Boogie rock

Boogie rock
Stylistic origins Rock and roll, blues rock, rhythm and blues, hard rock
Cultural origins 1960s Britain and United States
Typical instruments Guitar - Bass - Drums - Piano - Harmonica
Mainstream popularity Peaked in the 1970s in Europe, Australia and the Americas

Boogie rock is a music genre which came out of the hard heavy blues rock of the late 1960s.[1] It tends to feature a repetitive driving rhythm in place of instrumental experimentation found in the more progressive blues-rock bands of the period.

Contents

Definitions

Boogie rockers concentrate on the groove, working a steady, chugging back beat, often in shuffle time.[2]

History

One of the first bands to popularize boogie rock worldwide was Canned Heat.[3] Boogie rock reached the height of its popularity in the mid to late 1970s.[4]

Many US boogie rock bands have a southern twang, like Canned Heat, ZZ Top, The Allman Brothers Band[5] and Lynyrd Skynyrd. The Canadian band Bachman-Turner Overdrive also popularized a style of heavy, danceable boogie rock in the mid-1970s.[6]

British bands include Status Quo,[7] Humble Pie, Savoy Brown,[8] Foghat[9]and Engine. Status Quo became, from the early 1970s the most significant British boogie rock band.

References

  1. ^ Sunday Morning Playlist: Blues Rock
  2. ^ MSN Entertainment - Music: Boogie Rock
  3. ^ Festival brings the blues to Portland's waterfront
  4. ^ Free Boogie Rock Music: Album, Track and Artist Charts - Rhapsody Online
  5. ^ allmusic
  6. ^ Interview track on the 1998 CD release King Biscuit Flower Hour: Bachman-Turner Overdrive
  7. ^ STATUS QUO | Unique, Detailed Biography | MusicMight
  8. ^ Larkin, Colin, ed (1997). "Savoy Brown". Encyclopedia of Popular Music, Concise Edition. London: Virgin Publishing Ltd. p. 1056. ISBN 1-85227-745-9. "Having honed a simple, blues-boogie style, the guitarist now seemed content to repeat it..." 
  9. ^ http://www.foghat.com/fog_band/history.htm

External links