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Budd's fluted stainless-steel, rubber-tired railcar, the Silver Slipper, in 1933; it is sometimes credited as the first streamlined passenger train. The Budd–Michelin rubber-tired rail cars were built by the Budd Company in the United States between 1931 and 1933 using French firm Michelin's "Micheline" rail car design.
A hubcap is technically a small cover over the center of the wheel, while a wheel cover is a decorative metal or plastic disk that snaps or bolts onto and covers the entire face of the wheel. [ 3 ] Cars with stamped steel wheels often use a full-wheel cover that conceals the entire wheel.
Leroy "Roy" Buchanan (September 23, 1939 – August 14, 1988) was an American guitarist and blues rock musician. A pioneer of the Telecaster sound, [1] Buchanan worked as a sideman and as a solo artist, with two gold albums early in his career [2] and two later solo albums that made it to the Billboard chart.
Rear wheel partially covered by a detachable fender skirt on 1969 Buick Electra 225 1952 Nash Rambler non-detachable front and rear fender skirts 1986 Citroën CX Los Angeles city bus Fender skirts , known in Australia and the United Kingdom as spats or covers, are pieces of bodywork attached to or part of the fender that cover the upper ...
Roy Buchanan is a 1972 album by American guitarist and blues musician Roy Buchanan. [1] It is his second album and first for Polydor. Critical reception
Roy Buchanan - lead guitar; Ray Gomez - acoustic and rhythm guitar; Willie Weeks - bass; Andy Newmark - drums [6] Jean Roussel - keyboards (not credited) with: Gary St. Clair - lead vocals on "Down by the River" Alfa Anderson, David Lasley, Krystal Davis, Luther Vandross - backing vocals on "Down by the River" [6]
The double CD contains released as well as previously unreleased recordings, live and studio. According to Mike Joyce, who reviewed the album in The Washington Post, it "presents the good, the bad and the unreleased from Buchanan's tenure with the Polydor and Atlantic labels." [1] The anthology is part of PolyGram's "Chronicles" retrospective ...
The cover, designed by John Kehe, is a mirrored still frame of Dorothy's ruby slippers. [43] This still was also used for the picture sleeve of " Can't Get It Out of My Head ", the single release from the Eldorado album.