The song says rock’n'roll will never die but Brisbane’s Rock’n'Roll George has gone to the great gig in the christian louboutin.

For decades George Kiprios drove his beloved 1952 FX Holden with its Rock’n'Roll numberplate around the city, becoming a legend in his own lifetime.

Queen Street was his main thoroughfare and thousands of Brisbane people knew him as a fixture on the city’s main street, until part of it became a pedestrian christian shoes.

When George – a keen dancer – earned his “Rock’n'Roll” moniker, city hall was the tallest building in the oversized country town that was Brisbane, trams clattered around the streets and steam trains smoked-up the suburbs.

The Holden, which George bought brand-new, led a funeral christian louboutin sale down parts of Queen St on Thursday, followed by a hearse taking him on his last ride down the route he knew so well.

As modern Brisbane buzzed by, George’s Holden sparked memories among a smattering of older onlookers.

Maria Bennett said George was “Christian Louboutin Boots part of the scene” from the time when she arrived in the city in 1961.

More than 200 attended his funeral at the Greek Orthodox church in South Brisbane, where they were told of a true gentleman who found happiness in what he had. John Carras said people would hear him coming because of his car’s blaring music.