Description: Ronnie Scotts Blues, Jazz Music, Jazz Rock, music for tv, royalty-free song and royalty free music loops
Keywords: Ronnie Scotts Blues, music for tv, royalty-free song, royalty free music loops, download music clips, royalty-free songs, production music library, corporate music, website music, royalty free sounds, royalty-free production music, music loops, music wav, stock music loops, tv music, stock music sound effects, television music, license music, company music, commercial stock music, stock music tracks, stock music library, royalty free music, royalty-free stock music, royalty free background music, royalty free music downloads, royalty free mp3, business music, flash music loops, download music, commercial soundtrack, 免专利税音乐, audio stock, Charlie Parker John Coltrane Lester Young Coleman Hawkins Sonny Rollins Eric Dolphy Cannonball Adderley Wayne Shorter Stanley Turrenti Dexter Gordon saxophone The style began to develop in the mid-1960s in Britain and the United States British bands, such as the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds and the Animals and American bands such as the Butterfield Blues Band and the Siegel–Schwall Band, experimented with music from older African-American bluesmen, like Albert King, Howlin' Wolf, Robert Johnson, Jimmy Reed, Muddy Waters and B B King While the early blues rock bands "attempted to play long, involved improvisations which were commonplace on jazz records", by the 1970s, blues rock got heavier and more riff-based By the "early '70s, the lines between blues rock and hard rock were barely visible", as bands began recording rock-style albums In the 1980s and 1990s, blues rock acts returned to their bluesy roots, and some of these, such as the Fabulous Thunderbirds and Stevie Ray Vaughan Blues rock had a rebirth in the early 1990s - 2000s Ronnie Scott was the original session sax for British Blues
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