CrateView
More George Thorogood And The Destroyers

More George Thorogood And The Destroyers

Album Summary

More George Thorogood and the Destroyers came rolling out of Rounder Records in 1980, a follow-up that carried the full weight of everything the band had been building on the road since their self-titled debut dropped back in 1977. Produced by George Thorogood and Jack Lieber, this record didn't try to reinvent the wheel — it doubled down on that raw, stripped-down, guitar-driven electric blues that had been turning heads from the bars of Delaware all the way to the concert halls. Recorded during a period when the Destroyers were a relentless touring machine, the sessions captured that live-wire energy and blues traditionalism that no amount of studio polish could manufacture — and to their credit, nobody tried to polish it.

Reception

  • The album reached #55 on the Billboard 200, a testament to the growing grassroots fanbase Thorogood and the Destroyers had been earning one sweaty club show at a time.
  • Critical reception among blues and rock circles was warm and genuine, with reviewers consistently praising the band's uncompromising commitment to authentic electric blues at a time when that kind of honesty was getting harder to find on the radio.
  • The record sold respectably and kept the momentum building toward what would become one of the great commercial breakthroughs in blues-rock, setting the stage for the years ahead.

Significance

  • At a moment when new wave and synth-pop were muscling their way onto every turntable in America, More George Thorogood and the Destroyers stood firm as a testament to the enduring soul of American electric blues — no apologies, no compromises.
  • The album proved that traditional blues-rock wasn't just a nostalgia act but a living, breathing commercial proposition, demonstrating that audiences hungry for real guitar work and honest songwriting were still very much out there.
  • Through tracks like Tip On In and House Of Blue Lights, Thorogood wore his influences — Hound Dog Taylor, Elmore James, and the whole Chicago blues lineage — right on his sleeve, cementing his role as a guardian and torchbearer of that sacred tradition.

Tracklist

# Song BPM Preview Time
  1. A1 I'm Wanted 168 YouTube 4:05
  2. A2 Kids From Philly 192 YouTube 2:30
  3. A3 One Way Ticket 101 YouTube 4:33
  4. A4 Bottom Of The Sea 133 YouTube 3:30
  5. A5 Night Time 184 YouTube 3:03
  6. B1 Tip On In YouTube 3:01
  7. B2 Goodbye Baby 99 YouTube 4:18
  8. B3 House Of Blue Lights 99 YouTube 3:03
  9. B4 Just Can't Make It YouTube 3:25
  10. B5 Restless YouTube 3:14

Artist Details

George Thorogood & The Destroyers burst out of Wilmington, Delaware in 1973, bringing a raw, electrifying blend of Chicago blues and hard-driving rock and roll that hit like a freight train and never let up. This band, led by the impossibly cool slide guitar of George Thorogood himself, carved out a reputation as one of the most ferocious live acts in America, turning barrooms into revival meetings and making classics like "Who Do You Love" and "Bad to the Bone" the soundtrack of blue-collar swagger for generations to come. Their significance lies in keeping the roots of American blues alive and kicking during an era when disco and glam were fighting for the spotlight, proving that sometimes all a soul needs is a slide guitar, a cold drink, and a band that plays like their life depends on it.

Members

Steve Chrismar
Bill Blough

Artist Discography

Nadine (1986)
Boogie People (1991)
Bone-A-Fide Badness: The George Thorogood Chronicles (1991)
Haircut (1992)
Rockin’ My Life Away (1997)
Half a Boy/Half a Man (1999)
Ride ’Til I Die (2003)
The Hard Stuff (2006)
The Dirty Dozen (2009)
2120 South Michigan Ave. (2011)

Complimentary Albums