jazz characterized by unusual chord structures, syncopated rhythm, and harmonic complexity and innovation. Also called bop3
Originally a nonsense word used in scat singing to denote a particular two-beat rhythm, bebop – later more widely recognized in the shorter form ‘bop’ – became one of the major styles in jazz, developed by young American musicians in the 1940s and characterized by a deeper and more diversified rhythmic and harmonic content than that offered by swing jazz — Richard Cook
bebopper noun
[imitative of the music's rhythm]