Boogie rock is a music genre which came out of the hard heavy blues-rock of the late 1960s. It tends to feature a repetitive driving rhythm in place of instrumental experimentation found in the more progressive blues-rock bands of the period. Boogie rockers concentrate on the groove, working a steady, chugging back beat, often in shuffle time. Boogie rock can be considered the upbeat form of blues-rock. One of the first bands to popularize boogie rock worldwide was Canned Heat.
| Property | Value |
| dbpedia-owl:MusicGenre/instrument
| |
| dbpedia-owl:MusicGenre/musicSubgenre
| |
| dbpedia-owl:MusicGenre/stylisticOrigin
| |
| dbpedia-owl:instrument
| |
| dbpedia-owl:musicSubgenre
| |
| dbpedia-owl:stylisticOrigin
| |
| dbpprop:abstract
|
- Boogie rock is a music genre which came out of the hard heavy blues-rock of the late 1960s. It tends to feature a repetitive driving rhythm in place of instrumental experimentation found in the more progressive blues-rock bands of the period. Boogie rockers concentrate on the groove, working a steady, chugging back beat, often in shuffle time. Boogie rock can be considered the upbeat form of blues-rock. One of the first bands to popularize boogie rock worldwide was Canned Heat. The main distinction between bands is their instrumental attack. Boogie rock reached the height of its popularity in the mid to late 1970s
- Il Boogie Rock è un ramo del blues rock/hard rock dalle sonorità più dure, sviluppato nei tardi anni sessanta. Invece di concentrare la struttura dei brani sull'improvvisazione come le blues-rock band classiche, gli esponenti del boogie rock erano incentrati su sonorità più dirette e costanti. Quasi tutte le band suonavano ad un tempo di 4/4 e la principale distinzione fra i gruppi era l'approccio strumentale, ad esempio gruppi come Foghat presentavano sonorità generalmente più dure degli altri.
|
| dbpprop:bgcolor
| |
| dbpprop:color
| |
| dbpprop:culturalOrigins
| |
| dbpprop:date
| |
| dbpprop:instruments
| |
| dbpprop:name
| |
| dbpprop:popularity
|
- Peaked in the 1970s in € and the Americas
|
| dbpprop:reference
| |
| dbpprop:stylisticOrigins
| |
| dbpprop:subgenrelist
| |
| dbpprop:subgenres
| |
| dbpprop:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:comment
|
- Boogie rock is a music genre which came out of the hard heavy blues-rock of the late 1960s. It tends to feature a repetitive driving rhythm in place of instrumental experimentation found in the more progressive blues-rock bands of the period. Boogie rockers concentrate on the groove, working a steady, chugging back beat, often in shuffle time. Boogie rock can be considered the upbeat form of blues-rock. One of the first bands to popularize boogie rock worldwide was Canned Heat.
- Il Boogie Rock è un ramo del blues rock/hard rock dalle sonorità più dure, sviluppato nei tardi anni sessanta. Invece di concentrare la struttura dei brani sull'improvvisazione come le blues-rock band classiche, gli esponenti del boogie rock erano incentrati su sonorità più dirette e costanti.
|
| rdfs:label
| |
| skos:subject
| |
| foaf:name
| |
| foaf:page
| |
| is dbpedia-owl:Artist/genre
of | |
| is dbpedia-owl:MusicGenre/derivative
of | |
| is dbpedia-owl:Work/genre
of | |
| is dbpedia-owl:derivative
of | |
| is dbpedia-owl:genre
of | |
| is dbpprop:derivatives
of | |
| is dbpprop:disambiguates
of | |
| is dbpprop:genre
of | |
| is dbpprop:redirect
of | |