School Days 演唱: Chuck Berry 00:02.3 lrc/lyrics 文档 txt 文档 下载lyrics文档 [00:00.00]School Days - Chuck Berry (查克·贝里) [00:02.92]Up in the mornin' and out to school [00:06.48]The teacher is teachin' the Golden Rule [00:10.04]American history and practical math [00:13.79]...
precisely articulated lyrics were a major inspiration for the English pop renaissance and for a wide variety of other rock musicians. A dynamic performer, he also became known for his signature crouching and gliding “duck walk.” Berry produced a string of hits in the late 1950s, many of wh...
Chuck Berry–Oh Yeah lyrics Post my meaning Write my explanationnew Request & respond explanations Don't understand the meaning of the song? Highlight lyrics and request an explanation. Click onhighlightedlyrics to explain. In the Wee wee hours, I used to play Maybellene ...
Chuck Berry was discovered by Muddy Waters while on vacation to St. Louis. Berry’s upbeat blues were spiked with country and given a teenage twist. Songs about work became songs about school; his love songs were less dark and more playful. Berry was a poet, capable of packing more syllab...
Berry, in his late 20s before his first major hit, crafted lyrics that spoke to the teenagers of the day and remained fresh decades later. His style was influenced by bandleader Louis Jourdan, blues guitarist T-Bone Walker and jazz man Charlie Christian, but also hip to country music, nove...
Berry had intended the song to be about Johnson but he admitted it ended up “more or less about myself.” In a time of terrible racial segregation, he also decided to change the lyrics so not to alienate white audiences, telling Rolling Stone in 1972; “The original words [were], of...
(1958), Berry refined and developed rhythm and blues into the major elements that made rock and roll distinctive, with lyrics successfully aimed to appeal to the early teenage market by using graphic and humorous descriptions of teen dances, fast cars, high school life, and consumer culture, ...
So, “Reelin’ and Rockin'” is of course one of Chuck Berry’s biggest hits and you’ve probably heard it a million times. This version, though, is from the 1978 Alan Freed biopic,American Hot Wax. In addition to featuring more explicitly lurid lyrics than the recorded version, it’s...
McCartney and George Harrison is incalculable. After becoming stars in their own right, they sang his praises at every turn and as a band delivered two studio versions of Berry songs. Lennon’s unhinged take on “Rock and Roll Music” reveals his love for everything Chuck Berry, and ...
Berry tapped into rock’s sense of rebellion, but slyly. His songs were celebrations of youth’s new sovereignty; they were also demarcations. His lyrics didn’t flash switchblade imagery – rather, they drew lines by issuing rally cries: “Early in the mornin’ I’m a-givin’ you a war...