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Posted: 16 Sep 2004 5:11 am
by Bill C. Buntin
I've heard some refer to any stringed instrument as a "Gourd" also.

Posted: 16 Sep 2004 9:37 am
by Colm Chomicky
When I think of "Ax" I think of the "Blade"

Posted: 16 Sep 2004 9:57 am
by Dan Tyack
I know there were mentions of 'cutting contests' back in the 30s at least.

Posted: 16 Sep 2004 10:29 am
by Gene Jones
.....as in, "_____ cut _____ so bad that he was bloody!" Image

Posted: 16 Sep 2004 12:19 pm
by CrowBear Schmitt
tho' many words have been discarded or changed most of the "hip" talk was originated by black musicians in the 20s/30s
ie: Mezz Mezzrow "Really the Blues"

To all hipsters, hustlers and fly cats tipping along The Stroll
(Keep Scuffling)
To all the cons in all the houses of many slammers, wrastling with chinches
(Short time, boys)
to all junkies and lushheads in two-bit scratch pads, and the flophouse grads in morgue iceboxes
(RIP)
To the sweettalkers, the gumbeaters, the high jivers, out of the gallion for good and never going to take low again
(You got to make it, daddy)
To Bessie Smith, Jimmy Noone, King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Zutty Singleton, Johnny Dodds, Sidney Bechet and Tommy Ladnier
(Grab a taste of the millenium, gate)

Posted: 16 Sep 2004 1:02 pm
by Dan Tyack
Now that's poetry!

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www.tyack.com

Posted: 16 Sep 2004 6:38 pm
by Gene H. Brown
OK then, what about Harp? ha

Posted: 17 Sep 2004 2:36 am
by Gene Jones
.....and "good pipes", referring to a vocalist!

www.genejones.com

Posted: 17 Sep 2004 12:21 pm
by Farris Currie
sitting here smoking my pipe,need to sharpen
my axe

Posted: 17 Sep 2004 2:00 pm
by Recluse
Another dictionary, Dictionary of American Slang,(1960 edition) has the 1957 origin credited to "For Cool Cats and Far-Out Chicks" by E. Horne. entry is "Axe - any musical instrument, even a piano." then adds "far-out and beat use; not common." As these things cite first printed use, origin would be a little bit earlier but not much as it was listed as uncommon.
At 54 I feel pretty beat and not very far-out so I guess I'll have to stop using the word.
Steve Bailey