Archive for December, 2009
In the book, “The Story of the Blues,” on page 16 in his chapter titled “Cottonfield Hollers,” 5 historian Paul Oliver wrote:
“When the blues began, the countryside was quiet. Loudest of the sounds to break the stillness was the roar of a steam train as it traced its way through the lowlands, leaving a smudge [...]
December 22nd, 2009 | Posted in 8 to the bar, Barrelhouse Music, Blues Piano, Boogie Woogie Piano History, Country Blues Piano, Fast Blues, Fast Texas, Fast Western, Galveston Blues, Hillbilly Music, Honky Tonk, Jazz, Ragtime, Rock and Roll Piano, Rockabilly, Stride Music, Walking Bass, Western Rolling Blues | 2 Comments
The quotations above from E. Simms Campbell and Clarence Williams are among the earliest accounts that attribute an origin of Boogie Woogie music to a specific geographical region, namely Texas. Their comments above are also noteworthy in that neither E. Simms Campbell nor Clarence Williams were from Texas. Campbell was from St. Louis [...]
December 22nd, 2009 | Posted in 8 to the bar, Barrelhouse Music, Blues Piano, Boogie Woogie Piano History, Country Blues Piano, Fast Blues, Fast Texas, Fast Western, Galveston Blues, Hillbilly Music, Honky Tonk, Jazz, Ragtime, Rock and Roll Piano, Rockabilly, Stride Music, Walking Bass, Western Rolling Blues | 3 Comments
Photo Above: Steel Gang Laying a Logging Railroad in the Piney Woods of East Texas. The image is from the East Texas Research Center Collection.
“Although the neighboring states of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Missouri would also produce boogie-woogie players and their boogie-woogie tunes, and despite the fact that Chicago would become known as the center for [...]
December 21st, 2009 | Posted in 8 to the bar, Barrelhouse Music, Blues Piano, Boogie Woogie Piano History, Country Blues Piano, Fast Blues, Fast Texas, Fast Western, Galveston Blues, Hillbilly Music, Honky Tonk, Jazz, Ragtime, Rock and Roll Piano, Rockabilly, Stride Music, Walking Bass, Western Rolling Blues | 2 Comments
On page 2 of his 1940 “Boogie Woogie and Blues Folio,”63 in his annotation to the reprint of the 1923 sheet music of George W. Thomas, Jr.‘s “New Orleans Hop Scop Blues,” (first published in 1916 by George W. Thomas) Clarence Williams states:
“The ‘Boogie Woogie’ originated in Texas many years ago. It wasn’t called [...]
December 21st, 2009 | Posted in 8 to the bar, Barrelhouse Music, Blues Piano, Boogie Woogie Piano History, Boogie Woogie Piano Player Biographies, Country Blues Piano, Fast Blues, Fast Texas, Fast Western, Galveston Blues, Hillbilly Music, Honky Tonk | 3 Comments
The photo above was taken in Minglewood, TN in 1920. This photo is contained in the Special Collections Photograph Archives of the University of Louisville.
“Boogie Woogie piano playing originated in the lumber and turpentine camps of Texas and in the sporting houses of that state. A fast, rolling bass — [...]
December 17th, 2009 | Posted in 8 to the bar, Barrelhouse Music, Blues Piano, Boogie Woogie Piano History, Country Blues Piano, Fast Blues, Fast Texas, Fast Western, Galveston Blues, Hillbilly Music, Honky Tonk, Jazz, Ragtime, Rock and Roll Piano, Rockabilly, Stride Music, Uncategorized, Walking Bass, Western Rolling Blues | 2 Comments
(The web pages here on the BoogieWoogie.Com web site contain only a fraction of the material that I will eventually publish as a book. Never before published material from my own field research into Boogie Woogie will be in this forthcoming book. If you would like a copy, please contact me using the contact [...]
December 17th, 2009 | Posted in 8 to the bar, Barrelhouse Music, Blues Piano, Boogie Woogie Piano History, Country Blues Piano, Fast Blues, Fast Texas, Fast Western, Galveston Blues, Hillbilly Music, Honky Tonk, Jazz, Ragtime, Rock and Roll Piano, Rockabilly, Stride Music, Walking Bass, Western Rolling Blues | 2 Comments