释义 |
boogie-woogie orig. U.S.|ˈbuːgɪˈwuːgɪ| [Redupl. f. boogie n.2] A style of playing blues (usu. on the piano) marked by a persistent bass rhythm.
1928(title) Pinetop's Boogie Woogie. 1935Swing Music Aug. 153 This side [of the record] might be an instruction disc in Swedish Drill..only it's a lesson in Boogie Woogie. 1938Manchester Guardian Wkly. 2 Sept. 188/3 Sometimes they play ‘boogie-woogie’ (on the heavy brass instruments). 1940Time 4 Mar. 48/2 Boogie-woogie is a kind of blues piano playing in which the left hand drones a set bass phrase over and over, while the right hand goes to town with whatever variations the player can think up. 1941N.Y. Times x. 7/3 The twelve-bar structure which is the basis of almost all boogie-woogie music is also one of the mainstays of hot jazz as a whole. 1950S. Morton Unfamiliar Name v. 76 They wanted the jive and boogie-woogie boys. 1966Crescendo Nov. 14/3 I'd listen to a lot of boogie woogie records and copy them off by ear. This led to me making up my own boogie woogies. |