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  • Ragtime - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Ragtime (alternately spelled Rag-time) is an American musical genre which enjoyed its peak popularity between 1897 and 1918. It has had several periods of revival since then and is ...

  • Ragtime (musical) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Ragtime is a musical with a book by Terrence McNally, lyrics by Lynn Ahrens, and music by Stephen Flaherty. Based on the 1975 novel by E. L. Doctorow, Ragtime tells the story of ...

  • Ragtime (1981)

    Plot: A young black pianist becomes embroiled in the lives of an upper-class white family set among the racial tensions, infidelity, violence, and other nostalgic events in early ...

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Ragtime

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Jazz Pianist Jelly Roll MortonJazz Pianist Jelly Roll Morton

Ragtime, American musical genre, mainly for piano, that reached its greatest popularity between 1897 and World War I. Usually in 24 time, it is characterized by syncopated melodies over a regularly accented bass. Its roots are in minstrel-show plantation songs, cakewalks, banjo playing, and black folk music; it also drew on, and recast in fresh ways, the chromatic harmonies of 19th-century European music. Created by itinerant professional performers in saloons and honky-tonks, ragtime was ultimately disseminated by piano rolls and printed music. It is a sophisticated genre requiring considerable technical skill. Its systematic syncopation—using patterns found in African American music throughout the Americas—was its critical contribution to jazz. Among outstanding ragtime composers were Scott Joplin, whose 'Maple Leaf Rag' (1899) inaugurated ragtime as a national craze; Thomas Turpin; James Scott; and Eubie Blake. Played at unrushed tempo in Joplin's classical St. Louis style, it gained a faster, “hotter” character in the hands of New Orleans players such as Jelly Roll Morton.



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