An instrumental version of the blues (especially for piano)
Sinònims
Examples for "boogie"
Examples for "boogie"
1New Zealand born boogie-woogie pianist Jan Preston is on NZ Live today.
2There were hundreds, if not thousands, of people dancing a boozey boogie.
3On the bright side, there's no time for a boogie woogie solo.
4We can boogie this iron pony uphill, downhill, and off the road.
5Incredibly he manages to keep his hair perfect throughout his boogie session.
1New Zealand born boogie-woogie pianist Jan Preston is on NZ Live today.
2Thus began my adoration of Waller and jazz piano, especially stride and boogie-woogie.
3Somewhere a piano was playing boogie-woogie and people were laughing and clapping along.
4The results reached polyphonic realms hitherto unknown, from the Bartòkian boogie-woogie-on-speed of Study no.
5The first boogie-woogie was written by George Thomas, in 1913.
6I added a blues guitar, a boogie-woogie piano player and drummer cracking that afterbeat.
7Mother could play wonderful boogie-woogie when the urge struck her, but it didn't often.
8Outwardly, nothing had changed: the relentless boogie-woogie and ramshackle interviews were all present and correct.
9I loved boogie-woogie and hillbilly music and gospel too much, Toussaint said on the website.
10When Laurence had trouble sleeping as a baby, Jackson played boogie-woogie records to console him.
11They sure laid some boogie-woogie on you, she thought.
12That was the beginning of his boogie-woogie period.
13There's also some classic boogie-woogie courtesy of Piano Red and a birthday tune for Jimmie Dale Gilmore.
14Tiny Bradshaw plays the first version in the jump blues style, with boogie-woogie piano and big-band brass.
15It isn't a boogie-woogie, but close.
16He was influenced by the jazz and boogie-woogie musicians he heard playing in bars among Fairmont's black community.
Translations for boogie-woogie