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Link Nr. 4 has changed: http://www.rhapsody.com/genre/rock-pop/blues-and-boogie-rock/boogie-rock 79.10.72.2 ( talk) 17:56, 9 July 2013 (UTC)
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Cheers.— cyberbot II Talk to my owner:Online 11:40, 24 January 2016 (UTC)
This needs more historical reference. Boogie rock is an guitar rock style based on Jump blues(which in itself is a product of boogie woogie)..its where the word 'Boogie' comes from. Which was popularised in the fifties by people like Chuck Berry and reinvented by bands such as the Stones in the early sixties. 81.146.61.12 ( talk) 21:35, 18 May 2016 (UTC)
Some new expansion by Ojorojo has added a paragraph with a list of artists. This might be in violation of Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Music#Lists which says "Music genre articles should not contain lists of performers." I interpret that to mean we should be describing each significant artist in some context relative to the topic rather than simply listing them in a row of commas or a column of bullet points. As is usual in music genres, we could break out the full list of artists into a separate article, possibly titled List of boogie rock artists. The most influential artists should be described here, telling the reader why each is important. Binksternet ( talk) 16:34, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
In Status Quo: Mighty Innovators of 70s Rock, author Andrew L. Cope outlines a definition of "boogie rock" that is unrelated to Hooker and "Boogie Chillen". [5] Instead, he traces its development from a "12-bar riff" (his term for a "boogie shuffle" or "boogie bass pattern", i.e., a "fifth–sixth degrees of a major scale oscillation above the root chord"), that is a simplified version of the classic piano boogie rhythm figure from the 1920s–30s, such as in " Honky Tonk Train Blues". He cites "examples of 12-bar riffs used in a rock 'n' roll context" as "Johnny B. Goode" and "Roll Over Beethoven" (other authors, such as Birnbaum, have shown the influence of boogie or boogie woogie through jump blues upon early R&R).
Cope then attempts to define boogie rock as "incorporating a boogie/swing/shuffle rhythm to contrast the straight eighths rhythm of rock 'n' roll, and a harder-edged, more serious blues-rock element". He gives several Status Quo songs as examples ("Junior's Wailing", " Mean Girl", "Don't Waste My Time", "Softer Ride", and " Break the Rules"), all of which feature prominent rhythm guitar shuffle riffs.
A problem with this definition is that the Hooker-derived songs now reliably sourced in the article (Canned Heat's signature "Fried Hockey Boogie", "Spirit in the Sky", and "La Grange") don't meet it. Other songs that have been mentioned, such as "Sabbra Cadabra", " Smokin'", " Hot for Teacher", etc., also would not fit with this definition.
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Link Nr. 4 has changed: http://www.rhapsody.com/genre/rock-pop/blues-and-boogie-rock/boogie-rock 79.10.72.2 ( talk) 17:56, 9 July 2013 (UTC)
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Boogie rock. Please take a moment to review
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Cheers.— cyberbot II Talk to my owner:Online 11:40, 24 January 2016 (UTC)
This needs more historical reference. Boogie rock is an guitar rock style based on Jump blues(which in itself is a product of boogie woogie)..its where the word 'Boogie' comes from. Which was popularised in the fifties by people like Chuck Berry and reinvented by bands such as the Stones in the early sixties. 81.146.61.12 ( talk) 21:35, 18 May 2016 (UTC)
Some new expansion by Ojorojo has added a paragraph with a list of artists. This might be in violation of Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Music#Lists which says "Music genre articles should not contain lists of performers." I interpret that to mean we should be describing each significant artist in some context relative to the topic rather than simply listing them in a row of commas or a column of bullet points. As is usual in music genres, we could break out the full list of artists into a separate article, possibly titled List of boogie rock artists. The most influential artists should be described here, telling the reader why each is important. Binksternet ( talk) 16:34, 1 July 2021 (UTC)
In Status Quo: Mighty Innovators of 70s Rock, author Andrew L. Cope outlines a definition of "boogie rock" that is unrelated to Hooker and "Boogie Chillen". [5] Instead, he traces its development from a "12-bar riff" (his term for a "boogie shuffle" or "boogie bass pattern", i.e., a "fifth–sixth degrees of a major scale oscillation above the root chord"), that is a simplified version of the classic piano boogie rhythm figure from the 1920s–30s, such as in " Honky Tonk Train Blues". He cites "examples of 12-bar riffs used in a rock 'n' roll context" as "Johnny B. Goode" and "Roll Over Beethoven" (other authors, such as Birnbaum, have shown the influence of boogie or boogie woogie through jump blues upon early R&R).
Cope then attempts to define boogie rock as "incorporating a boogie/swing/shuffle rhythm to contrast the straight eighths rhythm of rock 'n' roll, and a harder-edged, more serious blues-rock element". He gives several Status Quo songs as examples ("Junior's Wailing", " Mean Girl", "Don't Waste My Time", "Softer Ride", and " Break the Rules"), all of which feature prominent rhythm guitar shuffle riffs.
A problem with this definition is that the Hooker-derived songs now reliably sourced in the article (Canned Heat's signature "Fried Hockey Boogie", "Spirit in the Sky", and "La Grange") don't meet it. Other songs that have been mentioned, such as "Sabbra Cadabra", " Smokin'", " Hot for Teacher", etc., also would not fit with this definition.