. . . . . "Joe Hill Louis - \"Boogie in the Park\""@en . . . "Joe Hill Louis - Boogie in the Park.ogg"@en . . "Howlin' Wolf - How Many More Years.ogg"@en . . . . . . . . "James Cotton - Cotton Crop Blues.ogg"@en . . . "white"@en . "\"Boogie in the Park\" by Joe Hill Louis. It featured Louis playing an overdriven, distorted electric guitar solo while playing on a drum kit at the same time."@en . . . "Electric blues"@en . . . . . . . . . . . . "Goree Carter - \"Rock Awhile\""@en . . . "Goree Carter - Rock Awhile.ogg"@en . . . . . . . . . "Goree Carter's \"Rock Awhile\" featured an over-driven electric guitar style and is considered a strong contender for the \"first rock and roll record\" title."@en . "1960.0"^^ . "*Blues scale\n*Electric guitar\n*Guitar amplifier\n*Distortion\n*Power chord\n*String bending"@en . . . . . "Guitar Slim - The Things That I Used to Do.ogg"@en . . . . . "Electric blues"@en . "#0000E1"@en . . "James Cotton's \"Cotton Crop Blues\" , featuring Pat Hare playing a heavily distorted, power chord-driven electric guitar solo anticipating elements of heavy metal."@en . "Howlin' Wolf's \"How Many More Years\" is considered the first record to feature a distorted power chord, played by Willie Johnson on the electric guitar."@en . . . . . . . . "*Chicago blues\n*Detroit blues\n*Texas blues\n*Memphis blues\n*New Orleans blues\n*British blues\n*Canadian blues"@en . . "James Cotton - \"Cotton Crop Blues\""@en . "*Rhythm and blues\n*Rock and roll\n*Rockabilly\n*Soul blues\n*Blues rock\n*Punk blues"@en . "right"@en . . . . "Electric blues is a type of blues music distinguished by the use of the electric guitar as a lead instrument and the amplification of the instruments, including the lead guitar, bass guitar, drums, and occasionally the harmonica or keyboard. Pioneered in the 1930s, it emerged as a genre in Chicago in the 1940s. It was taken up in many areas of America, leading to the development of regional subgenres, following its adoption in regional scenes such as Memphis and Texas. The genre had fully developed by the 1950s."@en . . "Early 1940s: United States"@en . . . . "Howlin' Wolf - \"How Many More Years\""@en . . "Guitar Slim's \"The Things That I Used to Do\" contributed to the development of rock and soul music."@en . . "Guitar Slim - \"The Things That I Used to Do\""@en . "Electric blues is a type of blues music distinguished by the use of the electric guitar as a lead instrument and the amplification of the instruments, including the lead guitar, bass guitar, drums, and occasionally the harmonica or keyboard. Pioneered in the 1930s, it emerged as a genre in Chicago in the 1940s. It was taken up in many areas of America, leading to the development of regional subgenres, following its adoption in regional scenes such as Memphis and Texas. The genre had fully developed by the 1950s. Electric blues was instrumental in the development of electric guitar techniques such as amplification, distortion, power chords, and string bending, and is credited with bringing heavy guitar sounds into popular music. It was a foundation of rock music, which adopted its dense texture, electric guitar techniques and basic blues band instrumentation from electric blues. It influenced rock and roll, particularly in the mid-1950s, and more so classic rock in the 1960s. It was widely adopted in the British blues boom of the 1960s and led to the development of blues rock. Electric blues laid the foundations for hard rock and heavy metal, and influenced the development of rockabilly and soul music. It continues to be a major style of blues music and has enjoyed a revival in popularity since the 1990s."@en . . . . . . .