home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT1276>
- <title>
- Sep. 19, 1994: Books:American Schubert
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Sep. 19, 1994 So Young to Kill, So Young to Die
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ARTS & MEDIA/BOOKS, Page 80
- American Schubert
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A scholar has written the first real biography and appreciation
- of Scott Joplin, one of this country's unheralded musical giants
- </p>
- <p>By Michael Walsh
- </p>
- <p> Is there an American composer more important, more familiar
- and yet more obscure than Scott Joplin? His signature tune,
- The Maple Leaf Rag (1899), was the first piece of sheet music
- in America to sell a million copies, and after the 1973 release
- of the film The Sting and its accompanying soundtrack, his rag
- The Entertainer was heard constantly all over the country. And
- yet this genius, whose ambition it was to merge white European
- classical forms with black American rhythms and harmonies, has
- remained a shadowy historical figure, a mysterious creature
- of the late 19th century urban demimonde.
- </p>
- <p> For years the standard reference work on Joplin's life was They
- All Played Ragtime by Rudi Blesh and Harriet Janis, a 1950 study
- based largely on interviews with surviving original ragtimers.
- But oral history is necessarily flawed, since recollection fails
- with the passage of years, and a more scholarly, rigorous treatment
- was called for. Now comes King of Ragtime: Scott Joplin and
- His Era by ragtime scholar Edward A. Berlin (Oxford; 334 pages;
- $25); it immediately supplants the earlier book as the most
- accurate and informative Joplin biography.
- </p>
- <p> Berlin has a sure grasp of the ragtime era; his earlier Ragtime:
- A Musical and Cultural History is an exemplary scholarly monograph
- on a complicated subject. The Joplin biography is equally formidable
- in its research. Combing census records, city directories and
- newspaper files across the Midwest, Berlin follows in detail
- Joplin's travels from his birthplace near Texarkana, Texas (his
- father Giles was a freed slave), through the bandstands and
- bordellos of the Mississippi to Tin Pan Alley, the budding popular-music
- scene in New York City. Berlin then recounts Joplin's syphilis-induced
- descent into madness, a deterioration that ended with his death
- in Manhattan in 1917 at age 49. Joplin earned a penny for each
- copy of The Maple Leaf Rag that was sold, but he died broke
- as a result of his creeping insanity and his quixotic efforts
- to publish and produce his opera Treemonisha.
- </p>
- <p> The author gives equally detailed attention to Joplin's music--the early parlor songs, the magnificent piano rags, the waltzes
- and marches and Treemonisha, his great last work. Berlin's analysis
- is always illuminating and expert; however, nonmusical readers
- may have trouble following his arguments, illustrated as they
- are by plentiful examples from scores. There are tantalizing
- references to such lost works as a symphony, a piano concerto
- and the opera A Guest of Honor, which was registered for copyright
- in 1903, although no copy of the score is known to exist.
- </p>
- <p> If ever an American composer was worthy of such thorough examination,
- surely Joplin is. His great accomplishment was to refine and
- perfect a kind of protojazz called ragtime. He did not invent
- it: black musicians along the Mississippi had long been syncopating,
- or "ragging," the rhythm of such forms as the march and the
- two-step, and Joplin was not even the first to publish a rag.
- But in his hands the nascent genre was quickly transformed into
- something worthy of the concert hall. Joplin's rags, beginning
- with the sprightly Original Rags and ending with the autumnal,
- resigned Magnetic Rag of 1914, his farewell to the genre, were
- elegant in construction and limpid in expression. Yet they fully
- partook of what Joplin called a "weird and intoxicating" rhythmic
- quality, a quality that enthralled listeners and enraged preachers.
- </p>
- <p> No part of American musical culture is untouched by Joplin's
- influence. Stride piano, boogie-woogie, Dixieland, Big Band
- swing, blues, soul and rock 'n' roll--to some degree, all
- these forms were adumbrated in Joplin's works. But Joplin's
- achievement transcends pop music; indeed, the soft-spoken, neatly
- dressed whorehouse pianist was a master melodist who would rightly
- be called an American Schubert.
- </p>
- <p> Although he chronicles Joplin's activities with admirable exhaustiveness,
- Berlin stops short of exploring the inner life of his subject.
- That is unfortunate, for despite Joplin's constant travels and
- his uncanny knack for turning up in the right place at the precise
- point in history when his music would have the most impact (in
- Tin Pan Alley, for example, in the early 20th century), his
- life was not particularly full of incident, and his intellectual
- development may have been as important as any documented event.
- Joplin had a fierce desire to show the whites in America that
- blacks were their equal in every respect. Repeatedly he admonished
- his fellow blacks that education was the way to first-class
- citizenship, and indeed that is the explicit theme of Treemonisha.
- </p>
- <p> Joplin believed passionately that neither the idiom of a composition
- nor the setting in which it was played had anything to do with
- its quality--and that race had nothing to do with quality
- whatsoever. "What is scurrilously called ragtime is an invention
- that is here to stay," he wrote in 1908. "Syncopations are no
- indication of light or trashy music, and to shy bricks at `hateful
- ragtime' no longer passes for musical culture." In an age when
- the quest for "diversity" has turned into a form of cultural
- apartheid, Joplin's achievements and values serve as a reminder
- of just how potent cultural fusion can be.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-