An instrumental version of the blues (especially for piano)
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