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James Edwards "Jimmy" Yancey (February 20, 1894 β September 17, 1951) was an African American boogie-woogie pianist, composer, and lyricist. One reviewer noted him as "one of the pioneers of this raucous, rapid-fire, eight-to-the-bar piano style". Yancey was born in Chicago in (depending on the source) 1894, or 1898. His older brother, Alonzo Yancey (1894 β 1944) was also a pianist, while their father was a guitarist. Yancey started performing as a singer in traveling shows during his childhood. He was a noted pianist by 1915, and influenced younger musicians, such as Meade Lux Lewis and Albert Ammons. While he played in a boogie-woogie style, with a strong-repeated figure in the left hand and melodic decoration in the right hand, his playing was delicate and subtle, rather than hard driving. He popularized a left hand figure which became known as the 'Yancey bass', and was later used in Pee Wee Crayton's "Blues After Hours", Guitar Slim's "The Things That I Used to Know" and many other songs. Part of Yancey's distinctive style was that he played in a variety of keys but ended some pieces in E flat, even if it was in another key. And he favored keys atypical for barrelhouse blues, like E flat and A flat. Most of his recordings were of solo piano, but late in his career he also recorded with vocals by his wife, Estelle Yancey, under the billing 'Jimmy and Mama Yancey'. They appeared in concert at the Carnegie Hall in 1948. In 1951, the twosome recorded the first album that wa

Jimmy Yancey Vol. 1 1939 - 1940
Late Night Tales - Belle & Sebastian [Remastered Edition]

Chicago Piano Volume 1

Jimmy Yancey Vol. 2 1940 - 1943
The Very Best Of Boogie Woogie

Yancey Special

Pure Blues
Hey! Piano Man: Selected Boogie Woogie Sides Remastered - CD A
The Famous Blues Masterpieces' of Ray Charles, T-Bone Walker, Big Bill Broonzy and Other Hits, Vol.7

The Very Best Of

Yancey's Getaway
In the Beginning