Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum

Jimmy Yancey

Induction Year: 1986

Induction Category: Early Influence


Jimmy Yancey is the progenitor of boogie-woogie piano, a style that eventually became a recognizable element of uptempo blues and early rock and roll. The boogie-woogie craze came and went in the latter half of the Thirties, but Yancey had actually been playing in that style as far back as the 1910s and 1920s. A self-taught pianist, singer and dancer, he performed in a style characterized by rolling, rhythmic lines from his left hand played off against percussive accents from the right hand.

A master of the form whose protégés included Clarence “Pinetop” Smith and Charles “Cow Cow” Davenport, Yancey was much in-demand at rent parties and afterhours joints around Chicago during boogie-woogie’s heyday. He began recording in 1939, cutting such favorites as “Yancey’s Stomp” and “State Street Special” for a variety of labels. Despite his impact in blues and jazz circles, he held on to his day job as a groundskeeper for the Chicago White Sox for 25 years. Yancey died of a diabetic stroke in 1951.

TIMELINE

February 20, 1898: Jimmy Yancey was born.

1939: Jimmy Yancey makes his first recordings.

September 17, 1951: Jimmy Yancey died in Chicago, IL of a diabetic stroke.

January 23, 1986: Jimmy Yancey is inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.


Eldon Shamblin's (Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys) Fender Stratocaster Electric Guitar

Photo by Design Photography
Anonymous Texas Collector