![]() It is of course on this disc, along with 21 others. Review: "Classical Album of the Week." (epulse) "Too much of a good thing? Not when the composer is William Bolcom, that propagandist for rags from Scott Joplin to today, pianist, and the composer of Graceful Ghost, the most haunting and beautiful of contemporary rags. Few of us would continue to write rags after about 1975, but the Ragtime Revival was certainly the beginning of American composers' serious absorption of our own popular sources into our music in an unself-conscious way." This wonderful two CD set should find a large audience. It was all delightful for us (playing these new-old pieces in concert elicited warm responses from audiences), but I think we all felt the real impetus from our picking up a dropped thread of our emerging American tradition. Bill Albright and I would send each other rags by mail like chess problems. What may be less well known is that from about 1968 on a whole group of young American composers, Peter Winkler, William Albright and several others, joined me in writing new traditional style rags. Soon after, Joshua Rifkin recorded the Joplin rags and Gunther Schuller laid the period instrumentations of Joplin onto disc Joplin's obscurity would be no more. From this happy event came an exploration of Joplin's rags (courtesy of Rudi's friend Max Morath) as well as the whole field of turn-of-the last-century piano ragtime. Shall I bring it next week?" I almost fell off my chair. When he said, "I have a copy of the vocal score. That is, until I asked my colleague Rudi Blesh at Queens College we had barely ever said hello before as we rushed in and out of the same office on the way to teaching, but one week I asked him if he knew where I could find a copy of the opera, as all the usual suspects had nothing. For some reason I immediately went on the trail of Treemonisha, only to find that no one even at the Library of Congress, Lincoln Center, or the Schomburg Collection had it. Who is that? I asked - few people in 1967 knew the name Scott Joplin - and Norman told me Joplin was the composer of the "Maple Leaf Rag' but that his opera existed only in legend. Bolcom tells this story: "One day in the fall of 1967 I had lunch with Norman Lloyd, then head of the music division for the Rockefeller Foundation, who mentioned having heard of a ragtime opera by Scott Joplin. Go Back > Bolcom's modern rags collected together for the first time! What a pleasure it is for Albany to be able to bring these wonderful pieces to the musical public.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |