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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Drum Boogie" is a 1941 jazz "boogie-woogie" standard, composed by Gene Krupa[1] and trumpeter Roy Eldridge and originally sung by Irene Daye, soon replaced by Anita O'Day.[2][3][4]
It 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.[5]
In 1942, Ella Fitzgerald sang the song on tour with the Gene Krupa Orchestra.[6] 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.[7]
David Dicaire referred to the song as "Krupa's best drum solo, an accumulation of twenty years of studying the intricacies of rhythmic textures".[4] 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.[8]
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