The New Cab Calloway's Cat-ologue - Cab Calloway's famous 1939 jazz 'Jive Dictionary' Author: Calloway, Cab Place: New York Publisher: Date: 1939 Description: 14pp. 11.5x7.1 cm (4½x2¾"), original pictorial saddle-stitched self-wrappers. Revised Edition, 1939. Rare imprint. OCLC/WorldCat locates only one copy in any American institution. It is held at the New York Public Library. Written by (or at least attributed to) one of the best-known Black entertainers of the 1930s, orchestra leader at Harlem’s famed Cotton Club, the “Cat-ologue” is a legendary imprint which has called “the first dictionary published by a Black person”, though it is more accurately the first short lexicon of Black Jazz jargon, 100+ “quaint expressions” which would work their way into the general American vernacular, including Boogie-Woogie (a new dance), corny (old fashioned, stale), freeby (no charge, gratis), gravy (profits), jitter bug (a swing fan), kopasetic (absolutely okay, the tops), mellow (all right, fine), ofay (white person), pad (bed), reefer (marijuana cigarette) skin (drums), yeah man (an exclamation of assent). This is the second of three printings (the last appeared in 1944 as the “language of jive”), all of which are highly collectible. Lot Amendments Condition: Light dampstaining at rear, minor creasing; about near fine. Item number: 326157
The New Cab Calloway's Cat-ologue - Cab Calloway's famous 1939 jazz 'Jive Dictionary' Author: Calloway, Cab Place: New York Publisher: Date: 1939 Description: 14pp. 11.5x7.1 cm (4½x2¾"), original pictorial saddle-stitched self-wrappers. Revised Edition, 1939. Rare imprint. OCLC/WorldCat locates only one copy in any American institution. It is held at the New York Public Library. Written by (or at least attributed to) one of the best-known Black entertainers of the 1930s, orchestra leader at Harlem’s famed Cotton Club, the “Cat-ologue” is a legendary imprint which has called “the first dictionary published by a Black person”, though it is more accurately the first short lexicon of Black Jazz jargon, 100+ “quaint expressions” which would work their way into the general American vernacular, including Boogie-Woogie (a new dance), corny (old fashioned, stale), freeby (no charge, gratis), gravy (profits), jitter bug (a swing fan), kopasetic (absolutely okay, the tops), mellow (all right, fine), ofay (white person), pad (bed), reefer (marijuana cigarette) skin (drums), yeah man (an exclamation of assent). This is the second of three printings (the last appeared in 1944 as the “language of jive”), all of which are highly collectible. Lot Amendments Condition: Light dampstaining at rear, minor creasing; about near fine. Item number: 326157
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