Scott Joplin
Scott Joplin | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Scott Joplin |
Also known as | King of Ragtime |
Born | c. late 1867 or early 1868 Northeast Texas, U.S. |
Origin | Texarkana, Texas |
Died | April 1, 1917 (aged 49) New York City, New York, U.S. |
Genres | Ragtime, march, waltz |
Occupation(s) | Composer, pianist, music teacher |
Instrument(s) | Piano, cornet, guitar, mandolin, violin, banjo, vocals |
Years active | 1895–1917 |
Scott Joplin (c. 1867/1868? – April 1, 1917) was an African-American composer and pianist. Joplin achieved fame for his ragtime compositions, and was later titled "The King of Ragtime". During his brief career, he wrote 44 original ragtime pieces, one ragtime ballet, and two operas. One of his first pieces, the "Maple Leaf Rag," became ragtime's first and most influential hit, and has been recognized as the archetypal rag.[2]
Joplin was born into a musical family of laborers in Northeast Texas, and developed his musical knowledge with the help of local teachers, most notably Julius Weiss. Joplin grew up in Texarkana, where he formed a vocal quartet, and taught mandolin and guitar. During the late 1880s he left his job as a laborer with the railroad, and travelled around the American South as an itinerant musician. He went to Chicago for the World's Fair of 1893, which played a major part in making ragtime a national craze by 1897.
Joplin moved to Sedalia, Missouri, in 1894, and earned a living as a piano teacher, continuing to tour the South. In Sedalia, he taught future ragtime composers Arthur Marshall, Scott Hayden and Brun Campbell. Joplin began publishing music in 1895, and publication of his "Maple Leaf Rag" in 1899 brought him fame. This piece had a profound influence on subsequent writers of ragtime. It also brought the composer a steady income for life, though Joplin did not reach this level of success again and frequently had financial problems.
Joplin moved to St. Louis in 1901, where he continued to compose and publish music, and regularly performed in the St Louis community. By the time he had moved to St. Louis, he may have been experiencing discoordination of the fingers, tremors, and an inability to speak clearly, as a result of having contracted syphilis. The score to his first opera, A Guest of Honor, was confiscated in 1903 with his belongings, owing to his non-payment of bills, and is considered lost by biographer Edward A. Berlin and others.[3]
He continued to compose and publish music, and in 1907 moved to New York City, seeking to find a producer for a new opera. He attempted to go beyond the limitations of the musical form which made him famous, without much monetary success. His second opera, Treemonisha, was not received well at its partially staged performance in 1915.
In 1916, suffering from tertiary syphilis and by consequence rapidly deteriorating health, Joplin descended into dementia. He was admitted to a mental institution in January 1917, and died there three months later at the age of 49.
Joplin's death is widely considered to have marked the end of ragtime as a mainstream music format, and the next several years would see it evolve into jazz and eventually big band swing. His music was rediscovered and returned to popularity in the early 1970s with the release of a million-selling album of Joplin's rags recorded by Joshua Rifkin, followed by the Academy Award–winning movie The Sting, which featured several of his compositions, such as "The Entertainer". The opera Treemonisha was finally produced in full to wide acclaim in 1972. In 1976, Joplin was posthumously awarded a Pulitzer Prize.
Early life
Joplin was born in Linden, Texas, either in late 1867 or early 1868. Although for many years his birth date was accepted as November 24, 1868, research has revealed that this is almost certainly inaccurate – the most likely approximate date being the second half of 1867.[4] He was the second of six children (the others being Monroe, Robert, William, Myrtle, and Ossie)[5] born to Giles Joplin, an ex-slave from North Carolina, and Florence Givens, a freeborn African-American woman from Kentucky.[6][7][8] The Joplins subsequently moved to Texarkana where Giles worked as a laborer for the railroad while Florence was a cleaner. Joplin's father had played the violin for plantation parties in North Carolina, and his mother sang and played the banjo.[5] Joplin was given a rudimentary musical education by his family and from the age of seven he was allowed to play the piano while his mother cleaned.[9]
At some point in the early 1880s, Giles Joplin left the family for another woman, leaving Florence to provide for her children through domestic work. Biographer Susan Curtis speculated that his mother's support of Joplin's musical education was an important causal factor in this separation; his father argued that it took the boy away from practical employment which would have supplemented the family income.[10]
According to a family friend, the young Joplin was serious and ambitious, studying music and playing the piano after school. While a few local teachers aided him, he received most of his music education from Julius Weiss, a German-Jewish music professor who had immigrated to the United States from Germany.[11] Weiss had studied music at university in Germany and was listed in town records as a "Professor of music." Impressed by Joplin's talent, and realizing his family's dire straits, Weiss taught him free of charge. He tutored the 11-year-old Joplin until he was 16, during which time Weiss introduced him to folk and classical music, including opera. Weiss helped Joplin appreciate music as an "art as well as an entertainment"[12] and helped his mother acquire a used piano. According to his wife Lottie, Joplin never forgot Weiss and in his later years, when he achieved fame as a composer, sent his former teacher "gifts of money when he was old and ill," until Weiss died.[11] At the age of 16 Joplin performed in a vocal quartet with three other boys in and around Texarkana, playing piano. In addition he taught guitar and mandolin.[12]
Life in the Southern states and Chicago
In the late 1880s, having performed at various local events as a teenager, Joplin chose to give up work as a laborer with the railroad and left Texarkana to become a traveling musician.[13] Little is known about his movements at this time, although he is recorded in Texarkana in July 1891 as a member of the "Texarkana Minstrels" in a performance that happened to be raising money for a monument to Jefferson Davis, President of the Southern Confederacy.[14] He was soon to discover that there were few opportunities for black pianists, however; besides the church, brothels were one of the few options for obtaining steady work. Joplin played pre-ragtime 'jig-piano' in various red-light districts throughout the mid-South, and it has been claimed he was in Sedalia and St. Louis during this time.[15][16]
In 1893 Joplin was in Chicago for the World's Fair. While in Chicago, he formed his first band playing cornet and began arranging music for the group to perform. Although the World's Fair minimized the involvement of African-Americans, black performers still came to the saloons, cafés and brothels that lined the fair. The exposition was attended by 27 million Americans and had a profound effect on many areas of American cultural life, including ragtime. Although specific information is sparse, numerous sources have credited the Chicago World Fair with spreading the popularity of ragtime.[17] Joplin found that his music, as well as that of other black performers, was popular with visitors.[18] By 1897 ragtime had become a national craze in American cities, and was described by the St. Louis Dispatch as "a veritable call of the wild, which mightily stirred the pulses of city bred people."[19]
Life in Missouri
In 1894 Joplin arrived in Sedalia, Missouri. At first, Joplin stayed with the family of Arthur Marshall, at the time a 13-year old boy but later one of Joplin's students and a rag-time composer in his own right.[24] There is no record of Joplin having a permanent residence in the town until 1904, as Joplin was making a living as a touring musician.
There is little precise evidence known about Joplin's activities at this time, although he performed as a solo musician at dances and at the major black clubs in Sedalia, the "Black 400" club and the "Maple Leaf Club". He performed in the Queen City Cornet Band, and his own six-piece dance orchestra. A tour with his own singing group, the Texas Medley Quartet, gave him his first opportunity to publish his own compositions and it is known that he went to Syracuse, New York and Texas. Two businessmen from New York published Joplin's first two works, the songs Please Say You Will, and A Picture of her Face in 1895.[25] Joplin's visit to Temple, Texas enabled him to have three pieces published there in 1896, including the Great Crush Collision March which commemorated a planned train crash on the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad on September 15 which he may have witnessed. The March was described by one of Joplin's biographers as a "special... early essay in ragtime".[26] While in Sedalia he was teaching piano to students who included future ragtime composers Arthur Marshall, Brun Campbell, and Scott Hayden.[27] In turn, Joplin enrolled at the George R. Smith College, where he apparently studied "advanced harmony and composition". The College records were destroyed in a fire in 1925,[28] and biographer Edward A. Berlin notes that it was unlikely that a small college for African-Americans would be able to provide such a course.[29][30][2]
In 1899, Joplin married Belle, the sister-in-law of collaborator Scott Hayden. Although there were hundreds of rags in print by the time the Maple Leaf Rag was published, Joplin was not far behind. His first published rag, Original Rags, had been completed in 1897, the same year as the first ragtime work in print, the Mississippi Rag by William Krell. The Maple Leaf Rag was likely to have been known in Sedalia before its publication in 1899; Brun Campbell claimed to have seen the manuscript of the work in around 1898.[31] The exact circumstances which led to the Maple Leaf Rag's publication are unknown, and there are a number of different versions of the event which contradict each other. After several unsuccessful approaches to publishers, Joplin signed a contract on August 10, 1899 with John Stillwell Stark, a retailer of musical instruments who later became his most important publisher. The contract stipulated that Joplin would receive a 1% royalty on all sales of the rag, with a minimum sales price of 25 cents.[32] With the inscription "To the Maple Leaf Club" prominently visible along the top of at least some editions, it is likely that the rag was named after the Maple Leaf Club, although there is no direct evidence to prove the link, and there were many other possible sources for the name in and around Sedalia at the time.[33]
There have been many claims about the sales of the Maple Leaf Rag, for example that Joplin was the first musician to sell 1 million copies of a piece of instrumental music.[2] Joplin's first biographer, Rudi Blesh wrote that during its first six months the piece sold 75,000 copies, and became "the first great instrumental sheet music hit in America".[34] However, research by Joplin's later biographer Edward A. Berlin demonstrated that this was not the case; the initial print-run of 400 took one year to sell, and under the terms of Joplin's contract with a 1% royalty would have given Joplin an income of $4 (or approximately $146 at current prices). Later sales were steady and would have given Joplin an income which would have covered his expenses; in 1909 estimated sales would have given him an income of $600 annually (approximately $20,347 in current prices).[35]
The Maple Leaf Rag did serve as a model for the hundreds of rags to come from future composers, especially in the development of classic ragtime.[36] After the publication of the Maple Leaf Rag, Joplin was soon being described as "King of rag time writers", not least by himself[37] on the covers of his own work, such as "The Easy Winners" and Elite Syncopations.
After the Joplins' move to St. Louis in early 1900, they had a baby daughter who died only a few months after birth. Joplin's relationship with his wife was difficult as she had no interest in music. They eventually separated and then divorced.[38] About this time, Joplin collaborated with Scott Hayden in the composition of four rags.[39] It was in St. Louis that Joplin produced some of his best-known works, including The Entertainer, March Majestic, and the short theatrical work The Ragtime Dance.
In June 1904, Joplin married Freddie Alexander of Little Rock, Arkansas, the young woman to whom he had dedicated The Chrysanthemum. She died on September 10, 1904 of complications resulting from a cold, ten weeks after their wedding.[37] Joplin's first work copyrighted after Freddie's death, Bethena, was described by one biographer as "an enchantingly beautiful piece that is among the greatest of ragtime waltzes".[40]
During this time, Joplin created an opera company of 30 people and produced his first opera A Guest of Honor for a national tour. It is not certain how many productions were staged, or even if this was an all-black show or a racially mixed production. During the tour, either in Springfield, Illinois, or Pittsburg, Kansas, someone associated with the company stole the box office receipts. Joplin could not meet the company's payroll or pay for its lodgings at a theatrical boarding house. It is believed that the score for A Guest of Honor was lost and perhaps destroyed because of non-payment of the company's boarding house bill.[41]
Later years
In 1907, Joplin moved to New York City, which he believed was the best place to find a producer for a new opera. After his move to New York, Joplin met Lottie Stokes, whom he married in 1909.[39] In 1911, unable to find a publisher, Joplin undertook the financial burden of publishing Treemonisha himself in piano-vocal format. In 1915, as a last-ditch effort to see it performed, he invited a small audience to hear it at a rehearsal hall in Harlem. Poorly staged and with only Joplin on piano accompaniment, it was "a miserable failure", the public being not yet ready for "crude" black musical forms, so different from the style of European grand opera of that time.[42] The audience, including potential backers, was indifferent and walked out.[38] Scott writes that "after a disastrous single performance ... Joplin suffered a breakdown. He was bankrupt, discouraged, and worn out." He concludes that few American artists of his generation faced such obstacles: "Treemonisha went unnoticed and unreviewed, largely because Joplin had abandoned commercial music in favor of art music, a field closed to African Americans."[27] In fact, it was not until the 1970s that the opera received a full theatrical staging.
In 1914, Joplin and Lottie self-published his "Magnetic Rag" using the name the "Scott Joplin Music Company" which had been formed the previous December.[43] Biographer Vera Brodsky Lawrence speculates that Joplin was aware of his advancing deterioration due to syphilis and was "consciously racing against time." In her sleeve notes on the 1992 Deutsche Grammophon release of Treemonisha she notes that he "plunged feverishly into the task of orchestrating his opera, day and night, with his friend Sam Patterson standing by to copy out the parts, page by page, as each page of the full score was completed."[42]
Death
By 1916, Joplin was suffering from tertiary syphilis and a resulting descent into insanity.[44][45] In January 1917, he was admitted to Manhattan State Hospital, a mental institution.[37] He died there on April 1 of syphilitic dementia at the age of 49[42][46] and was buried in a pauper's grave that remained unmarked for 57 years. His grave at Saint Michaels Cemetery in East Elmhurst was finally given a marker in 1974.[47]
Works
The combination of classical music, the musical atmosphere present around Texarkana (including work songs, gospel hymns, spirituals and dance music) and Joplin's natural ability has been cited as contributing significantly to the invention of a new style, which blended both African-American musical styles with European forms and melodies and which first became celebrated in the 1890s: ragtime.[10]
When Joplin was learning the piano, serious musical circles condemned ragtime because of its association with the vulgar and inane songs "cranked out by the tune-smiths of Tin Pan Alley".[48] As a composer Joplin refined ragtime, elevating it above the low and unrefined form played by the "wandering honky-tonk pianists... playing mere dance music" of popular imagination.[49] This new art form, the classic rag, combined Afro-American folk music's syncopation and 19th-century European romanticism, with its harmonic schemes and its march-like tempos.[39][50] In the words of one critic, "ragtime was basically... an Afro-American version of the polka, or its analog, the Sousa-style march."[51] With this as a foundation, Joplin intended his compositions to be played exactly as he wrote them – without improvisation.[27] Joplin wrote his rags as "classical" music in miniature form in order to raise ragtime above its "cheap bordello" origins and produced work which opera historian Elise Kirk described as "... more tuneful, contrapuntal, infectious, and harmonically colorful than any others of his era."[15]
It has been speculated that Joplin's achievements were influenced by his classically trained German music teacher Julius Weiss, who may have brought a polka rhythmic sensibility from the old country to the 11-year old Joplin.[52] As Curtis put it "The educated German could open up the door to a world of learning and music of which young Joplin was largely unaware."[48]
Joplin's first, and most significant hit, the "Maple Leaf Rag", was described as the "archetype" of the classic rag, influencing subsequent rag composers for at least 12 years after its initial publication thanks to its rhythmic patterns, melody lines, and harmony,[36] although with the exception of Joseph Lamb they generally failed to enlarge upon it.[53]
Treemonisha
The opera's setting is a former slave community in an isolated forest near Joplin's childhood town Texarkana in September 1884. The plot centers on an 18-year old woman Treemonisha who is taught to read by a white woman, and then leads her community against the influence of conjurers who prey on ignorance and superstition. Treemonisha is abducted and is about to be thrown into a wasps' nest when her friend Remus rescues her. The community realizes the value of education and the liability of their ignorance before choosing her as their teacher and leader.[54][55][56]
Joplin wrote both the score and the libretto for the opera, which largely follows the form of European opera with many conventional arias, ensembles and choruses. In addition the themes of superstition and mysticism which are evident in Treemonisha are common in the operatic tradition, and certain aspects of the plot echo devices in the work of the German composer Richard Wagner (of which Joplin was aware); a sacred tree under which Treemonisha is found recalls the tree from which Siegmund takes his enchanted sword in Die Walküre, and the retelling of the heroine's origins echos aspects of the opera Siegfried. In addition, African-American folk tales also influence the story, with the wasp nest incident being similar to the story of Br'er Rabbit and the briar patch.[57]
Treemonisha is not a ragtime opera because Joplin employed the styles of ragtime and other black music sparingly, using them to convey "racial character", and to celebrate the music of his childhood at the end of the 19th century. The opera has been seen as a valuable record of rural black music from late 19th century re-created by a "skilled and sensitive participant".[58]
Berlin speculates about parallels between the plot and Joplin's own life. He notes that Lottie Joplin (the composer's third wife) saw a connection between the character Treemonisha's wish to lead her people out of ignorance, and a similar desire in the composer. In addition, it has been speculated that Treemonisha represents Freddie, Joplin's second wife, because the date of the opera's setting was likely to have been the month of her birth.[59]
At the time of the opera's publication in 1911, the American Musician and Art Journal praised it as "an entirely new form of operatic art".[60] Later critics have also praised the opera as occupying a special place in American history, with its heroine "a startlingly early voice for modern civil rights causes, notably the importance of education and knowledge to African American advancement."[61] Curtis's conclusion is similar: "In the end, Treemonisha offered a celebration of literacy, learning, hard work, and community solidarity as the best formula for advancing the race."[56] Berlin describes it as a "fine opera, certainly more interesting than most operas then being written in the United States", but later states that Joplin's own libretto showed the composer "was not a competent dramatist" with the book not up to the same quality as the music.[62]
Performance skills
Joplin's skills as a pianist were described in glowing terms by a Sedalia newspaper in 1898, and fellow ragtime composers Arthur Marshall and Joe Jordan both said that he played the instrument well.[39] However, the son of publisher John Stark stated that Joplin was a rather mediocre pianist and that he composed on paper, rather than at the piano. Artie Matthews recalled the "delight" the St. Louis players took in outplaying Joplin.[64]
While Joplin never made an audio recording, his playing is preserved on seven piano rolls for use in mechanical player pianos. All seven were made in 1916. Of these, the six released under the Connorized label show evidence of significant editing,[65] probably by William Axtmann, the staff arranger at Connorized.[66] Berlin theorizes that by the time Joplin reached St. Louis he may have been experiencing discoordination of the fingers, tremors and an inability to speak clearly, symptoms of syphilis, the disease that took his life in 1917.[67] The second roll recording of "Maple Leaf Rag" on the UniRecord label from June 1916 was described by biographer Blesh as "... shocking... disorganized and completely distressing to hear."[68] While there is disagreement among piano-roll experts about the accuracy of the reproduction of a player's performance,[69][70][71][72] Berlin notes that the "Maple Leaf Rag" roll was "painfully bad" and likely to be the truest record of Joplin's playing at the time. The roll, however, does not reflect his abilities earlier in life.[65]
Legacy
Joplin and his fellow ragtime composers rejuvenated American popular music, fostering an appreciation for African American music among European Americans by creating exhilarating and liberating dance tunes, changing American musical taste. "Its syncopation and rhythmic drive gave it a vitality and freshness attractive to young urban audiences indifferent to Victorian proprieties ... Joplin's ragtime expressed the intensity and energy of a modern urban America."[27]
Joshua Rifkin, a leading Joplin recording artist, wrote that "a pervasive sense of lyricism infuses his work, and even at his most high-spirited, he cannot repress a hint of melancholy or adversity ... He had little in common with the fast and flashy school of ragtime that grew up after him."[73] Joplin historian Bill Ryerson adds that "In the hands of authentic practitioners like Joplin, ragtime was a disciplined form capable of astonishing variety and subtlety ... Joplin did for the rag what Chopin did for the mazurka. His style ranged from tones of torment to stunning serenades that incorporated the bolero and the tango."[38] Biographer Susan Curtis wrote that Joplin's music had helped to "revolutionise American music and culture" by removing Victorian restraint.[74]
Composer and actor Max Morath found it striking that the vast majority of Joplin's work did not enjoy the popularity of the Maple Leaf Rag, because while the compositions were "of increasing lyrical beauty and delicate syncopation" they remained "obscure" and "unheralded" during his lifetime.[53] Joplin apparently realized that his music was ahead of its time: As music historian Ian Whitcomb mentions that Joplin "opined that Maple Leaf Rag would make him 'King of Ragtime Composers' but he also knew that he would not be a pop hero in his own lifetime. 'When I'm dead twenty-five years, people are going to recognize me,' he told a friend." Just over thirty years later he was recognized, and later historian Rudi Blesh would write a large book about ragtime, which he dedicated to the memory of Joplin.[49]
Although he was penniless and disappointed at the end of his life, Joplin set the standard for ragtime compositions and played a key role in the development of ragtime music. And as a pioneer composer and performer, he helped pave the way for young black artists to reach American audiences of both races. After his death, jazz historian Floyd Levin noted: "those few who realized his greatness bowed their heads in sorrow. This was the passing of the king of all ragtime writers, the man who gave America a genuine native music."[75]
Revival
After his death in 1917, Joplin's music and ragtime in general waned in popularity as new forms of musical styles, such as jazz and novelty piano, emerged. Even so, jazz bands and recording artists such as Tommy Dorsey in 1936, Jelly Roll Morton in 1939 and J. Russell Robinson in 1947 released recordings of Joplin compositions. "Maple Leaf Rag" was the Joplin piece found most often on 78 rpm records.[76]
In the 1960s, a small-scale reawakening of interest in classical ragtime was underway among some American music scholars such as Trebor Tichenor, William Bolcom, William Albright and Rudi Blesh. Audiophile Records released a two record set, The Complete Piano Works of Scott Joplin, The Greatest of Ragtime Composers, performed by Knocky Parker, in 1970.[77]
In 1968, Bolcom and Albright interested Joshua Rifkin, a young musicologist, in the body of Joplin's work. Together, they hosted an occasional ragtime-and-early-jazz evening on WBAI radio.[78] In November 1970, Rifkin released a recording called Scott Joplin: Piano Rags[79] on the classical label Nonesuch. It sold 100,000 copies in its first year and eventually became Nonesuch's first million-selling record.[80] The Billboard "Best-Selling Classical LPs" chart for September 28, 1974 has the record at number 5, with the follow-up "Volume 2" at number 4, and a combined set of both volumes at number 3. Separately both volumes had been on the chart for 64 weeks. In the top 7 spots on that chart, 6 of the entries were recordings of Joplin's work, three of which were Rifkin's.[81] Record stores found themselves for the first time putting ragtime in the classical music section. The album was nominated in 1971 for two Grammy Award categories: Best Album Notes and Best Instrumental Soloist Performance (without orchestra). Rifkin was also under consideration for a third Grammy for a recording not related to Joplin, but at the ceremony on March 14, 1972, Rifkin did not win in any category.[82] He did a tour in 1974, which included appearances on BBC Television and a sell-out concert at London's Royal Festival Hall.[83] In 1979 Alan Rich in the New York Magazine wrote that by giving artists like Rifkin the opportunity to put Joplin's music on disk Nonesuch Records "created, almost alone, the Scott Joplin revival."[84]
In January 1971, Harold C. Schonberg, music critic at the New York Times, having just heard the Rifkin album, wrote a featured Sunday edition article entitled "Scholars, Get Busy on Scott Joplin!"[85] Schonberg's call to action has been described as the catalyst for classical music scholars, the sort of people Joplin had battled all his life, to conclude that Joplin was a genius.[86] Vera Brodsky Lawrence of the New York Public Library published a two-volume set of Joplin works in June 1971, entitled The Collected Works of Scott Joplin, stimulating a wider interest in the performance of Joplin's music.
In mid-February 1973 under the direction of Gunther Schuller, The New England Conservatory Ragtime Ensemble recorded an album of Joplin's rags taken from the period collection "Standard High-Class Rags" called Joplin: The Red Back Book. The album won a Grammy Award as Best Chamber Music Performance in that year, and went on to become Billboard magazine's Top Classical Album of 1974.[87] The group subsequently recorded two more albums for Golden Crest Records: More Scott Joplin Rags in 1974 and The Road From Rags To Jazz in 1975.
In 1973, film producer George Roy Hill contacted Schuller and Rifkin separately, asking each man to write the score for a film project he was working on: The Sting. Both men turned down the request because of previous commitments. Instead Hill found Marvin Hamlisch available, and brought him into the project as composer.[88] Hamlisch lightly adapted Joplin's music for the The Sting, for which he won an Academy Award for Best Original Song Score and Adaptation on April 2, 1974.[89] His version of "The Entertainer" reached number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100 and the American Top 40 music chart on May 18, 1974,[90][91] prompting The New York Times to write, "the whole nation has begun to take notice".[83] Thanks to the film and its score, Joplin's work became appreciated in both the popular and classical music world, becoming (in the words of music magazine Record World), the "classical phenomenon of the decade".[92] Rifkin later said of the film soundtrack that Hamlisch lifted his piano adaptations directly from Rifkin's style and his band adaptations from Schuller's style.[88] Schuller said Hamlisch "got the Oscar for music he didn't write (since it is by Joplin) and arrangements he didn't write, and 'editions' he didn't make. A lot of people were upset by that, but that's show biz!"[88]
On October 22, 1971, excerpts from Treemonisha were presented in concert form at Lincoln Center with musical performances by Bolcom, Rifkin and Mary Lou Williams supporting a group of singers.[93] Finally, on January 28, 1972, T.J. Anderson's orchestration of Treemonisha was staged for two consecutive nights, sponsored by the Afro-American Music Workshop of Morehouse College in Atlanta, with singers accompanied by the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra[94] under the direction of Robert Shaw, and choreography by Katherine Dunham. Schonberg remarked in February 1972 that the "Scott Joplin Renaissance" was in full swing and still growing.[95] In May 1975, Treemonisha was staged in a full opera production by the Houston Grand Opera. The company toured briefly, then settled into an eight-week run in New York on Broadway at the Palace Theater in October and November. This appearance was directed by Gunther Schuller, and soprano Carmen Balthrop alternated with Kathleen Battle as the title character.[94] An "original Broadway cast" recording was produced. Because of the lack of national exposure given to the brief Morehouse College staging of the opera in 1972, many Joplin scholars wrote that the Houston Grand Opera's 1975 show was the first full production.[93]
1974 saw the Royal Ballet, under director Kenneth MacMillan, create Elite Syncopations a ballet based on tunes by Joplin and other composers of the era.[96] That year also brought the premiere by the Los Angeles Ballet of Red Back Book, choreographed by John Clifford to Joplin rags from the collection of the same name, including both solo piano performances and arrangements for full orchestra.
Other awards and recognition
1970: Joplin was inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame by the National Academy of Popular Music.[97]
1976: Joplin was awarded a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for his special contribution to American music.[98]
1977: Motown Productions produced Scott Joplin, a biographical film starring Billy Dee Williams as Joplin, released by Universal Pictures.[99]
1983: the United States Postal Service issued a stamp of the composer as part of its Black Heritage commemorative series.[100]
1989: Joplin received a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame.[101]
2002: a collection of Joplin's own performances recorded on piano rolls in the 1900s (decade) was included by the National Recording Preservation Board in the Library of Congress National Recording Registry.[102] The board annually selects songs that are "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant."
Notes
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 121
- ^ a b c Edwards 2008.
- ^ Berlin, Edward A. "Scott Joplin: Brief Biographical Sketch". Berlin. Retrieved April 9, 2013.
- ^ Berlin, Edward A. "Scott Joplin: Brief Biographical Sketch". Retrieved May 3, 2009.
- ^ a b Jasen, David A. (2007). Ragtime: An Encyclopedia, Discography, and Sheetography. New York: Routledge. p. 109. ISBN 978-0-415-97862-0. Retrieved February 24, 2013.
- ^ Jasen & Tichenor (1978) p. 82.
- ^ "Scott Joplin". Texas Music History Online. Archived from the original on July 22, 2011. Retrieved November 22, 2006.
- ^ Kirchner (2005) p. 32.
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 6.
- ^ a b Curtis (2004) p. 38.
- ^ a b Albrecht (1979) pp. 89–105.
- ^ a b Berlin (1994) pp. 7–8.
- ^ Christensen (1999) p. 442
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 9
- ^ a b Kirk (2001) p. 190.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 8–9
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 11–12.
- ^ Christensen (1999) p. 442.
- ^ St. Louis Dispatch, quoted in Scott & Rutkoff (2001) p. 36
- ^ Jasen (1981) p. 319–320.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 131–132.
- ^ Edwards 2010.
- ^ RedHotJazz.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 24–25.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 25–27.
- ^ Blesh (1981) p. xviii.
- ^ a b c d Scott & Rutkoff (2001) p. 37
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 19
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 31–34
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 27.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 47, 52.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 56, 58.
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 62.
- ^ Blesh (1981)p. xxiii.
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 56, 58.
- ^ a b Blesh (1981) p. xxiii.
- ^ a b c Berlin 1998.
- ^ a b c Ryerson (1973)
- ^ a b c d Jasen & Tichenor (1978) p. 88
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 149.
- ^ "Profile of Scott Joplin". Classical.net. Retrieved November 14, 2009.
- ^ a b c Kirk (2001) p. 191. Cite error: The named reference "Kirk191" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 226, 230.
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 239.
- ^ Walsh, Michael (September 19, 1994). "American Schubert". Time. Retrieved November 14, 2009.
- ^ Scott & Rutkoff (2001) p. 38.
- ^ John Chancellor (October 3, 1974). "Vanderbilt Television News Archive summary". Vanderbilt Television News Archive. Retrieved December 17, 2011.
- ^ a b Curtis (2004) p. 37.
- ^ a b Whitcomb (1986) p. 24.
- ^ Davis (1995)pp. 67–68.
- ^ Williams (1987)
- ^ Tennison, John. "History of Boogie Woogie". Chapter 15. Retrieved October 4, 2009.
- ^ a b Kirchner (2005) p. 33.
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 203.
- ^ Crawford (2001) p. 545.
- ^ a b Christensen (1999) p. 444.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 203–204.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 202, 204.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 207–208.
- ^ Berlin (1994) p. 202.
- ^ Kirk (2001) p. 194.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 202–203.
- ^ "Pianola.co.nz". Retrieved April 20, 2009.
- ^ Jasen & Tichenor (1978) p. 86.
- ^ a b Berlin (1994) p. 237.
- ^ "List of Piano Roll Artists". Pianola. Retrieved July 31, 2010.
- ^ Berlin (1994) pp. 237, 239.
- ^ Blesh (1981) p.xxxix.
- ^ Siepmann (1998) p. 36.
- ^ Philip (1998) pp. 77–78.
- ^ Howat (1986) p. 160.
- ^ McElhone (2004) p. 26.
- ^ Rifkin, Joshua. Scott Joplin Piano Rags, Nonesuch Records (1970) album cover
- ^ Curtis (2004) p. 1.
- ^ Levin (2002) p. 197.
- ^ Jasen (1981) pp. 319–320.
- ^ The Complete Piano Works of Scott Joplin, The Greatest of Ragtime Composers, John W. (Knocky) Parker, piano. Audiophile Records (1970) AP 71–72
- ^ Waldo (1976) pp. 179–182.
- ^ "Scott Joplin Piano Rags Nonesuch Records CD (w/bonus tracks)". Retrieved March 19, 2009.
- ^ "Nonesuch Records". Retrieved March 19, 2009.
- ^ Billboard Magazine 1974a, p. 61..
- ^ "Entertainment Awards Database". LA Times. Retrieved March 17, 2009.
- ^ a b Kronenberger, John (August 11, 1974). "New York Times". The Ragtime Revival-A Belated Ode to Composer Scott Joplin.
- ^ Rich 1979, p. 81..
- ^ Schonberg, Harold C. (January 24, 1971). "Scholars, Get Busy on Scott Joplin!". New York Times. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
- ^ Waldo (1976) p. 184.
- ^ Billboard Magazine & December 26, 1974.
- ^ a b c Waldo (1976) p. 187.
- ^ "Entertainment Awards Database". LA Times. Retrieved March 14, 2009.
- ^ "Charis Music Group, compilation of cue sheets from the American Top 40 radio Show" (PDF). Retrieved September 5, 2009.
- ^ Billboard Magazine 1974b, p. 64.
- ^ Record World Magazine July 1974, quoted in Berlin (1994) p. 251.
- ^ a b Ping-Robbins 1998, p. 289.
- ^ a b Peterson, Bernard L. (1993). A century of musicals in black and white. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Press. p. 357. ISBN 0-313-26657-3. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
- ^ Schonberg, Harold C. (February 13, 1972). "The Scott Joplin Renaissance Grows". New York Times. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
- ^ "Birmingham Royal Ballet". Retrieved September 6, 2009.
- ^ "Songwriters Hall of Fame". Retrieved March 17, 2009.
- ^ "The Pulitzer Prize – Special Awards and Citations". Retrieved March 14, 2009.
- ^ IMDB.com.
- ^ ESPER.
- ^ St. Louis Walk of Fame. "St. Louis Walk of Fame Inductees". stlouiswalkoffame.org. Retrieved April 25, 2013.
- ^ "2002 National Recording Registry from the National Recording Preservation Board of the Library of Congress". Library of Congress. Retrieved September 6, 2009.
References
Bibliography
Books
- Blesh, Rudi (1981). "Scott Joplin: Black-American Classicist". In Lawrence, Vera Brodsky (ed.). Scott Joplin Complete Piano Works. New York Public Library. ISBN 0-87104-272-X.
- Berlin, Edward A. (1994). King of Ragtime: Scott Joplin and His Era. Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 0-19-510108-1.
- Crawford, Richard (2001). America's Musical Life: A History. W. W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-04810-1.
- Curtis, Susan (1999). Christensen, Lawrence O (ed.). Dictionary of Missouri Biography. Univ. of Missouri Press. ISBN 0-8262-1222-0. Retrieved October 2, 2009.
- Curtis, Susan (2004). Dancing to a Black Man's Tune: A Life of Scott Joplin. Univ. of Missouri Press. ISBN 0-8262-1547-5.
- Davis, Francis (1995). The History of the Blues:The Roots, the Music, the People. Hyperion. ISBN 0-306-81296-7.
- Gioia, Ted (1997). The History of Jazz. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-509081-0.
- Haskins, James (1978). Scott Joplin. New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc. ISBN 0-385-11155-X.
- Howat, Roy (1986). Debussy in Proportion: A Musical Analysis. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-31145-4. Retrieved April 17, 2009.
- Jasen, David A. (1978). Rags and Ragtime: A Musical History. New York, NY: Dover Publications, Inc. p. 88. ISBN 0-486-25922-6.
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suggested) (help) - Jasen, David A. (1981). "Discography of 78 rpm Records of Joplin Works". In Lawrence, Vera Brodsky (ed.). Scott Joplin Complete Piano Works. New York Public Library. ISBN 0-87104-272-X.
- Kirk, Elise Kuhl (2001). American Opera. Univ. of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-02623-3.
- Lawrence, Vera Brodsky, ed. (1971). Scott Joplin Complete Piano Works. New York Public Library. ISBN 0-87104-242-8.
- Levin, Floyd (2002). Classic Jazz: A Personal View of the Music and the Musicians. Univ. of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-23463-5.
- MaGee, Jeffrey (1998). "Ragtime and Early Jazz". In David Nicholls (ed.) (ed.). The Cambridge History of American Music. New York: The Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-45429-8.
{{cite book}}
:|editor=
has generic name (help) - McElhone, Kevin (2004). Mechanical Music (2 ed.). Osprey Publishing. ISBN 0-7478-0578-4. Retrieved April 16, 2009.
- Morath, Max (2005). Kirchner, Bill (ed.). The Oxford Companion to Jazz. Oxford Univ. Press. ISBN 0-19-518359-2.
- Palmer, Tony (1976). All You Need Is Love /The Story Of Popular Music. Book Club Associates. ISBN 978-0-670-11448-1.
- Philip, Robert (1998). Rowland, David (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to the Piano (Illustrated, reprint ed.). Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-47986-X. Retrieved April 17, 2009.
- Scott, William B.; Rutkoff, Peter M (2001). New York Modern: The Arts and the City. Johns Hopkins Univ. Press. ISBN 0-8018-6793-2.
- Ping-Robbins, Nancy R. (1998). Scott Joplin: a guide to research. p. 289. ISBN 0-8240-8399-7. Retrieved March 20, 2009.
{{cite book}}
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(help) - Siepmann, Jeremy (1998). The Piano: The Complete Illustrated Guide to the World's Most Popular Musical Instrument. Hal Leonard Corporation. ISBN 0-7935-9976-8.
- Ryerson, Bill; Joplin, Scott (1973). Best of Scott Joplin: a Collection of Original Ragtime Piano Compositions. C. Hansen Music and Books. ISBN 0-8494-0581-5.
- Waldo, Terry (1976). This Is Ragtime. New York: Hawthorn Books, Inc. ISBN 0-8015-7618-0.
- Waterman, Guy (1985a). "Ragtime". In J.E. Hasse (ed.) (ed.). Ragtime: Its History, Composers, and Music. New York: Shirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-871650-7.
{{cite book}}
:|editor=
has generic name (help) - Waterman, Guy (1985b). "Joplin's Late Rags: An Analysis". In J.E. Hasse (ed.) (ed.). Ragtime: Its History, Composers, and Music. New York: Shirmer Books. ISBN 0-02-871650-7.
{{cite book}}
:|editor=
has generic name (help) - Whitomb, Ian (1986). After the Ball. Hal Leonard Corp. ISBN 0-87910-063-X.
- Williams, Martin (1959). The Art of Jazz: Ragtime to Bebop. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-306-80134-5.
- Williams, Martin, ed. (1987). The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz. Smithsonian Institution Press. ISBN 0-393-99342-6.
Web-pages
- Berlin, Edward A. (2012). "Scott Joplin: Brief Biographical Sketch". Edward A. Berlin. Retrieved April 3, 2012.
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(help) - Berlin, Edward A. (1998). "A Biography of Scott Joplin". The Scott Joplin International Ragtime Foundation. Retrieved November 14, 2009.
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(help) - Edwards, "Perfessor" Bill (2008). "Rags & Pieces by Scott Joplin, 1895–1905". Retrieved November 14, 2009.
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(help) - Edwards, "Perfessor" Bill (2010). ""Perfessor" Bill's guide to notable Ragtime Era Composers". Retrieved July 28, 2011.
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(help) - ESPER. "Black Heritage Stamp issues". Ebony Society of Philatelic Reflections, Inc. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
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(help) - IMDB.com. "Listing for Scott Joplin (TV 1977)". IMDB.com, Inc. Retrieved August 16, 2011.
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(help) - RedHotJazz. "Wilbur Sweatman and His Band". Retrieved July 25, 2011.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - St. Louis Walk of Fame. "Inductees to the St. Louis Walk of Fame". St. Louis Walk of Fame. Retrieved August 17, 2011.
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Journals
- Albrecht, Theodore (1979). Julius Weiss: Scott Joplin's First Piano Teacher. Vol. 19. Case Western Univ. College Music Symposium. pp. 89–105.
- Billboard Magazine (1974a). "Best Selling Classical LPs". Billboard magazine (September 28, 1974). Nielsen Business Media, Inc.: 61. Retrieved July 29, 2011.
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(help) - Billboard Magazine (1974b). "Hot 100". Billboard Magazine (May 18, 1974). Nielsen Business Media, Inc.: 64. Retrieved August 5, 2011.
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(help) - Rich, Alan (1979). "Music". New York Magazine (December 24, 1979). New York Media LLC: 81. Retrieved August 5, 2011.
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External links
- Texas State Historical Association – Biography of Scott Joplin
- The Scott Joplin International Ragtime Foundation
- Joplin at St. Louis Walk of Fame
- "Perfessor" Bill Edwards plays Joplin, with anecdotes and research.
- Maple Leaf Rag A site dedicated to 100 years of the Maple Leaf Rag.
- The Scott Joplin House – St. Louis, Missouri
- Scott Joplin at Find a Grave
- Encyclopedia of Arkansas History & Culture
Recordings and sheet music
- Free recordings of Joplin's music in Mp3 format by various pianists at PianoSociety.com
- www.kreusch-sheet-music.net – Free Scores by Joplin
- Sheet Music and Covers (includes cover art, comprehensive sheet music selection, and biography)
- Free scores by Scott Joplin at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
- Kunst der Fuge: Scott Joplin – MIDI files (live and piano-rolls recordings)
- John Roache's site has MIDI performances of ragtime music by Joplin and others
- The Mutopia Project has compositions by Scott Joplin
- Scott Joplin
- 1860s births
- 1917 deaths
- 20th-century classical composers
- African-American classical composers
- African-American pianists
- American classical musicians
- American composers
- Composers for piano
- Deaths from syphilis
- Music of St. Louis, Missouri
- Musicians from Missouri
- Musicians from Texas
- People from Sedalia, Missouri
- People from St. Louis, Missouri
- People from Texarkana, Texas
- Ragtime composers
- Ragtime pianists
- Romantic composers
- Songwriters Hall of Fame inductees
- Texas classical music