Texarkana Mural honoring Scott Joplin.
Photo by Carol M. Highsmith.
Image courtesy the Library of Congress.
Photo by Carol M. Highsmith.
Image courtesy the Library of Congress.
[Scott Joplin (c. 1867-1917) is featured at AfriClassical.com as a pianist and composer of Jazz and Classical Music]
In the early 1880s, a young African American boy in Texarkana named
Scott Joplin was trained in the fundamentals of classical music and
opera by his German-born teacher. Born near Linden, Joplin was the son
of a former slave—and a budding musical talent. By his early twenties,
he left home to become an itinerant musician.
While living in St. Louis, Joplin encountered a kind of music that
juxtaposed a steady, bouncing bass with a syncopated treble: “ragged
time,” or “ragtime.” The music was played in saloons and brothels, and
in Joplin’s hands, it became high art.
In the late 1890s, Joplin settled in Sedalia, Missouri, where he
studied music, performed, and began writing songs such as the “Maple
Leaf Rag” and “The Entertainer.” Ragtime was described as the “one true
American music” of the day, and Joplin was its king.
Joplin spent his final years in New York City, seeking to produce his opera, Treemonisha. Discouraged and in declining health, he died in 1917.
In the 1970s, the world rediscovered Joplin. New recordings were
issued. And his music featured prominently in the Hollywood film The Sting, which won an Academy Award for its score.
In 1976, Joplin received a posthumous Pulitzer Prize for his unique and lasting contributions to American popular song.
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