释义 |
gut bucket noun- an earthy style of jazz music combining elements of ragtime and blues US, 1929
A “gutbucket” was a cheap saloon from the name given to a bucket placed beneath a barrel of gin to catch and recycle leakages. The musicians in these type of places played for tips, and the style of music they played there became known as “gutbucket”. - People want gut bucket orchestras ... the hip liquor toter wants sensational noise — Frederic Ramsay Junior, Chicago Documentary, p. 28, 1944
- We sopped up a lot of learning at Capone’s University of Gutbucket Arts. — Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues, p. 62, 1946
- She didn’t want to dance to the blues, the gut bucket, the funky songs. — Dick Gregory, Nigger, p. 60, 1964
- [L]ots of people still care about getdown gutbucket rock ‘n’ roll passionately[.] — Lester Bangs, Psychotic Reactions and Carburetor Dung, p. 69, 1971
- a rough and rowdy bar with rough and rowdy patrons US, 1970
- I mean, like sho’ nuff groovy gut bucket Black. — Odie Hawkins, Great Lawd Buddha, p. 29, 1990
- a fish bait boat; by extension a messy space of any kind US
- — John Gould, Maine Lingo, p. 119, 1975
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