Scott Joplin’s “Maple Leaf Rag” (1899) is perhaps the most famous piece of this type and Joplin himself ragtime’s most well-known composer. It helped his fame and resurgence in ragtime’s popularity that George Roy Hill’s Academy Award-winning 1973 film, “The Sting”, used
If it hadn’t been for the film, and the Top Ten status for Marvin Hamlisch’s rendition of
Life goes on, and after over twenty-five years of not having a keyboard and the ability to regularly practice, a piano finally rolled back into my life. Scott Joplin and ragtime came back, too. It wasn’t enough this time to simply relearn “The Entertainer” and “Maple Leaf Rag” – this time I started exploring the other pieces in the misnamed (as it’s not really complete) “Scott Joplin: The Complete Ragtime Piano Solos” I’d carried around since 1973.
I took on unfamiliar rags like “Weeping Willow,” “Cascades,” and “Palm Leaf Rag.” I finally even got around to bothering with the book’s introduction, which contained “
He wrote: “What is scurrilously called ragtime is an invention that is here to stay. That is now conceded by all classes of musicians … That real ragtime of the higher class is rather difficult to play is a painful truth which most pianists have discovered. Syncopations are no indication of light or trashy music, and to shy bricks at ‘hateful ragtime’ no longer passes for musical culture.”
This is where my blog comes in.
It’s going to grow slowly and hopefully steadily, but always its aim will be to put out here “the best I can” at the time.
To stretch things out further than I should: Ragtime’s heart-sided hand with the beat, keeps time and holds onto the roundabout syncopation of the right-hand -- representing thoughts all-too-loose and ephemeral in my mind. With the help of this music and making sense of no-sense, perhaps I can begin to catch the swing of things -- and from there move along a little faster.