Maple Leaf Rag

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Second edition cover of "Maple Leaf Rag", perhaps the most famous rag of all
Second edition cover of "Maple Leaf Rag", perhaps the most famous rag of all

The "Maple Leaf Rag" (1899) is an early ragtime composition for piano by Scott Joplin. It was one of Joplin's early works, and is one of the most famous of all ragtime pieces, becoming the first instrumental piece to sell over one million copies.[1]

In 1916, Joplin recorded the Maple Leaf Rag on a piano roll on the Connorized and Aeolian Uni-Record labels, along with his other ragtime pieces - Something Doing, Magnetic Rag, Ole Miss Rag (composed by W.C. Handy), Weeping Willow and Pleasant Moments - Ragtime Waltz.

Maple Leaf Rag

Problems listening to the file? See media help.

Contents

[edit] Structure

"Maple Leaf Rag" is a multi-strain ragtime march with athletic bass lines and upbeat melodies. Each of the four parts features a recurring theme and a striding bass line with copious seventh chords.

It is more carefully constructed than almost all previous ragtime tunes, and the syncopations, especially in the transition between the first and second strain, were arrestingly novel at the time.

While not an extremely difficult piece rhythmically or musically, a pianist must have a well developed command of his or her left arm in order to perform the piece successfully—especially the third section. When it was first published, it was considered significantly more difficult than the average Tin Pan Alley and early ragtime sheet music common at the time.

The Gladiolus Rag, a later composition by Joplin, is a thinly disguised variant of the Maple Leaf Rag, and is usually played at a somewhat slower tempo. In addition, the first part of Joplin's The Cascades is very close to Maple Leaf Rag's first part.

[edit] Popularity and legacy

Joplin wrote the Maple Leaf Rag circa 1897, in honor of the Maple Leaf Club, a black social club that existed briefly during the late 1890s in Sedalia Missouri. Shortly after its completion, Joplin told fellow ragtime composer Arthur Marshall that "the Maple Leaf will make me King of ragtime composers."[2] It was published in September 1899 (finally after Joplin submitted the rag to three publishers) on sheet music by John Stark & Son, after and in its first six months sold 75,000 copies, becoming "the first great instrumental sheet music hit in America."[3]

Over 1 million copies of the sheet music were eventually sold, making Scott Joplin the first musician to sell 1 million copies of any type of music. In addition to sales of sheet music, it was also popular in orchestrations for dance bands and brass bands for years.

The tune continued to be in the repertoire of jazz bands decades later, with artists such as the New Orleans Rhythm Kings in the 1920s, and Sidney Bechet in the 1940s giving it up-to-date adaptations, maintaining a timeless quality to it.

The "Maple Leaf Rag" is still a favorite of ragtime pianists, and has been described as an "American institution... still in print and still popular."[3]

Judith Durham has used the song as a mainstay in concert, both as a solo artist, as well as with The Seekers.

As the copyright has expired, the composition is in the public domain. It appears in the soundtracks of hundreds of films, cartoons, commercials, and Bally Midway's 1983 arcade videogame, Domino Man. Long before the Scott Joplin revival that began with the feature film The Sting, the tune can be heard in the film The Public Enemy from 1931, as in one scene a piano player can be heard slowly working through the piece. Also, Walt Disney used it too (It was played repeatedly through the 1932 Mickey Mouse cartoon "The Whoppee Party").

In 2004 Canadian radio listeners voted it the 39th greatest song of all time.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Edwards, "Perfessor" Bill. "Rags & Pieces by Scott Joplin, 1895 - 1905", accessed March 25, 2008.
  2. ^ Rudi Blesh and Harriet Janis, "They All Played Ragtime", New York: Oak Publications, 1971.
  3. ^ a b Rudi Blesh, "Scott Joplin: Black-American Classicist", Introduction to Scott Joplin Complete Piano Works, New York Public Library, 1981.
Languages