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Beginning of "Solace" Though Joplin labeled the piece "a Mexican Serenade", [2] [3] its origins are more probably Cuban, [4] [5] and it is considered to have a habanera (and tango [4] [5]) rhythm in three of the four strains [note 1] [6] – something unique for a work by Joplin, [5] [6] although a brief habanera bass did appear in his previous composition of that year, "Wall Street Rag".
Scott Joplin was born in Arkansas in around 1867, just outside Texarkana, and was a street performer before settling in Sedalia, Missouri, St. Louis, Missouri, and finally New York City where he died in 1917.
Joplin was the second of six children [6] born to Giles Joplin, a former slave from North Carolina, and Florence Givens, a freeborn African-American woman from Kentucky. [7] [8] [9] His birth date was accepted by early biographers Rudi Blesh and James Haskins as November 24, 1868, [10] [11] although later biographer Edward A. Berlin showed this was most likely incorrect.
Scott Joplin was an early musician who transformed much of the landscape of popular music in the early 1900s. Though many details of his short life are uncertain, his impact on early American ...
List of compositions by Scott Joplin; S. Solace (Joplin) This page was last edited on 10 December 2021, at 21:24 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
Between 1895 and 1917, he published more than 80 songs, including classical music, operas, and a new form of popular music, ragtime.
"The Entertainer" is a 1902 classic piano rag written by Scott Joplin. [1] It was sold first as sheet music by John Stark & Son of St. Louis, Missouri, [2] and in the 1910s as piano rolls that would play on player pianos. [1] The first recording was by blues and ragtime musicians the Blue Boys in 1928, played on mandolin and guitar. [1]
[22] Scott Joplin's "Solace" (1909) is considered a habanera. For the more than quarter-century in which the cakewalk, ragtime and proto-jazz were forming and developing, the habanera was a consistent part of African American popular music. [23]