Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Blues_After_Hours> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 77 of
77
with 100 triples per page.
- Blues_After_Hours runtime "2.466666666666667".
- Blues_After_Hours abstract "\"Blues After Hours\" is a 1948 instrumental by West Coast blues guitarist Pee Wee Crayton. It was his first single and the most successful of his three chart entries. \"Blues After Hours\" went to the number one spot on the R&B charts.According to Crayton, \"Blues After Hours\" was inspired by T-Bone Walker and developed while he was playing at the New Orleans Swing Club in San Francisco. During his first recording session for Jules Bihari, Crayton began to play the song and Bihari decided to record it. Crayton protested, saying that the song was unfinished. Bihari countered \"Play anything\".\"So I started playing and ideas just came. I was making T-Bone's stuff into what little I knew. That turned out to be one of the biggest records I ever had\".Backing Crayton (guitar) are: Buddy Floyd (tenor saxophone), David Lee Johnson (piano), Bill Davis (bass), Candy Johnson (drums), plus additional unidentified musicians. One source calls \"Blues After Hours\" \"a barely disguised takeoff on 'After Hours'\", a 1940 instrumental by Erskine Hawkins and His Orchestra (Bluebird 10879), although Crayton's song features electric guitar, whereas the earlier song does not.".
- Blues_After_Hours bSide ""I'm Still in Love with You"".
- Blues_After_Hours format Gramophone_record.
- Blues_After_Hours genre Blues.
- Blues_After_Hours musicalArtist Pee_Wee_Crayton.
- Blues_After_Hours musicalBand Pee_Wee_Crayton.
- Blues_After_Hours recordLabel Modern_Records.
- Blues_After_Hours runtime "148.0".
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageID "24157762".
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageLength "3554".
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageOutDegree "20".
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageRevisionID "593021857".
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink After_Hours_(Avery_Parrish_song).
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Bewildered.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Bihari_brothers.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Blues.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Category:1948_singles.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Hip-Hop_Songs_number-one_singles.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Category:Blues_songs.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Category:Instrumentals.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Corn_Bread_(instrumental).
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Erskine_Hawkins.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Gramophone_record.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Hal_Singer.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Hip-Hop_Songs.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink List_of_number-one_R&B_singles_of_1948_(U.S.).
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Modern_Records.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Pee_Wee_Crayton.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink Red_Miller_(singer).
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink T-Bone_Walker.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLink West_Coast_blues.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageWikiLinkText "Blues After Hours".
- Blues_After_Hours writer Pee_Wee_Crayton.
- Blues_After_Hours after ""Bewildered" by The Red Miller Trio".
- Blues_After_Hours artist Pee_Wee_Crayton.
- Blues_After_Hours bSide ""I'm Still in Love with You"".
- Blues_After_Hours before ""Corn Bread" by Hal Singer Sextette".
- Blues_After_Hours format "10".
- Blues_After_Hours genre Blues.
- Blues_After_Hours label "Modern".
- Blues_After_Hours name "Blues After Hours".
- Blues_After_Hours nextSingle ""Texas Hop"".
- Blues_After_Hours recorded "1948".
- Blues_After_Hours recorded "Los Angeles".
- Blues_After_Hours thisSingle ""Blues After Hours"".
- Blues_After_Hours title "Billboard Best Selling Retail Race Records number-one single".
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Duration.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:End_box.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_single.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Start_box.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Start_date.
- Blues_After_Hours wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Succession_box.
- Blues_After_Hours writer "Pee Wee Crayton".
- Blues_After_Hours years "1948-11-06".
- Blues_After_Hours subject Category:1948_singles.
- Blues_After_Hours subject Hip-Hop_Songs_number-one_singles.
- Blues_After_Hours subject Category:Blues_songs.
- Blues_After_Hours subject Category:Instrumentals.
- Blues_After_Hours type MusicalWork.
- Blues_After_Hours type Single.
- Blues_After_Hours type Work.
- Blues_After_Hours type Composition.
- Blues_After_Hours type CreativeWork.
- Blues_After_Hours type Thing.
- Blues_After_Hours type Q134556.
- Blues_After_Hours type Q2188189.
- Blues_After_Hours type Q386724.
- Blues_After_Hours comment "\"Blues After Hours\" is a 1948 instrumental by West Coast blues guitarist Pee Wee Crayton. It was his first single and the most successful of his three chart entries. \"Blues After Hours\" went to the number one spot on the R&B charts.According to Crayton, \"Blues After Hours\" was inspired by T-Bone Walker and developed while he was playing at the New Orleans Swing Club in San Francisco.".
- Blues_After_Hours label "Blues After Hours".
- Blues_After_Hours sameAs Q4930438.
- Blues_After_Hours sameAs m.07k8fz_.
- Blues_After_Hours sameAs Q4930438.
- Blues_After_Hours wasDerivedFrom Blues_After_Hours?oldid=593021857.
- Blues_After_Hours isPrimaryTopicOf Blues_After_Hours.
- Blues_After_Hours name "Blues After Hours".