Scott Joplin and the Age of Ragtime
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About the Book
At the turn of the twentieth century, Scott Joplin struggled on the margins of society to play a pivotal role in the creation of ragtime music. His brief life and tragic death encompassed a tumultuous time of changes in modern music, culture, and technology.
This biography follows Joplin’s life from the brothels and bars of St. Louis to the music mills of Tin Pan Alley as he introduced a syncopated, lively style to classical piano.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Ray Argyle
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 231
Bibliographic Info: 16 photos, appendix, bibliography, index
Copyright Date: 2009
pISBN: 978-0-7864-4376-5
Imprint: McFarland
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Prelude 1
Part I—Breaking All the Rules: The 1890s 3
1. A Medley for the Fair: A Time to Start Raggin’ It 6
2. My Kind of Town: Hot Nights in the City 16
3. The Making of the Legend: A Boy and a Banjo 26
4. Marching to a Ragtime Tune 38
Part II—The Music Makers Play Main Street: The 1900s 49
5. Writing in Ragtime 51
6. Tin Pan Alley and All That Jazz: Footloose in “Black Bohemia” 65
7. They All Played Ragtime: Scott Joplin and Irving Berlin—A Case of Plagiarism? 79
8. The Girls of Ragtime and the Cult of Celebrity: Murder, Passion and Honor 87
Part III—The Dream That Wouldn’t Die: The 1910s 99
9. Dancing in Ragtime 101
10. The Censors and the Erotic Life 112
11. Reporting in Ragtime 124
12. Dreaming of Treemonisha 137
Part IV—After the Rag: The Finale 147
13. Little Mary and the Little Tramp: Ragtime Partners of the Silent Screen 149
14. The Rites of Spring: The Martyred Saint of the Ragtime Era 159
15. Ragtime in Revival 169
16. Echoes of the Music: We’re All Still Playing Ragtime 179
The Life and Times of Scott Joplin 187
Scott Joplin’s Compositions 189
Sources of Quotations 193
Appendix: Ragtime in the Newspapers 201
Bibliography 215
Index 219
Book Reviews & Awards
“Ray Argyle is an author who writes exceptionally fascinating stories on social and cultural change.”—Toronto Globe and Mail; “not simply a musical history…ragtime aficionados and the new-to-ragtime together will be delighted by the information…and creative take Argyle has on this music Joplin and his contemporaries gave us”—ARSC Journal; “an excellent read, for musicians, historians and the curious”—www.mfiles.co.uk.