choogle

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English[edit]

Etymology[edit]

Coined by John Fogerty of the band Creedence Clearwater Revival.

Verb[edit]

choogle (third-person singular simple present choogles, present participle choogling, simple past and past participle choogled)

  1. (slang, intransitive) To have a good time.
    • 1985 June, Joe Nick Patoski, “Last One In!”, in Texas Monthly, volume 13, number 6, page 227:
      The swimming hole is about 75 yards wide and averages 10 feet in depth, ample space for a swimmer to splash and choogle.
    • 1993, James Franklin Harris, Philosophy at 33 1/3 rpm: themes of classic rock music, page 176:
      So, choogle on, baby, and choogle on down the highway, man.
    • 2000, Robert Christgau, Any Old Way You Choose it: Rock and Other Pop Music, 1967-1973, →ISBN:
      The two categories come together in "Down on the Corner," which is about poor boys who choogle.
    • 2001, Patrick McCabe, Emerald Germs of Ireland, →ISBN:
      He was sitting on the wall with his friends. 'Hey Pat, man! Choogle on over, yeah?' he cried.
    • 2011, Greil Marcus, The Old, Weird America: The World of Bob Dylan's Basement Tapes, →ISBN:
      “You're all invited. Born to choogle,” he adds, because they kick the tune off with riffs from Creedence Clearwater Revival's premier chooglin' extravaganza, “Born on the Bayou.”

Noun[edit]

choogle (plural choogles)

  1. (music) A funky musical romp.
    • 1980, Ronald Zalkind, Contemporary Music Almanac, page 234:
      Hawkins was the king of the choogle, a southern guitarist from Louisiana who played with the down home swamp funk sound that characterized his greatest hit, the 1957 smash "Suzie Q," a tremendous inspiration on bayou rocker John Fogerty, who used it to get Creedence Clearwater Revival their first hit in the 70's.
    • 2013, Chris Handyside, Fell in Love with a Band: The Story of The White Stripes, →ISBN, page 85:
      Their sound was a collision of glam rock strut, Stooges thuggery, and pub rock choogle.
    • 2015, Ben Graham, A Gathering of Promises, →ISBN:
      Highlights include the voodoo-choogle swamp rock of It's A Cold Night For Alligators and the driving, bubbling groove of Sputnik, driven along by Jeff Sutton's disco-tight, Clem Burke-like drumming, which Billy Miller claims is Roky's answer song to Joe Meek's Telstar.
    • 2016, Chuck Eddy, Terminated for Reasons of Taste, →ISBN:
      In fact, it might be a stretch to call R.E.O. Speedwagon prog at all, if they didn't temper the riverboat-pianoed bonfire-in-the-woods choogle of their first two albums with occasional outrageously ambitious, amp-cranking, Hammond-pumping gloom monsters that, like sundry early Kansas/ Head East / Styx tracks, seemed to owe more than a bit to the majestic post-psychedelic organ-metal funderals of the UK's Uriah Heep.