Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
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vanderbagger
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Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
Newbie question: please define 'axe' and 'BAT.'
How did they get started?
How did they get started?
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
An axe would be one's main horn, or just a general term for one's instrument.
BAT: big @ss tuba
BAT: big @ss tuba
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
Additionally, the term BAT was coined when a particularly drunk tubist noticed his horn was Batman .
Last edited by k001k47 on Wed Apr 13, 2011 12:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
and BART is rotary or recording
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
Speaking of BART, where is Marty Neilan these days? Haven't seen him on here in some time...
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
There is only so much TubeNet one can tolerate.bort wrote:Speaking of BART, where is Marty Neilan these days? Haven't seen him on here in some time...
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
An axe is the tool a trumpeter uses to shatter your eardrums.
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ginnboonmiller
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
The phrase itself is older than the electric guitar, and I suspect you're right with your second argument. But for what it's worth, if you really want to illustrate with pictures, I've always thought the Ovation Breadwinner was the real axe:bloke wrote:I'm guessing (??) that "axe" came from the appearance of electric guitars being somewhat similar (in an albeit very basic way) to the appearance of axes...and then it spread from electric guitars to other instruments. If not that, just the fact that an "axe" is a very basic tool that man uses to do work.

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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
There is an old New Orleans song called "Audubon Zoo" but sometimes "They All Axed For You" (and that is the way it is usually pronounced - not "asked")
In the jazz & blues world, originally an Ax or Axe was a Sax (usually a Tenor) and this term probably came up in the mid 1950s, maybe a bit earlier. Later it meant any instrument. Sometimes limited to an instrument held in both hands while playing.
Related jazz slang: Woodshedding, Cutting, Woodchopper
In the jazz & blues world, originally an Ax or Axe was a Sax (usually a Tenor) and this term probably came up in the mid 1950s, maybe a bit earlier. Later it meant any instrument. Sometimes limited to an instrument held in both hands while playing.
Related jazz slang: Woodshedding, Cutting, Woodchopper
Last edited by David Richoux on Tue Apr 12, 2011 8:32 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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tclements
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
I'm not 100% sure on this, but I BELIEVE the term 'axe' was used by jazz musicians in the 1950's. It was a very HEP term. All the hep cats jived the lingo, ya dig? Correct me if I'm wrong...
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
There is a Hepcat's Jive Dictionary written by Cab Calloway in the late 30s, a Hipster's Dictionary collected in the 50s, and Slim Gaillard wrote his Vout Dictionary sometime in the 1930s.tclements wrote:I'm not 100% sure on this, but I BELIEVE the term 'axe' was used by jazz musicians in the 1950's. It was a very HEP term. All the hep cats jived the lingo, ya dig? Correct me if I'm wrong...
There is some overlap, but Slim's was the most creative, I think.
More related fun stuff.
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
Cab twisted meanings and adapted existing slang to say things in a new way, but Slim Gaillard invented a new language, which you could only understand if you spent the time learning it. But don't forget Louis Jordan... and dig his exposition of hash house lingo related to the food service industry. Picture a busy hash house in Harlem- http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHG82Q0n ... 05C7651A9E" target="_blank
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
When you have a good cross section of "Jazzers" and "Legit" players, you learn the ways of both--so when you hear "Im usin' my main axe to blow a pay gig tonight man" you what he is expressing to you--can you dig it, brotha man?
J "Its ALL good, no matter how its expressed" J
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peter birch
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
I think as well that they are particularly North American terms (nothing wrong with that, by the way), I don't hear many people refer to their instruments in those terms in the UK
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
Yes, 'Axe' is not used to refer to tubas in the UK - mind you they are also never called 'horn' as seems to be used generically for brass instruments in the US.peter birch wrote:I think as well that they are particularly North American terms (nothing wrong with that, by the way), I don't hear many people refer to their instruments in those terms in the UK
In bands they are usually called 'Bass' and in more recent years 'Tuba' has also started to be used. Although funny to think I was playing tuba for 15 years before I ever knew what I played was called that, as everyone in school and at brass band called it a 'Bass', or 'Double bee flat bass'. It was only when I went to a classical concert and saw tuba in orchestra that I realised my 'Bass' was a TUBA
I have only become familiar with 'BAT' through TubeNet.
Last edited by Wyvern on Wed Apr 13, 2011 8:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
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tubeast
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
Over here, "Bass" and "Tuba" were used much the same way as was described by Jonathan.
I always liked to think I played Tuba rather than Bass. A little on the poche side, maybe.
The proper German term for "axe" would be "Kanne" (jug, I believe) as in "Colloquial term for brass instruments in general".
Saxophones would be "Staubsauger" (Vacuum cleaner), by the way. Especially baritone saxes.
One term for clarinet would be "Wimmerpin" (literally: whimpering rod).
I´d get banned from this forum for a long time if I told You the other expression for clarinet because of abusive, rude, and racist language, so I won´t.
French horn is a good one: "Glücksspirale" (spiral of fortune, obviously referring to the odds against the player getting the right note).
Just thought some technical terms in another language might come in handy at times.
I always liked to think I played Tuba rather than Bass. A little on the poche side, maybe.
The proper German term for "axe" would be "Kanne" (jug, I believe) as in "Colloquial term for brass instruments in general".
Saxophones would be "Staubsauger" (Vacuum cleaner), by the way. Especially baritone saxes.
One term for clarinet would be "Wimmerpin" (literally: whimpering rod).
I´d get banned from this forum for a long time if I told You the other expression for clarinet because of abusive, rude, and racist language, so I won´t.
French horn is a good one: "Glücksspirale" (spiral of fortune, obviously referring to the odds against the player getting the right note).
Just thought some technical terms in another language might come in handy at times.
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- bort
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
I've never *actually* heard anyone use "axe" in verbal conversation. Mostly just here. Maybe those left coast "hep" folks do though... 
Same for BAT. And in fact, I'm not even sure how I'd pronounce it. "Bat" (like the animal)? Say the letters B, A, T? Or actually say Bigass tuba? Kind of the same for 5/4 or 6/4 tubas. For whatever reason, I always read that as "five four" and "six four," but think other people would probably say "five quarter" or "six quarter."
I think this all means that this is stuff we write about, but it's often not important enough to be what we talk about in conversation...? Really how often in a week am I describing the size of my tuba?
Same for BAT. And in fact, I'm not even sure how I'd pronounce it. "Bat" (like the animal)? Say the letters B, A, T? Or actually say Bigass tuba? Kind of the same for 5/4 or 6/4 tubas. For whatever reason, I always read that as "five four" and "six four," but think other people would probably say "five quarter" or "six quarter."
I think this all means that this is stuff we write about, but it's often not important enough to be what we talk about in conversation...? Really how often in a week am I describing the size of my tuba?
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
When people ask about my Neptune I just say "it's an orchestral C tuba", or "it's a grand orchestral tuba" - would never mention BAT (would pronounce as animal), or even six-four except to other tuba fanatics.
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
Oh, I certainly wouldn't use any of that jargon with non-tuba players. Actually, even amongst tuba players I'd rather just refer to it by key, brand, or model number.
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Re: Please define 'axe' and 'BAT'
An "axe" is a horn that cuts it for you 

