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・ Rock mass rating
・ Rock Master
・ Rock Master Scott & the Dynamic Three
・ Rock Me
・ Rock Me (ABBA song)
・ Rock Me (Great White album)
・ Rock Me (Great White song)
・ Rock Me (Melanie C song)
・ Rock Me (One Direction song)
・ Rock Me (Platnum album)
・ Rock Me (Riva song)
・ Rock Me Amadeus
・ Rock Me Baby
・ Rock Me Baby (album)
・ Rock Me Baby (Johnny Nash song)
Rock Me Baby (song)
・ Rock Me Baby (TV series)
・ Rock Me Gently
・ Rock Me Gently (Andy Kim song)
・ Rock Me Gently (Erasure song)
・ Rock Me on the Water
・ Rock Me Tonight
・ Rock Me Tonight (For Old Times Sake)
・ Rock Me Tonite
・ Rock mechanics
・ Rock Messiah
・ Rock Methodist Episcopal Church
・ Rock microstructure
・ Rock Mill
・ Rock Mill, Ashton-under-Lyne


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Rock Me Baby (song) : ウィキペディア英語版
Rock Me Baby (song)

"Rock Me Baby" is a blues standard that has become one of the most recorded blues songs of all time.〔
〕 When B.B. King's recording of "Rock Me Baby" was released in 1964, it became his first Top 40 hit. It is based on earlier blues songs and has been interpreted and recorded by numerous artists in a variety of styles.
==Earlier songs==
Mick Jagger's "Rock Me Baby" is based on "Rockin' and Rollin'", a song recorded by Lil' Son Jackson in 1950 (Imperial 5113).〔 Jagger's lyrics are nearly identical to Jackson's, although instrumentally the songs are different. "Rockin' and Rollin'" is a solo piece, with Jackson's vocal and guitar accompaniment, whereas "Rock Me Baby" is an ensemble piece.
Muddy Waters' song "Rock Me", recorded in 1956 (Chess 1652), is also based on Jackson's song. Some of Jackson's lyrics were used, but Waters incorporated a couple of verses from his 1951 song "All Night Long" (which is also based on "Rockin' and Rollin'") (Chess 1509). Muddy Waters' "Rock Me" also uses Jackson's guitar figure and the starting of the vocal on the IV chord and he interpreted it as an unusual fifteen-bar blues (an uneven number of measures, rather than the traditional twelve bars or somewhat less common eight or sixteen bars). Muddy Waters recorded a second version of "Rock Me" for his 1978 album ''I'm Ready''.
Lil' Son Jackson's "Rockin' and Rollin'" was inspired by earlier blues songs.〔 Many songs from the 1920s through the 1940s have some combination of ''rock'', ''roll'', ''baby'', and ''mama'' in the title or lyrics, although instrumentally they are different than "Rock Me Baby", "Rock Me", or "Rockin' and Rollin'". Big Bill Broonzy's 1940 song "Rockin' Chair Blues" makes frequent use of the phrase "rock me baby" as in "Rock me baby now, rock me slow ... now rock me baby, one time before you go" (OKeh 6116). Arthur Crudup's 1944 song, "Rock Me Mama", is based on Broonzy's song〔
〕 and repeats the same refrain, but uses "mama" in place of "baby" (Bluebird 34-0725). Curtis Jones' 1939 song "Roll Me Mama" shares a couple of phrases ("like a wagon wheel", "ain't got no bone") with "Rockin' and Rollin'" (Vocalion 4693).

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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