hello all chopin lovers....i'm back again with an unexpected question about chopin..
I guess most of you know of scott joplin and his tribute to ragtime music. anyway, as a big chopin fan i think it is clearly that he invented the style before joplin's time.
In chopin's butterfly etude, which everyone in this forum probably knows, i can hear every and every element in joplin's music, and i whould be bold to say that it's the first rag...
Just listen to it and afterwards to joplin and tell me what you think... I hope it's not to much farfetched.
have a nice day,
Shaul.
Dude common, seriously?
Let me tell you a little about ragtime and Chopin:
Scott Joplin didn't INVENT ragtime. Ragtime was invented a few years before him.
As far as Chopin, no Chopin didn't invent ragtime. Just because there are jumps in the left hand doesn't mean that its ragtime. Ragtime is a SYNCOPATED sound. Yes, jumps in the left hand are part of it, but not all of it.
And let me tell you a little about jumps:
Jumps have been incorporated in many classical composers music. There are jumps in Chopin, Liszt, Ravel, Beethoven, and Mozart! Jumps are just a technique that are incorporated in a LOT of music. Even in modern jazz!
Like I said, jumps do not mean that a piece is labeled "ragtime".
As a similar statement, jumps do not mean that a piece is labeled "stride". Similarly, ragtime doesn't mean to be labeled "stride".
Stride is a style too, just like ragtime. If you are confusing jumps in music with ragtime and stride, then you are obviously missing the point.
A left hand with stride like jumps is either called a "stride left hand" or "jumps", but never do we call a piece that has jumps in music a "stride" piece, unless its stylistically "stride" piano.
Therefore, what you hear in your Chopin Etude piece called a "stride" left hand or simply "jumps". But we do not call the piece a "stride" piece, because it is not stylistically "stride" piano. It should fall under the category romantic classical music.
More importantly, most people consider the Chopin etude a romantic classical etude. But you say that Chopin invented ragtime and point out the butterfly etude as an example of a "stride" left hand. The thing is, if you tend to say the Chopin invented ragtime, then your basically saying that the butterfly etude is a "ragtime" piece, although it is not and it is classified under the category of "romantic". Just want to point that out!