Thursday, February 9, 2017
Progressive Post
We have control over our future in many ways. Our individual decisions every day dictate smaller details about our own future, but other bigger choices can affect the rest of the world. Things like recycling, a kind gesture to a stranger, or choosing to go to school are ways we have control over our future. We can make a difference in the world even if it is a small one simply by speaking our minds or writing about something we care about. Other times, we have no control over our future, because other factors are making those decisions for us. The weather, some technology, and other people are examples of things that not only we can't control, but could control us. Every choice we make in our daily lives is not placed in a vacuum where nothing can affect it as it takes place. Everyone else's choices are constantly effecting everything that happens in our lives. A great example of this is traffic. We depend on everyone on the road to make safe decisions so that we can get to where we need to be safely and on time. The government and other big institutions will in some ways play a big role in controlling the future. These organizations are made up of many people who will eventually decide together important decisions for our country dictating how our lives will be like.
Tuesday, February 7, 2017
Thinking about the Future
People were predicting that we would have moving sidewalks and pneumatic tube delivery of everything like food or newspapers. They thought airships will be invented and be flying in the sky daily. They basically envisioned the opposite of the slums in the cities and the cities will be beautiful. Boston specifically predicted that in 100 years, the city will have a morning and afternoon local newspaper. They thought the population would be between 350 and 500 million people. Life expectancy will grow because people will find a way to fight disease better and sewage and garbage would be nonexistent. They envisioned that everyone would have cars, airships sailed over the city, and moving sidewalks would make transporting giant populations easier. Smoke and noise would also disappear from cities with new ways to generate heat. This list is more of a wish list because the people of Boston live in a big city where all these new inventions would benefit their comfort in the city. Many of these things improved, but did not come true. Garbage in cities are still a huge issue and of course there are no airships yet. The trend of these things are improvement of city life in many aspects like smoke and traffic. Airships seemed like the most bizarre. People do seem to be anticipating a better future.
The Smithsonian
An civil engineer in 1900 predicted digital color photography, the height of Americans to increase, invention of mobile phones, pre-paid meals, the population growth to decrease, hot house vegetables (faster), TV, bigger fruit, no more C, X, or Q in alphabet, and no more cars or mosquitoes. These predictions seem like a wishlist to help improve everyone's lives. The alphabet losing letters and no more cars seem to be the most bizarre and out of reach. Everything else seems reasonable or has already happened. The trends in these items are improving the health of Americans like making bigger fruit and decreasing disease and mosquitos. People are anticipating a better future by imagining these items. I think our future is going to consist of more environmentally safe transportation and machinery, and more efficient forms of energy conservation, but also some mistakes along the way that will hurt the planet and the people. The future could be better, but might also be very dark and unsafe.
BBC
The Smithsonian
An civil engineer in 1900 predicted digital color photography, the height of Americans to increase, invention of mobile phones, pre-paid meals, the population growth to decrease, hot house vegetables (faster), TV, bigger fruit, no more C, X, or Q in alphabet, and no more cars or mosquitoes. These predictions seem like a wishlist to help improve everyone's lives. The alphabet losing letters and no more cars seem to be the most bizarre and out of reach. Everything else seems reasonable or has already happened. The trends in these items are improving the health of Americans like making bigger fruit and decreasing disease and mosquitos. People are anticipating a better future by imagining these items. I think our future is going to consist of more environmentally safe transportation and machinery, and more efficient forms of energy conservation, but also some mistakes along the way that will hurt the planet and the people. The future could be better, but might also be very dark and unsafe.
BBC
Sunday, February 5, 2017
Ragtime
Urbanization and the rise of mass consumption in the late 19th century changed American lives forever in many ways. As new technology was invented, the need for human labor decreased creating an alienated term called leisure. Leisure was a brand new term for the American working class and, at first, people did not know what to do with it. (Alan Brinkley) Americans started to search for forms of entertainment and because of urbanization, industrialization, and immigration, ragtime music gained a very large audience fast. Ragtime, in its simplest form, was piano music that had syncopated or "ragged" sounding rhythms and melodies giving it a swinging feel. (The Library of Congress ) It originated from jigs or march music played and composed by African Americans. As ragtime gained popularity in the 1880s, ragtime mostly reflected stereotypical, black characters through album covers and lyrics. Ragtime in the early 1900s, however, was romanticized and less ridiculed. Piano was a very popular instrument and was kept in many households because middle class families put high value on learning to play an instrument, especially piano. The new availability of instruments and sheet music propelled ragtime into everyone's lives. Ragtime will become influential to modern composers and inspire new genres of music and dance.
Ragtime was called “the one original and indigenous type of music of the American people” (Susan Curtis) in 1915 because it represented the patriotism and spirit of American people in the nation’s cities. Ragtime for the longest time was passed on orally and had very little opportunity to be written down. Before 1870, ragtime was mostly played at minstrel shows or accompanied song and dance, but around the 1880s, ragtime caught the attention of white audiences and white composers began to imitate ragtime styles. (Ingeborg Harer) Pop culture was also developing alongside ragtime and was an important contributor to the growing popularity of ragtime. New, rapid developments in communications and printing technology helped develop pop culture and, in turn, helped ragtime become popular. Once this music got published, ragtime got its liftoff into the progressive lives of American people. Ben R. Harney was one of the first practitioners to bring ragtime to vaudeville shows in New York and, as an all round entertainer, he helped ragtime to spread even further to the mainstream public. A young composer who followed Harney teamed up with John Stark, a famous publisher of the time, and published his first rag Maple Leaf Rag. His name was Scott Joplin, who is known today as the King of Ragtime.
Scott Joplin was born in Texas and grew up playing piano, cornet, and singing in a quartet. He later moved to Sedalia, a city outside of St. Louis, Missouri, which was where ragtime flourished. He wrote music, played in many small ensembles, and was a member of The Maple Leaf Gentleman's Club where he wrote his most famous song. Missouri was considered the heart of America based off its geographical location just like ragtime was thought to represent the heart and soul of America. Missouri got a lot of musical attention because of the railroad hubs, thriving community of commerce and transportation, and the many travelers seeking entertainment. (Crawford, 538-546) Missouri was “The Gateway to the West” so musicians thrived there because cities like St. Louis were going through social, commercial, and cultural change which attracted a lot of people.
Joplin among many other black composers struggled to get their works published because many of the big brand publishers would refuse to publish black composers. For example, Will Marion Cook, a black composer, started out studying classical violin, but found that classical music was prejudice against his race and decided to, instead, compose for shows centered around black characters where he was more successful. One of the most famous publishers of the time was civil war veteran, John Stark, who met Scott Joplin in 1899 with his unpublished song “Maple Leaf Rag”. He was one of the only publishers who ignored his prejudice and agreed to publish Joplin’s work. Because of this, John Stark and Co. actually became more successful than the other publishing companies. (Library of Congress) In only 15 years, "Maple Leaf Rag" sold over 1 million copies. Scott Joplin’s goals were to give ragtime music a salable form, expand the range of customers, and raise the status of ragtime. The only way to accomplish his goals was to get ragtime published and written down for all of America to enjoy. The new printing and distributing technology that was available at the time made this possible. John Stark and Scott Joplin were very important figures in history that helped make ragtime immortal.
It was not a surprise that ragtime caught on so fast after the first publication of ragtime music. Americans during this time period were very spirited and energized as a whole because of the new opportunities they had due to leisure time. Ragtime was a musical representation of this energy and complimented many locations like saloons, sporting houses, ballrooms, and private homes. (Ingeborg Harer) The tunes were very catchy, foot- tapping, and humorous. What separated ragtime from all other music at the time was the unpredictable rhythms and beats. Ragtime introduced syncopation, which was the act of putting emphasis on the “weak” beats in music. Instead of the strict dance beats that put emphasis on beats 1 and 3, ragtime emphasized 2 and 4. Ragtime broke a lot of musical rules, but that was what made it so appealing to Americans. Composers brought to the stage a new sound by using syncopation, bending pitches, and exploring various vocal and instrumental sounds and techniques. For example, Scott Joplin created a unique technique in rag called “stop time” where the music stops and you just hear the musician stomping their feet to keep the beat. This premiered in his song “A Stop Time Two Step” in 1902 and later became a critical music device in Jazz and Blues music. (Jim Paterson)
Ragtime faded in popularity around the 1920s, because of the rise of Jazz and Blues music which originated in New Orleans. Even though it was fading, many aspects of rag were still prevalent in Jazz and Blues like syncopation and stop-time. Rag was also used in many broadway shows and is the inspiration for many broadway composers today. Ragtime was even popularized in Europe when Arthur Pryor, a ragtime composer who grew up playing trombone, composed rags for John Philip Sousa’s marching band to play while they toured Europe in 1900. (The Library of Congress) Urbanization and the need for entertainment created a platform for ragtime sheet music to be a nation wide household item. Even though ragtime is no longer in our Top 100 billboard list, it changed the way people viewed black culture and created new music genres and styles we still listen to today.
Works Cited
“Back to Nature.” University Missourian [Colombia]. Library of Congress, chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn89066313/1913-11-14/ed-1/seq 2/#date1=1789&sort=state&date2=1924&words=ragtime&sequence=0&lccn=&index=6&state=&rows=20&ortext=&proxtext=ragtime&year=&phrasetext=&andtext=&proxValue=&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=725.
Primary source about personal opinions about ragtime.
Berlin, Edward A. Ragtime: A Musical and Cultural History. PDF ed., University of California Press.
Gave history behind the naming of ragtime and discussed attitude towards rag.
Brinkley, Alan. A Survey American History. 12th ed., McGraw Hill Company.
Gave background and set up for ragtime. Talked specifically how urbanization contributed to the popularity of ragtime.
Crawford, Richard. America’s Musical Life. New York, W. W. Norton & Company, 2001.
Discussed specific examples of people and places that were crucial to ragtime popularity. Especially publishing companies and Scott Joplin.
Curtis, Susan. “Ragtime.” Encyclopedia of Urban America. Literati, literati.credoreference.com/content/entry/abcurban/ragtime/0?searchId=beba0eff-eb0f-11e6-a028-0e58d2201a4d&result=0.
Gave information about spirit of people and Missouri and that translating into ragtime. Gave primary quotes of people commenting on the music.
Harer, Ingeborg. “Defining Ragtime: Historical and Typological Research.” JSTOR. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/902493?Search=yes&resultItemClick=true&searchText=ragtime&searchUri=%2Faction%2FdoBasicSearch%3Fgroup%3Dnone%26wc%3Don%26acc%3Don%26fc%3Doff%26amp%3D%26amp%3D%26amp%3D%26amp%3D%26Query%3Dragtime&seq=6#page_scan_tab_contents.
Discussed african american culture behind ragtime.
“History of Ragtime.” Performing Arts Encyclopedia. The Library of Congress, memory.loc.gov/diglib/ihas/loc.natlib.ihas.200035811/default.html.
Discussed why ragtime is different than any other music of the time. Sycopation, odd beats, etc.
Paterson, Jim. “Ragtime Music.” mfiles, Music Files, www.mfiles.co.uk/ragtime-music.htm.
Discussed the prejudice ragtime had to overcome to convince white people of its worth.
“Popular Culture in the Gilded Age.” History Study Center. History Study Center, www.historystudycenter.com/search/displayMultiResultStudyunitItem.do?Multi=yes&ResultsID=15974DFD3FD&fromPage=search&ItemNumber=1&QueryName=studyunit.
Discussed the technological advances that ragtime needed to get started.
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