"Doxy" has become a jazz standard,[2] a frequently performed and recorded part of many musicians' repertoires. Some sources say "Doxy" was written by Rollins during a stopover in England during a European tour and the name came from a bread spread the band was eating in the hotel.[3] Other sources note that Rollins never toured England and Europe until 1959, five years after the song was written. "Doxy," according to Rollins, is a double entendre that refers to the sacred and the profane. Doxy comes from the Greek "doxa," meaning a kind of incomplete knowledge.[4]
References
^Fox, Charles; McCarthy, Albert (1960). Jazz on record: a critical guide to the first 50 years, 1917–1967. Hanover Books. p. 62.
^Martin, Henry; Waters, Keith (2010). Jazz: The First 100 Years. Cengage Learning. p. 248. ISBN978-1-4390-8333-8.
^Fox, Charles; McCarthy, Albert (1960). Jazz on record: a critical guide to the first 50 years, 1917–1967. Hanover Books. p. 15.