Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1941 | |
Drum BoogieBuy Drum Boogie now from AmazonFirst, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it. | |
Wikipedia article"'Drum Boogie'" is a 1941 jazz "boogie-woogie" standard, composed by Gene Krupa and trumpeter Roy Eldridge and originally sung by Irene Daye, soon replaced by Anita O'Day. Movie appearanceIt was first recorded on January 17, 1941 in Chicago and was also featured in a film that year, 'Ball of Fire', performed by Krupa and his band in an extended version, when it was sung by Barbara Stanwyck, whose singing was dubbed by Martha Tilton. Other versionsIn 1942, Ella Fitzgerald sang the song on tour with the Gene Krupa Orchestra. In 1953, Gene Krupa played the song at the US-operated Ernie Pyle Theatre in Tokyo, which "brought the house down" according to 'The Pittsburgh Courier'. AnalysisDavid Dicaire referred to the song as "Krupa's best drum solo, an accumulation of twenty years of studying the intricacies of rhythmic textures". It is an E flat blues boogie-woogie progression with lyrics such as "Boogie! You hear the rhythm rompin'! Boogie! You see the drummer stompin'! It really is a killer!". In 1971 'The Danville Register' cited it as one of "50 Great Songs" of the Swinging 40's. ReferencesCategory:1940s jazz standards Category:Jazz compositions in E-flat major Category:1941 songs Category:Songs about jazz Category:Songs about drums | |
Buy Drum Boogie now from Amazon <-- Return to songs from 1941 This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1020285768. |