choreography vs rock and roll

choreography

noun
  • The dance steps, sequences or styles peculiar to a work, group, performance or institution. 

  • The art of creating, arranging and recording the dance movements of a work, such as a ballet. 

  • The art of creating and arranging sequences of movement for performances of any kind, such as in fight choreography. 

  • The representation of these movements by a series of symbols. 

  • The notation used to construct this record. 

rock and roll

noun
  • A style of vigorous dancing associated with this genre of music. 

  • An intangible feeling, philosophy, belief or allegiance relating to rock music, characterized by unbridled enthusiasm, hedonism, and cynical regard for authoritarian bodies. 

  • Dole, payment by the state to the unemployed. 

  • The full automatic fire capability selection on a selective fire weapon. 

  • The ability to run the picture and audio back and forth in synchronization, allowing the correction of mistakes during dubbing. 

  • A genre of popular music that evolved in the 1950s from a combination of rhythm and blues and country music, characterized by electric guitars, strong rhythms, and youth-oriented lyrics. 

verb
  • To play rock and roll music. 

  • To start, commence, begin, get moving. 

How often have the words choreography and rock and roll occurred in a corpus of books? (source: Google Ngram Viewer )