitively Bonnaroo is a 1974 album by the New Orleans rhythm and blues musician Dr. John. The album was produced by Allen Toussaint and features sizable musical support from The Meters. The album mines the territory featured on his previous album In The Right Place. This album spent eight weeks on the Billboard 200 charts, peaking at #105 on June 1, 1974. The Bonnaroo Music Festival was named ...

  6. Desitively Bonnaroo, an Album by Dr. John. Released 8 April 1974 on ATCO (catalog no. SD 7043; Vinyl LP). Genres: New Orleans R&B, Funk. Rated #436 in the best albums of 1974. Featured peformers: Allen Toussaint (producer, arranger, keyboards, percussion), Dr. John (guitar, piano, finger cymbals), The Meters (featured), Whit Sidener (alto saxophone, baritone saxophone), Gary Brown (alto ...

  7. Dr. John. Desitively Bonnaroo (Cajun for "better than the best") is the final installment of Dr. John's early-'70s New Orleans funk trilogy, with producer Allen Toussaint and matchless instrumental quartet the Meters again onboard. The funk runs deep in both uptempo tracks like the subtly discofied "What Goes Around (Comes Around)" and the slow ...