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词汇 barrelhouse
释义

Definition of barrelhouse in English:

barrelhouse

nounˈbar(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.

Origin

Late 19th century: so named because of the rows of barrels along the walls of such a bar.

Definition of barrelhouse in US English:

barrelhouse

nounˈbɛrəlˌhaʊsˈberəlˌhous
  • 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.

Origin

Late 19th century: so named because of the rows of barrels along the walls of such a bar.

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