jazz music in duple time characterized by collective improvisation
A style created by the Chicago school of 1920s jazz musicians, dixieland's brash and upbeat manner was an alternative to the more purist associations of traditional New Orleans playing. It has also become familiar as a sometimes disparaging term used to cover any playing within the traditional idiom that is perceived as being created for commercial rather than creative reasons — Richard Cook
[Dixie + land1; from its origin in the Southern states of the USA]