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Listen to Scott Joplin playing his own music - no swing. OK, it's on a piano roll, but those things could articulate swing if it was there.
Well I find all this a bit puzzling. First of all I don't hear a big difference in Rob's timing and mine in playing Grimshaw's #50. I hear a bit of swing in some of his phrasing. Then I just gave a listen to these piano rolls. Maple Leaf Rag is very straight time. But to my ears Magnetic Rag has a light swing/lilt to it. Other pieces have some of both. In any case, Rob is right about Scott Joplin's general approach. A fair amount of Morley in super-low fidelity can be heard on the CD "The Tarrant Bailey Collection". Except for some "dotted" music he plays straight time and he plays no rags. John Cunninghame plays ragtime very straight. But their contemporaries Sydney Turner and Clifford Essex play in swing time. Addressing "trapdoor"'s comment about classic banjo being "written" in straight time, I'd say that's the convention for writing, and a good thing too because the page would be cluttered with dots and flags if the real phrasing of Van Eps and Ossman were written out. If it actually could be.
It is clearly a case of personal preferance, with most people falling between none and heavy. Too much, though, and it begins to sound like jazz. My preference is to oscillate between none and a modicum.
Oscillate? It's only 7.25 am on a Sunday. My brain hasn't woken up yet...
My preference is to oscillate between none and a modicum.
Oscillate? It's only 7.25 am on a Sunday. My brain hasn't woken up yet...
Swing away, Jody, swing away. I can enjoy it both ways. I don't really have a strong preference, and I don't 'deliberately' not swing. We are doing the same thing: playing it the way we feel it. Nothing wrong with that.
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