ˈrideout
[f. ride v. + out adv.]
† 1. A bagman; = rider n. 6. Obs.—1
1752 Fielding Covent Gard. Jrnl. No. 33 He was a sort of rider, or rideout to a linendraper at London. |
2. Jazz slang. Also ride-out. A final chorus. Also attrib.
1939 Metronome May 19 Pussy Willow has a great ride⁓out. 1946 R. Blesh Shining Trumpets xii. 286 The Hot Seven's..ride-out ensemble sounds like a free-blowing parade band. 1952 B. Ulanov Hist. Jazz in Amer. vi. 52 Whether they are playing a solo.., or pushing a ride-out chorus to its obstreperous end, their harmonic thinking is vertical. 1962 Jazz Monthly Oct. 24 Folk Forms is reduced to a short bass solo, a short drum solo and a ride-out. 1977 New Yorker 8 Aug. 68/2 ‘On the Other Side of the Tracks’..has an ebullient and remarkable rideout section. |