In
jazz, blues and
R&B, riffs are often used as the starting point for longer compositions. Count Basie's band used many riffs in the 1930s, like in "Jumping at the Woodside" and "One O Clock Jump".
Charlie Parker used riffs on "Now's the Time" and "Buzzy". Oscar Pettiford's tune "Blues in the Closet" is a rifftune and so is Duke Ellington's tune "C Jam Blues". Blues guitarist
John Lee Hooker used a riff learned from his stepfather for "
Boogie Chillen" (1948), which in turn was adapted to many subsequent rock and roll songs. The riff from
Charlie Parker's
bebop number "Now's the Time" (1945) re-emerged four years later as the
R&B dance hit "
The Hucklebuck". The verse of "The Hucklebuck", which was another riff, was "borrowed" from the Artie Matthews composition "
Weary Blues". Glenn Miller's "
In the Mood" had an earlier life as
Wingy Manone's "Tar Paper Stomp". All these songs use
twelve-bar blues riffs, and most of these riffs probably precede the examples given (Covach 2005, p. 71). In classical music, individual musical phrases used as the basis of
classical music pieces are called
ostinatos or simply phrases. Contemporary jazz writers also use riff- or
lick-like ostinatos in
modal music and
Latin jazz. == Riff-driven ==