Whaddya say, gate? Are you in
the know, or are you a solid bringer-downer? - from Cab Calloways' hit song, 'Are
you Hep to the Jive?'
Here's the stone bible for you
to collar that apple trickeration that will truly get your boots on! Say
all you cats and chicks, don't be icky. Bust your conk on this mess and
you'll be wailin' with the mellows.
INSTRUMENTS:
- Guitar: Git Box or
Belly-Fiddle
- Bass: Doghouse
- Drums: Suitcase, Hides, or
Skins
- Piano: Storehouse or Ivories
- Saxophone: Plumbing or Reeds
- Trombone: Tram or Slush-Pump
- Clarinet: Licorice Stick or
Gob Stick
- Xylophone: Woodpile
- Vibraphone: Ironworks
- Violin: Squeak-Box
- Accordion: Squeeze-Box or
Groan-Box
- Tuba: Foghorn
- Electric Organ: Spark Jiver
JIVE TERMINOLOGY--
- A hummer (n.) -- exceptionally
good. Ex., "Man, that boy is a hummer."
- Ain't coming on that tab (v.)
-- won't accept the proposition. Usually abbr. to "I ain't
coming."
- Alligator (n.) -- jitterbug.
- Apple (n.) -- the big town,
the main stem, Harlem.
- Armstrongs (n.) -- musical
notes in the upper register, high trumpet notes.
- Barbecue (n.) -- the girl
friend, a beauty
- Barrelhouse (adj.) -- free and
easy.
- Battle (n.) -- a very homely
girl, a crone.
- Beat (adj.) -- (1) tired,
exhausted. Ex., "You look beat" or "I feel beat." (2)
lacking anything. Ex, "I am beat for my cash", "I am beat to
my socks" (lacking everything).
- Beat it out (v.) -- play it
hot, emphasize the rhythym.
- Beat up (adj.) -- sad,
uncomplimentary, tired.
- Beat up the chops (or the
gums) (v.) -- to talk, converse, be loquacious.
- Beef (v.) -- to say, to state.
Ex., "He beefed to me that, etc."
- Bible (n.) -- the gospel
truth. Ex., "It's the bible!"
- Black (n.) -- night.
- Black and tan (n.) -- dark and
light colored folks. Not colored and white folks as erroneously assumed.
- Blew their wigs (adj.) --
excited with enthusiasm, gone crazy.
- Blip (n.) -- something very
good. Ex., "That's a blip"; "She's a blip."
- Blow the top (v.) -- to be
overcome with emotion (delight). Ex., "You'll blow your top when you
hear this one."
- Boogie-woogie (n.) -- harmony
with accented bass.
- Boot (v.) -- to give. Ex.,
"Boot me that glove."
- Break it up (v.) -- to win
applause, to stop the show.
- Bree (n.) -- girl.
- Bright (n.) -- day.
- Brightnin' (n.) -- daybreak.
- Bring down ((1) n. (2) v.) --
(1) something depressing. Ex., "That's a bring down." (2) Ex.,
"That brings me down."
- Buddy ghee (n.) -- fellow.
- Bust your conk (v.) -- apply
yourself diligently, break your neck.
- Canary (n.) -- girl vocalist.
- Capped (v.) -- outdone,
surpassed.
- Cat (n.) -- musician in swing
band.
- Chick (n.) -- girl.
- Chime (n.) -- hour. Ex.,
"I got in at six chimes."
- Clambake (n.) -- ad lib
session, every man for himself, a jam session not in the groove.
- Chirp (n.) -- female singer.
- Cogs (n.) -- sun glasses.
- Collar (v.) -- to get, to
obtain, to comprehend. Ex., "I gotta collar me some food";
"Do you collar this jive?"
- Come again (v.) -- try it
over, do better than you are doing, I don't understand you.
- Comes on like gangbusters (or
like test pilot) (v.) -- plays, sings, or dances in a terrific manner, par
excellence in any department. Sometimes abbr. to "That singer really
comes on!"
- Cop (v.) -- to get, to obtain
(see collar; knock).
- Corny (adj.) -- old-fashioned,
stale.
- Creeps out like the shadow
(v.) -- "comes on," but in smooth, suave, sophisticated manner.
- Crumb crushers (n.) -- teeth.
- Cubby (n.) -- room, flat,
home.
- Cups (n.) -- sleep. Ex.,
"I gotta catch some cups."
- Cut out (v.) -- to leave, to
depart. Ex., "It's time to cut out"; "I cut out from the
joint in early bright."
- Cut rate (n.) -- a low, cheap
person. Ex., "Don't play me cut rate, Jack!"
- Dicty (adj.) -- high-class,
nifty, smart.
- Dig (v.) -- (1) meet. Ex.,
"I'll plant you now and dig you later." (2) look, see. Ex.,
"Dig the chick on your left duke." (3) comprehend, understand.
Ex., "Do you dig this jive?"
- Dim (n.) -- evening.
- Dime note (n.) -- ten-dollar
bill.
- Doghouse (n.) -- bass fiddle.
- Domi (n.) -- ordinary place to
live in. Ex., "I live in a righteous dome."
- Doss (n.) -- sleep. Ex.,
"I'm a little beat for my doss."
- Down with it (adj.) -- through
with it.
- Drape (n.) -- suit of clothes,
dress, costume.
- Dreamers (n.) -- bed covers,
blankets.
- Dry-goods (n.) -- same as
drape.
- Duke (n.) -- hand, mitt.
- Dutchess (n.) -- girl.
- Early black (n.) -- evening
- Early bright (n.) -- morning.
- Evil (adj.) -- in ill humor,
in a nasty temper.
- Fall out (v.) -- to be
overcome with emotion. Ex., "The cats fell out when he took that
solo."
- Fews and two (n.) -- money or
cash in small quatity.
- Final (v.) -- to leave, to go
home. Ex., "I finaled to my pad" (went to bed); "We copped a
final" (went home).
- Fine dinner (n.) -- a
good-looking girl.
- Focus (v.) -- to look, to see.
- Foxy (v.) -- shrewd.
- Frame (n.) -- the body.
- Fraughty issue (n.) -- a very
sad message, a deplorable state of affairs.
- Freeby (n.) -- no charge,
gratis. Ex., "The meal was a freeby."
- Frisking the whiskers (v.) --
what the cats do when they are warming up for a swing session.
- Frolic pad (n.) -- place of
entertainment, theater, nightclub.
- Fromby (adj.) -- a frompy
queen is a battle or faust.
- Front (n.) -- a suit of
clothes.
- Fruiting (v.) -- fickle,
fooling around with no particular object.
- Fry (v.) -- to go to get hair
straightened.
- Gabriels (n.) -- trumpet
players.
- Gammin' (adj.) -- showing off,
flirtatious.
- Gasser (n, adj.) --
sensational. Ex., "When it comes to dancing, she's a gasser."
- Gate (n.) -- a male person (a
salutation), abbr. for "gate-mouth."
- Get in there (exclamation.) --
go to work, get busy, make it hot, give all you've got.
- Gimme some skin (v.) -- shake
hands.
- Glims (n.) -- the eyes.
- Got your boots on -- you know
what it is all about, you are a hep cat, you are wise.
- Got your glasses on -- you are
ritzy or snooty, you fail to recognize your friends, you are up-stage.
- Gravy (n.) -- profits.
- Grease (v.) -- to eat.
- Groovy (adj.) -- fine. Ex.,
"I feel groovy."
- Ground grippers (n.) -- new
shoes.
- Growl (n.) -- vibrant notes
from a trumpet.
- Gut-bucket (adj.) -- low-down
music.
- Guzzlin' foam (v.) -- drinking
beer.
- Hard (adj.) -- fine, good.
Ex., "That's a hard tie you're wearing."
- Hard spiel (n.) -- interesting
line of talk.
- Have a ball (v.) -- to enjoy
yourself, stage a celebration. Ex., "I had myself a ball last
night."
- Hep cat (n.) -- a guy who
knows all the answers, understands jive.
- Hide-beater (n.) -- a drummer
(see skin-beater).
- Hincty (adj.) -- conceited,
snooty.
- Hip (adj.) -- wise,
sophisticated, anyone with boots on. Ex., "She's a hip chick."
- Home-cooking (n.) -- something
very dinner (see fine dinner).
- Hot (adj.) -- musically
torrid; before swing, tunes were hot or bands were hot.
- Hype (n, v.) -- build up for a
loan, wooing a girl, persuasive talk.
- Icky (n.) -- one who is not
hip, a stupid person, can't collar the jive.
- Igg (v.) -- to ignore someone.
Ex., "Don't igg me!)
- In the groove (adj.) --
perfect, no deviation, down the alley.
- Jack (n.) -- name for all male
friends (see gate; pops).
- Jam ((1)n, (2)v.) -- (1)
improvised swing music. Ex., "That's swell jam." (2) to play such
music. Ex., "That cat surely can jam."
- Jeff (n.) -- a pest, a bore,
an icky.
- Jelly (n.) -- anything free,
on the house.
- Jitterbug (n.) -- a swing fan.
- Jive (n.) -- Harlemese speech.
- Joint is jumping -- the place
is lively, the club is leaping with fun.
- Jumped in port (v.) -- arrived
in town.
- Kick (n.) -- a pocket. Ex.,
"I've got five bucks in my kick."
- Kill me (v.) -- show me a good
time, send me.
- Killer-diller (n.) -- a great
thrill.
- Knock (v.) -- give. Ex.,
"Knock me a kiss."
- Kopasetic (adj.) -- absolutely
okay, the tops.
- Lamp (v.) -- to see, to look
at.
- Land o'darkness (n.) --
Harlem.
- Lane (n.) -- a male, usually a
nonprofessional.
- Latch on (v.) -- grab, take
hold, get wise to.
- Lay some iron (v.) -- to tap
dance. Ex., "Jack, you really laid some iron that last show!"
- Lay your racket (v.) -- to
jive, to sell an idea, to promote a proposition.
- Lead sheet (n.) -- a topcoat.
- Left raise (n.) -- left side.
Ex., "Dig the chick on your left raise."
- Licking the chops (v.) -- see
frisking the whiskers.
- Licks (n.) -- hot musical
phrases.
- Lily whites (n.) -- bed
sheets.
- Line (n.) -- cost, price,
money. Ex., "What is the line on this drape" (how much does this
suit cost)? "Have you got the line in the mouse" (do you have the
cash in your pocket)? Also, in replying, all figures are doubled. Ex.,
"This drape is line forty" (this suit costs twenty dollars).
- Lock up -- to acquire
something exclusively. Ex., "He's got that chick locked up";
"I'm gonna lock up that deal."
- Main kick (n.) -- the stage.
- Main on the hitch (n.) --
husband.
- Main queen (n.) -- favorite
girl friend, sweetheart.
- Man in gray (n.) -- the
postman.
- Mash me a fin (command.) --
Give me $5.
- Mellow (adj.) -- all right,
fine. Ex., "That's mellow, Jack."
- Melted out (adj.) -- broke.
- Mess (n.) -- something good.
Ex., "That last drink was a mess."
- Meter (n.) -- quarter,
twenty-five cents.
- Mezz (n.) -- anything supreme,
genuine. Ex., "this is really the mezz."
- Mitt pounding (n.) --
applause.
- Moo juice (n.) -- milk.
- Mouse (n.) -- pocket. Ex.,
"I've got a meter in the mouse."
- Muggin' (v.) -- making 'em
laugh, putting on the jive. "Muggin' lightly," light staccato
swing; "muggin' heavy," heavy staccato swing.
- Murder (n.) -- something
excellent or terrific. Ex., "That's solid murder, gate!"
- Neigho, pops -- Nothing doing,
pal.
- Nicklette (n.) -- automatic
phonograph, music box.
- Nickel note (n.) --
five-dollar bill.
- Nix out (v.) -- to eliminate,
get rid of. Ex., "I nixed that chick out last week"; "I nixed
my garments" (undressed).
- Nod (n.) -- sleep. Ex.,
"I think I'l cop a nod."
- Ofay (n.) -- white person.
- Off the cob (adj.) -- corny,
out of date.
- Off-time jive (n.) -- a sorry
excuse, saying the wrong thing.
- Orchestration (n.) -- an
overcoat.
- Out of the world (adj.) --
perfect rendition. Ex., "That sax chorus was out of the world."
- Ow! -- an exclamation with
varied meaning. When a beautiful chick passes by, it's "Ow!"; and
when someone pulls an awful pun, it's also "Ow!"
- Pad (n.) -- bed.
- Pecking (n.) -- a dance
introduced at the Cotton Club in 1937.
- Peola (n.) -- a light person,
almost white.
- Pigeon (n.) -- a young girl.
- Pops (n.) -- salutation for
all males (see gate; Jack).
- Pounders (n.) -- policemen.
- Queen (n.) -- a beautiful
girl.
- Rank (v.) -- to lower.
- Ready (adj.) -- 100 per cent
in every way. Ex., "That fried chicken was ready."
- Ride (v.) -- to swing, to keep
perfect tempo in playing or singing.
- Riff (n.) -- hot lick, musical
phrase.
- Righteous (adj.) -- splendid,
okay. Ex., "That was a righteous queen I dug you with last black."
- Rock me (v.) -- send me, kill
me, move me with rhythym.
- Ruff (n.) -- quarter,
twenty-five cents.
- Rug cutter (n.) -- a very good
dancer, an active jitterbug.
- Sad (adj.) -- very bad. Ex.,
"That was the saddest meal I ever collared."
- Sadder than a map (adj.) --
terrible. Ex., "That man is sadder than a map."
- Salty (adj.) -- angry,
ill-tempered.
- Sam got you -- you've been
drafted into the army.
- Send (v.) -- to arouse the
emotions. (joyful). Ex., "That sends me!"
- Set of seven brights (n.) --
one week.
- Sharp (adj.) -- neat, smart,
tricky. Ex., "That hat is sharp as a tack."
- Signify (v.) -- to declare
yourself, to brag, to boast.
- Skins (n.) -- drums.
- Skin-beater (n.) -- drummer
(see hide-beater).
- Sky piece (n.) -- hat.
- Slave (v.) -- to work, whether
arduous labor or not.
- Slide your jib (v.) -- to talk
freely.
- Snatcher (n.) -- detective.
- So help me -- it's the truth,
that's a fact.
- Solid (adj.) -- great, swell,
okay.
- Sounded off (v.) -- began a
program or conversation.
- Spoutin' (v.) -- talking too
much.
- Square (n.) -- an unhep person
(see icky; Jeff).
- Stache (v.) -- to file, to
hide away, to secrete.
- Stand one up (v.) -- to play
one cheap, to assume one is a cut-rate.
- To be stashed (v.) -- to stand
or remain.
- Susie-Q (n.) -- a dance
introduced at the Cotton Club in 1936.
- Take it slow (v.) -- be
careful.
- Take off (v.) -- play a solo.
- The man (n.) -- the law.
- Threads (n.) -- suit, dress or
costuem (see drape; dry-goods).
- Tick (n.) -- minute, moment.
Ex., "I'll dig you in a few ticks." Also, ticks are doubled in
accounting time, just as money isdoubled in giving "line." Ex.,
"I finaled to the pad this early bright at tick twenty" (I got to
bed this morning at ten o'clock).
- Timber (n.) -- toothipick.
- To dribble (v.) -- to stutter.
Ex., "He talked in dribbles."
- Togged to the bricks --
dressed to kill, from head to toe.
- Too much (adj.) -- term of
highest praise. Ex., "You are too much!"
- Trickeration (n.) -- struttin'
your stuff, muggin' lightly and politely.
- Trilly (v.) -- to leave, to
depart. Ex., "Well, I guess I'll trilly."
- Truck (v.) -- to go somewhere.
Ex., "I think I'll truck on down to the ginmill (bar)."
- Trucking (n.) -- a dance
introduced at the Cotton Club in 1933.
- Twister to the slammer (n.) --
the key to the door.
- Two cents (n.) -- two dollars.
- Unhep (adj.) -- not wise to
the jive, said of an icky, a Jeff, a square.
- Vine (n.) -- a suit of
clothes.
- V-8 (n.) -- a chick who spurns
company, is independent, is not amenable.
- What's your story? -- What do
you want? What have you got to say for yourself? How are tricks? What excuse
can you offer? Ex., "I don't know what his story is."
- Whipped up (adj.) -- worn out,
exhausted, beat for your everything.
- Wren (n.) -- a chick, a queen.
- Wrong riff -- the wrong thing
said or done. Ex., "You're coming up on the wrong riff."
- Yarddog (n.) -- uncouth, badly
attired, unattractive male or female.
- Yeah, man -- an exclamation of
assent.
- Zoot (adj.) --
exaggerated
- Zoot suit (n.) -- the ultimate
in clothes. The only totally and truly American civilian suit .