Also called bebop.
early modern jazz developed in the early 1940s and characterized by often dissonant triadic and chromatic chords, fast tempos and eccentric rhythms, intricate melodic lines punctuated by pop-tune phrases, and emphasizing the inventiveness of soloists.
verb (used without object)
bopped,
bopping
Slang.
to move, go, or proceed (often followed byon down ).
Let's bop on down to the party.
bop2
American
[bop]/ bɒp /
verb (used with object)
bopped,
bopping
to strike, as with the fist or a stick; hit.
noun
a blow.
bop1
British
/ bɒp /
noun
Originally called: bebop.
a form of jazz originating in the 1940s, characterized by rhythmic and harmonic complexity and instrumental virtuosity
If you bop your little brother, you hit him lightly. If you do this, he's probably going to bop you right back. The origin of the word bop is imitative: bop sounds like the noise your hand makes when you bop someone or something. You can also use bop to mean bebop, the fast-tempo jazz that became popular in the 1940s, after the swing era. The word comes from the jazz tradition of singing nonsense words like bebop and rebop.