释义 |
Definition of barrelhouse in English: barrelhousenounˈbar(ə)lhaʊsˈbɛrəlˌhaʊs 1North American A cheap or disreputable bar. 〈北美〉低级酒吧 Example sentencesExamples - Boogie-woogie was generally confined to barrelhouses, dance halls, and houses of ill-repute.
- Johnson left home around 1930 and for the rest of his life traveled the country, playing and singing at parties, juke joints, barrelhouses, and other venues.
- Brown played the song at a brisk pace, imitating the piano blues so common in the jukes and barrelhouses of the South.
- There are some eye-opening glimpses into the business of recording, musical discoveries with amplification, sharecropping life, and the get-down funkiness of the juke joints and barrelhouses.
- He rode the rails from the Mississippi Delta to St. Louis, where he played poolrooms, barrelhouses, and parties for food and tips during the 1910s and 1920s.
- The Blue Highway - winds past the plantation barrelhouses of the Delta to the clubs and tenements of postwar Chicago.
- There will be a whole array of local and international artists playing gigs in barrelhouses cross town, and hosting workshops to boot.
- The Seagram Lofts condominiums occupy the two former barrelhouses, and there's almost five acres of land on the site waiting to be developed.
- He worked parties, roadhouses, jukes, and barrelhouses in the South and Midwest, notably Memphis into the 1920's.
- As an itinerant musician in his early life, Pickens played in barrelhouses across the southern states.
- Starting in the barrelhouses and places of even lower repute, piano players provided entertainment often by themselves in places that required music in high spirits.
- He soon began to work in barrelhouses and jukes in Helena, Arkansas often working with pianist Lee Green.
- Patton ruled the Delta blues circuit during the 1920s and early 1930s, packing the barrelhouses and selling loads of records to prove it.
- Every day these barrels of Jack Daniel's whiskey are rolled up into barrelhouses that are scattered throughout the hills.
- Like I say, I was hangin’ around a lot of churches, barrelhouses, speakeasys, I just mix my ideas up and call it a gumbo.
- Though he received a crash course in the ways of women, more important was his exposure to the blues and boogie woogie music which was popular in the barrelhouses at the time.
- Aubrey ‘Moon’ Mullican encountered Holiday frequently in the honkytonks and barrelhouses around Houston.
- By the time Albert was eleven, he was already playing parties and barrelhouses whenever he could slip away.
2mass noun, usually as modifier An unrestrained and unsophisticated style of jazz music. 低级酒吧爵士乐 neither took formal music lessons—they developed their barrelhouse style through playing by ear Example sentencesExamples - The funky barrelhouse piano that stomps all over ‘Cats vs. Dogs’ fits perfectly with the song's aggressively playful mood.
- On album opener ‘Let me Put my Suitcase Down,’ Ethier lays himself down to rest on top of the track's lazy barrelhouse piano.
- The former is given and laid back with an almost reggae rhythm and the French lyrics hilariously slurred through, and ‘Ruby Tuesday’ is given a barrelhouse piano reading by Johnston.
- The results are a delirious jumpcut odyssey where fragments of styles collide and splinter apart; ambient drones, barrelhouse piano, funk, jazz, even a snatch of ‘Roll Out the Barrel’ played on an accordion.
- The title track's a barrelhouse rocker, dripping attitude, about how she can use what she's got to get what she wants.
- They've got this one organ sound that mimics a growling, overdriven axe with startling fidelity, and which, along with the deep waves of the low end, ballasts the mutant barrelhouse boogie.
- Hell, I love ‘Drug Squad’ - love the barrelhouse piano and Strummer's near-Dylanesque delivery, because it's one of the only times they sound like they're having fun on Rope.
- ‘Tuesday Afternoon’ is constantly shifting from gloomy, melancholic folk rock to jumpy, jolly barrelhouse rock, for just a few seconds each.
- Of course round these parts we all love Mr Holland, with his cheeky east-end banter and barrelhouse joanna-thumping style.
- Gelb stays away from jazz or barrelhouse blues, preferring to stay in the classically influenced realm with a few diversions into Kurt Weill territory and that of movie soundtracks.
- ‘Monk's Dream’ perches perfectly between barrelhouse boogie woogie and rippling Conlon Nancarrow player piano.
- As well as some bluesier tracks - not many of them showcased per se; there's some unreal barrelhouse piano played in one of the churchy scenes that makes me wish I had hands with a foot-long reach.
- It's not impossible for them to start off with a barrelhouse boogie and, by the end, be dragging through a New Orleans funeral dirge with a singing saw leading the charge.
- The disc's second half comes across like Coney Island arcane arcadia by way of clattering barrelhouse piano and broken merry-go-round melodies.
OriginLate 19th century: so named because of the rows of barrels along the walls of such a bar. Definition of barrelhouse in US English: barrelhousenounˈbɛrəlˌhaʊsˈberəlˌhous 1North American A cheap or disreputable bar. 〈北美〉低级酒吧 Example sentencesExamples - There are some eye-opening glimpses into the business of recording, musical discoveries with amplification, sharecropping life, and the get-down funkiness of the juke joints and barrelhouses.
- Every day these barrels of Jack Daniel's whiskey are rolled up into barrelhouses that are scattered throughout the hills.
- The Seagram Lofts condominiums occupy the two former barrelhouses, and there's almost five acres of land on the site waiting to be developed.
- He rode the rails from the Mississippi Delta to St. Louis, where he played poolrooms, barrelhouses, and parties for food and tips during the 1910s and 1920s.
- Aubrey ‘Moon’ Mullican encountered Holiday frequently in the honkytonks and barrelhouses around Houston.
- Johnson left home around 1930 and for the rest of his life traveled the country, playing and singing at parties, juke joints, barrelhouses, and other venues.
- He soon began to work in barrelhouses and jukes in Helena, Arkansas often working with pianist Lee Green.
- Brown played the song at a brisk pace, imitating the piano blues so common in the jukes and barrelhouses of the South.
- Like I say, I was hangin’ around a lot of churches, barrelhouses, speakeasys, I just mix my ideas up and call it a gumbo.
- As an itinerant musician in his early life, Pickens played in barrelhouses across the southern states.
- He worked parties, roadhouses, jukes, and barrelhouses in the South and Midwest, notably Memphis into the 1920's.
- The Blue Highway - winds past the plantation barrelhouses of the Delta to the clubs and tenements of postwar Chicago.
- By the time Albert was eleven, he was already playing parties and barrelhouses whenever he could slip away.
- Though he received a crash course in the ways of women, more important was his exposure to the blues and boogie woogie music which was popular in the barrelhouses at the time.
- There will be a whole array of local and international artists playing gigs in barrelhouses cross town, and hosting workshops to boot.
- Boogie-woogie was generally confined to barrelhouses, dance halls, and houses of ill-repute.
- Starting in the barrelhouses and places of even lower repute, piano players provided entertainment often by themselves in places that required music in high spirits.
- Patton ruled the Delta blues circuit during the 1920s and early 1930s, packing the barrelhouses and selling loads of records to prove it.
2usually as modifier An unrestrained and unsophisticated style of jazz music. 低级酒吧爵士乐 neither took formal music lessons—they developed their barrelhouse style through playing by ear Example sentencesExamples - Gelb stays away from jazz or barrelhouse blues, preferring to stay in the classically influenced realm with a few diversions into Kurt Weill territory and that of movie soundtracks.
- Hell, I love ‘Drug Squad’ - love the barrelhouse piano and Strummer's near-Dylanesque delivery, because it's one of the only times they sound like they're having fun on Rope.
- It's not impossible for them to start off with a barrelhouse boogie and, by the end, be dragging through a New Orleans funeral dirge with a singing saw leading the charge.
- ‘Monk's Dream’ perches perfectly between barrelhouse boogie woogie and rippling Conlon Nancarrow player piano.
- The former is given and laid back with an almost reggae rhythm and the French lyrics hilariously slurred through, and ‘Ruby Tuesday’ is given a barrelhouse piano reading by Johnston.
- The results are a delirious jumpcut odyssey where fragments of styles collide and splinter apart; ambient drones, barrelhouse piano, funk, jazz, even a snatch of ‘Roll Out the Barrel’ played on an accordion.
- As well as some bluesier tracks - not many of them showcased per se; there's some unreal barrelhouse piano played in one of the churchy scenes that makes me wish I had hands with a foot-long reach.
- They've got this one organ sound that mimics a growling, overdriven axe with startling fidelity, and which, along with the deep waves of the low end, ballasts the mutant barrelhouse boogie.
- On album opener ‘Let me Put my Suitcase Down,’ Ethier lays himself down to rest on top of the track's lazy barrelhouse piano.
- The title track's a barrelhouse rocker, dripping attitude, about how she can use what she's got to get what she wants.
- Of course round these parts we all love Mr Holland, with his cheeky east-end banter and barrelhouse joanna-thumping style.
- The disc's second half comes across like Coney Island arcane arcadia by way of clattering barrelhouse piano and broken merry-go-round melodies.
- The funky barrelhouse piano that stomps all over ‘Cats vs. Dogs’ fits perfectly with the song's aggressively playful mood.
- ‘Tuesday Afternoon’ is constantly shifting from gloomy, melancholic folk rock to jumpy, jolly barrelhouse rock, for just a few seconds each.
OriginLate 19th century: so named because of the rows of barrels along the walls of such a bar. |