Friday, March 26, 2021

Ragtime Dynamics

You've probably never seen an article about dynamics in ragtime, because well... hardly anybody follows them anyway. I'm not saying I'm the best at it, but I try to pay attention, and it really does make a difference. That is... if they have any.

If someone didn't follow Mozart's dynamics, and OMG he's got them every three notes, a critical listener would say the whole thing was done wrong. And I've heard ragtime that sounds like midi, where the player is doing it note-perfect, but never gets louder, never gets softer. And it's dull.

The typical rag is like this

Intro, F or FF

First strain, mf

Second, F

Repeat the first. F or go back to MF

Third, p-mf

Fourth f, the FF or just blast away.

Or... not. We have to talk about Scott Joplin, and particular Searchlight Rag, which has a lot of MF and MP when you think it should be LOUD. Like really? I wonder if that's a character thing, that he's not going to "go there" because he's more quiet on the inside. But the end of Searchlight, quiet and legato, is much different than what I would do if I wasn't told otherwise. The third strain, the trio, is the same. it's MP and it seems like it should finally get loud, but... noooo.

Sometimes it feels wimpy. Like it's MP, and it crescendos all ... the way .. up to... MF. I think it's Magnetic Rag that does that, and so does Ophelia. That's kind of like turning your dial from 4 to 5 during rush hour traffic. Meh. but OK that's what they way, let's try it. Plus, if you can do it, make that small crescendo and make it work, that's some good playing. That way too, when you get to the louder part, you have somewhere to go with it.

Grace and Beauty by James Scott is the only instance I've seen of quieting down on the repeat. The second strain is F, then MP. It works, actually it feels like it should do that on its own, and it's a great place to slow down if you've gotten out of control.

The Thriller by May Aufderheide hits FF far too early and stays there, so I try to find a way around it. Or, just keep it there, because it's kind of ... thrilling. I think sometimes, the "feel" of the dynamic is what's important more than the volume. Like you don't want to be just play "F" all the way through a strain, but you start out, come down, come up, that's what music is all about. Next time, more intense, more relaxed, but just not "midi."

And then there's Ketchup, by Irene Giblin, that has nothing written in at all but an accent mark at the end. It's up to you. Which is cool too. I wonder if they figure that you'll know what to do so they don't bother. Fontella by Ethyl Smith is the same, but has a few more accents. But nary a dynamic. I try it with all kinds of changes and crescendos, let it speak to you, then you speak it to your audience.

"Cherry Leaf" is p-f all four strains, which makes me wonder if they just threw something in there to have something, without thinking about it. It does sort of work, if you make it so. 

OH... OMG we forgot Hothouse, hard enough to begin with, that has one strain that's p-ff, and then another that's pp-f later on. Get all that down, and you're a master! It can, from a practice perspective, take a lot of time, once you get the notes to get the dynamics. But is the piece finished without them? 

When our whole band plays a rag, it really shows a difference, when you play it quiet and then louder on the repeat, it's a pretty cool effect. It's a bit like archeology, you have to piece together the music by what you can find. And use other examples of dynamics to play the rags that don't have any.

Joplin was more meticulous about it, and even some of his don't have a lot. But he knew how he wanted it to sound. 

I was once at an event where the men were playing ragtime fast and loud as they could, each one kicking the other off the communal piano. Then a woman showed up and slowed it down, played with emotion, I'd never head anything like it. Wow, everyone just shut up and really paid attention. It was a whole different ballgame. Also, find Mimi Blais playing May Aufderhiede's "A Totally Different Rag" really slow and it's sexy as it gets.

Ketchup - a slow drag, works slow, and even "That Poker Rag," is supposed to slow down at the end. it says so. So does "Don't Jazz Me." It add drama, and it's "what they want you to do." They don't write in "Slow down" so you should do a presto double-forte.

Anyway, just a thought. Since there aren't a lot of dynamics I see it as a guide post vs. a hard and fast rule, but it's a good start, and gives you some idea of what the composer (or at least the publisher) thought would work.

Any thoughts? Feel free to share.


Monday, March 1, 2021

Women of Ragtime, links and sources

 For more information about "Women in Ragtime" here are a few links: 


There is a lot of ragtime sheet music by women available here:

Female Composers of Ragtime by Ted Tjaden (ragtimepiano.ca)



May Aufderheide:

There's more info here than you might think....

May Frances Aufderheide Kaufman (1888-1972) - Find A Grave Memorial

Library of Congress has a short bio

May Aufderheide, 1888-1972 | Library of Congress (loc.gov)

All Music has a lot of interesting information on ragtime era personalities

May Aufderheide | Biography & History | AllMusic


As always, Bill Edwards's research is fabulous

May Frances Aufderheide (ragpiano.com)

And here he is again with a discussion of her father's publishing company

John Henry Aufderheide (perfessorbill.com)


Here is a "non-ragtime" but famous interpretation of THRILLER RAG

Thriller Rag - Bunk Johnson and his New Orleans Band (1942) - YouTube


Some info on Aufderheide and scores of others are available here

That American Rag: The Story of Ragtime from Coast to Coast: Jasen, David A, Jones, Gene: 9780028647432: Amazon.com: Books

It's not the easiest book to read but it's a wealth of information.


Sophie Tucker:

There's some cool info here about her early years and her appearance at Ziegfeld.

New York One Way · Sophie Tucker: The "Pride of Hartford" · JHSGH

Here's a parody of "The Yiddisha Rag" called "The Yiddisha Fish" sung in Yiddish.

Yidishe fish (parody of The Yiddisha Rag) - YouTube

Sophie Tucker is well known and documented, so there is a lot more information available on her than the others in this feature.


Charlotte Blake:

Most information about her is available here at Bill Edwards' site

Charlotte Blake (perfessorbill.com)

A bit about here here, with a lot of history of women composers in general, and their treatment

Women Composers In American Popular Song, Page 1 (parlorsongs.com)

Here's a version of That Poker Rag by Jerry Rabushka (me, in other words), using a variety of instruments I had around the house, recorders, trumpets, autoharp, percussion, dulcimer, etc. It's a bit out of tune at time, but it's totally rad.

That Poker Rag by Charlotte Blake by Jerry Rabushka | Free Listening on SoundCloud


For information on Irene Giblin and Ethyl Smith, please see the blog on "St. Louis, Ragtime Capital." For information on Carita Day, I've got a blog devoted to her as well. There's a song called "You Can't Expect Kisses From Me" that has her photo on the cover in some versions.