Scott Joplin
Hudson Valley One
by Violet Snow
July 12, 2019
African-American talent will be showcased in two operas at the tenth
annual Phoenicia International Festival of the Voice, August 2-4, in the
Shandaken hamlet of Phoenicia [New York]. Damien Sneed, who led the previous
Festival’s extraordinary gospel concert, conducts excerpts from Scott
Joplin’s ragtime-influenced opera Treemonisha on Saturday afternoon, August 3. That night, Donizetti’s comedic Elixir of Love is set in an African village, featuring dancers and a drummer originally from West Africa.
Outside of black companies such as Opera Noir and Opera Ebony,
opportunities for African-Americans to sing the traditional repertoire
can be hard to come by. However, Festival executive director Maria
Todaro said, “We take whoever is knocking our socks off at auditions. We
don’t care about the color of their skin.” Baritone Lawrence Craig, who
has been featured in past Festival productions, including Of Mice and Men, will sing Dulcamaro in Elixir.
Bass Morris Robinson returns on Friday, August 2, for the opening
concert, a selection of favorite arias from the past ten years of
Festival presentations.
This year’s featured operas provide an abundance of roles
specifically for black artists, including singers, dancers,
instrumentalists, and the multi-talented Sneed, whose career, not unlike
Joplin’s, spans composing, arranging, conducting, and piano-playing, as
well as combining classical and popular music.
Scott Joplin was born just after the Civil War, the son of a freed
slave. He became the leading composer of ragtime, which was named for
its syncopated or “ragged” rhythm, blending European march and dance
forms with African polyrhythms. Ragtime gained enormous popularity
across the U.S. in the early 1900s, with Joplin’s most famous
composition, “Maple Leaf Rag,” selling millions of copies of sheet
music, each individual sale earning him one cent in royalties.
Around 1903, Joplin, who had classical training, turned to opera, creating The Guest of Honor,
about black leader Booker T. Washington’s controversial dinner with
President Theodore Roosevelt at the White House. A tour of the show
failed when the box office receipts were stolen. Although the score of
Joplin’s next effort, Treemonisha, was praised by a reviewer, he died before he could raise enough money for a full production.
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