[Scott
Joplin Treemonisha;
The Paragon
Ragtime Orchestra and Singers; Rick Benjamin, conductor; New World
Records 80720 (2011)]
ScottJoplin (c. 1867-1917) is featured at AfriClassical.com. We have already posted two
reviews of Scott
Joplin Treemonisha,
recorded
by The Paragon
Ragtime Orchestra and Singers under the direction of Rick Benjamin,
conductor. The recording is a New
World Records 2-CD set. Today we present a review from The
New Yorker:
The New Yorker
January
5, 2012
Classical Recordings: Eleven for 2011
Classical Recordings: Eleven for 2011
Posted
by Russell Platt
Scott
Joplin: “Treemonisha” (New World). Paragon Ragtime Orchestra and
soloists; Rick Benjamin, conductor.
“Treemonisha,” a
story of Reconstruction-era blacks trying to free their struggling
post-plantation community from ignorance and superstition, is as
noble and elevated as “Anna Nicole” is crude and deliberately
low-down. The major artistic testament of the Ragtime King, it blends
Joplin’s syncopated sui generis style with influences of the
classical opera tradition—which has led a number of
well-intentioned modern orchestrators to inflate the music to at
least Mozartean dimensions. Benjamin, going through his trove of rare
manuscripts, has at last given us the piece as the dying, impecunious
Joplin probably wanted it, scored for a early-twentieth-century “high
class vaudeville” band of twelve instrumentalists. The flaws and
virtues of the piece are as clear as ever: plodding recitatives and
sweetly foursquare arias (Joplin’s libretto is touching and
earnest) alternate with choruses that could make you weep with joy.
There is nothing else like it, and Benjamin, aided by his excellent
orchestra and singers, has finally made it whole.
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