• Xariphon
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      261 year ago

      Funny thing. “Whiskey and rye” makes no sense; rye is a kind of whiskey. The lyric is actually “drinking whiskey in Rye,” as in Rye, NY. The next town over from where The Levee, their favorite bar, had unexpectedly closed down.

      • @[email protected]
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        201 year ago

        Remember when physical music discs came with lyrics? Can anyone confirm this is the actual lyric? Because everything I read online says this may be apocryphal

      • Alien Nathan Edward
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        1 year ago

        Rye is a kind of whiskey, sure, but whiskey without qualifiers almost always refers to whiskey made with wheat. In America you may get corn whiskey (which is distinct from bourbon in that bourbon has to be more than half corn in the mash) but I’ll guarantee you could walk into a bar today and order “a shot of whiskey and a shot of rye” and the bartender would know what you meant and get you one shot of wheat whiskey and one shot of rye whiskey.

        Also, the original meaning of whiskey is just “distilled liquor”. It comes from a Gaelic phrase that means “water of life” and only came to mean what we understand as whiskey because that’s how the people who created the term “whiskey” made their hard liquor.

        It’s an awful lot like saying “water and sparkling water”. Sure, sparkling and flat are types of water but no one says “flat water”

    • Kovukono
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      251 year ago

      Archer: So you’re telling me that the good old boys were drinking whisky and rye… (laughing) …like mixed together?

      Robert: Archer, please just…

      Archer: I am concerned about the mental health of them good old boys. (gasps)

      Robert: What?

      Archer: Do you think their jobs were levee-based?