First, how is my practicing going? Well in general, I had less time, due both to factors like working and taking care of my kids, and having to practice about 5 million hymns for accompanying church and chapel services and a hymn sing over the weekend. That is not a complaint though; I enjoy doing it. But I don't really have time to practice those and simultaneously practice ragtime. It also seem to take a day or two for my fingers to remember how to do ragtime after playing just hymns for a week.
- New Era Rag by James Scott is now for sure memorized--I just played it without the music-- and, remarkably enough, it may actually be getting slightly better. I thought I was stuck but I think I have pushed it a little farther towards performance quality, especially if I play it when already warmed up. Still not there yet, though.
- Grace and Beauty, also by James Scott is where I am now stuck. Not memorized and not getting better. It seems more difficult now than it looked. The question is do I like it enough to keep going, or move on to something else?
- Ethiopia Rag by Joseph Lamb, I'm haven't touched. Think I'll give up on this one for now, probably removing it from the next update.
- Ragging the Scale, by Ed Claypoole. Played it a little but not as much as last time, needs more work.
- Two-Key Rag by Joe Hollander I also didn't practice as much this time as before; however I do feel it is improving. This piece and the above I have not printed off, so I always practice them together when putting my computer into tablet mode.
- Over The Top by Tom Brier, I have worked on some but feel stuck.
- Canadian Capers, I haven't touched, but not sure that I'm giving up just yet. I don't feel burned out on it. I'll keep it on the list for now.
- The Lion Tamer Rag, a Syncopated Fantasia by Mark Janza. A most remarkable piece, representing, I think, the pinnacle of ragtime creativity. For all the praise Joplin gets--all deserved, I grant--he really could never have written something like this. It is a completely different subgenre of ragtime. Another interesting point is that the composer was probably actually Al Marzian and not Mark Janza, who is likely fictitious. This is determined by analyzing the compositional style of known pieces by Marzian and comparing them to The Lion Tamer Rag, and the fact there is no outside evidence for the existence of a Mark Janza. In any case, it was rather common for sheet music publishers in the ragtime era to attribute to certain pieces they published to made-up composers, to make it look like they had a greater number of composers publishing with them.
Here's a performance of Joplin's last published composition, Magnetic Rag. This is Max's ancient piano which would be about 60 years old already at the time Magnetic Rag was published. Also, I recall reading there was some reason it cannot be tuned to the usual pitch points and is about 1/2 step low.
Michael Chisholm has posted a series of videos from the Old Town Music Hall Ragtime Festival in El Segundo, California. Unfortunately they were taken at some distance so it is difficult to observe the pianists, but they still sound great. This is a favorite piece of mine, the Queen Rag by Floyd Willis. One can easily imagine this being played on the paddleboats along the Mississippi River, by hired entertainers in the days long before sound systems, which apparently it was.
From the same series, this is Vincent Johnson's performance of 'Wildflower Rag' by Clarence Williams, a later ragtime piece which has been accused of blurring the lines between ragtime and jazz. Later versions of this are often heard as a jazz piece, but here it is played in more of a ragtime style, I think... well, you decide.
Here's something I'm basically bookmarking for myself in case it might lead me to more John Arpin compositions that I could watch later.
Finally, going back a few years, here's a fine performance of the Lion Tamer Rag by Tom Brier.
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