Classical composers
have long drawn on the language of ragtime. Examples that come
to mind include Satie’s ‘Le Piccadilly’; Debussy’s ‘General
Lavine’, ‘Minstrels’, ‘Le petit nègre’ and ‘Golliwog’s Cakewalk’;
Stravinsky’s ‘Piano- Rag-Music’; Hindemith’s ‘Ragtime’ in his
Suite of 1922 and Milhaud’s ‘Trois Rags Caprices’ of
the same year; Alexandre Tansman’s ‘Sonatine Transatlantique’
and Lothar Perl’s ‘Syncopated impressions’. Amongst American
composers, William Albright’s rag-inspired works for organ are
particularly striking, as are the rags of William Bolcom. Another
American composer who has been steadily building up a catalogue
of rag-influenced pieces is Judith Lang Zaimont. Zaimont is
one of those talented American composers, mildly eclectic stylistically,
highly competent, who attract relatively little attention beyond
America. Her body of work includes symphonies and operas, a
body of songs, a range of works for a variety of chamber ensembles
and a fair output for solo piano.
In her contribution
to the booklet notes which accompany this CD, Zaimont writes
Side by side with more elaborate concert works, I’ve been composing
rag-based pieces for more than three decades. And when these
two musical domains continually intersect in my imagination,
the manner of each mutually enriches the other, generating concert-framed
works that tap into infectious ‘ragged-time’ as deep-down, or
overt, source. Very often elaborated in their forms, these concert
works could be thought of as wholly American counterparts
to such music as Chopin’s polonaises and mazurkas, similarly
derived from national dance forms”.
That gets to the
heart of the matter and is a good guide to what the listener
will find on this thoroughly enjoyable CD. Some of the compositions
are more or less straight rags, continuations, as much as appropriations,
of the original idiom. There isn’t too much in ‘Judy’s Rag’
- well played by the composer, on a piano that sounds as if
it has had better days - that would raise the eyebrows of ragtime
masters such as Joseph F. Lamb or Scott Joplin. Elsewhere Zaimont’s
wanders further away from ‘pure’ ragtime. Some of the most striking
music is to be heard in ‘Bubble-Up Rag’, a work of considerable
complexity and length, which shifts in and out of ragtime rhythms
and which explores a harmonic language that would, indeed, have
startled the ragtime pioneers. It gets an excellent, compelling
performance from Immanuel Davis and Nanette Kaplan Solomon.
‘Serenade’ slows down the tempo to the point where resemblances
to the methods of ragtime (thought they are there) become less
important than the apparent differences. The result is an intriguing
piece of real, if mysterious, charm. The analogy with Chopin
seems particularly pertinent here.
The two piano suite,
‘Snazzy Sonata’, works its way through a whole chronological
catalogue of American ‘dance’ musics – it begins with ‘Moderate
Two-Step’, in which echoes of ragtime are clear; continues with
‘Lazy Beguine’, and a ‘Bebop Scherzo’ before closing with a
‘Grande Valse Brillante’ which is ‘American’, rather than Viennese,
insofar as it is redolent of the Broadway musical stage (and
is complete with some witty musical allusions).
The pieces played
in David Reffkin’s arrangements for a larger group, though they
are attractive enough, lack the rhythmic incisiveness and drive
of the other pieces/versions heard here.
Judith Lang Zaimont’s
treatment of ragtime is characterised by respect and affection,
by ease and familiarity and by an inventiveness which, for all
its musical sophistication, is never in danger of overwhelming
the structures and language of its source idiom. The results
are delightfully entertaining.
Glyn Pursglove