dojiee
George Thompson
george.thompson at NYU.EDU
Wed Aug 31 21:34:22 UTC 2005
HDAS has "Dojee see Dujy" and under Dujy it has the
definition "heroin", but with a note that the first of its
citations, "Dooji Woogie" and "King Dooji", song titles by Duke
Ellington from 1939, seem to mean something else.
Here is a quotation from Mary Lou Williams, Piano-player and
arranger/composer from Kansas City, referring to the mid 1930s:
"To top all, it was August and hot as a young girl's dojiee."
Having a dirty mind -- aren't they a delight? -- I suppose there is
some anatomical reference here. But maybe not.
Can there be a connection with the "dogie" of cowboy songs?
This is from Frank Driggs and Chuck Haddix, Kansas City Jazz: From
Ragtime to Bebop -- A History, N. Y., &c.: Oxford U. Pr., 2005, p. 69,
quoting an interview with Williams published in Max Jones, Talking
Jazz, 1988, p. 184.
GAT
George A. Thompson
Author of A Documentary History of "The African Theatre", Northwestern
Univ. Pr., 1998, but nothing much lately.
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