(Stomp Off Records, York, PA, 1985 - LP)
Status: Out of Print
One of the most influential figures in my life, Edgar Allan Poe, wrote in the introduction to his collected poems: "For me, poetry has not been a purpose, but a passion." For me, ragtime has been a relentless passion. Though it is only one of my many creative vehicles, it is inseparable from me and so rootedly fixed in my consciousness that I balk at envisioning existing, or ever having existed, without it. So strong is this bond that I have been led to imagine it as a pre-experiential force predating my birth and perhaps even the existence of ragtime.
This album is a diverse collection of compositions from eight decades and is the last of three Stomp Off LPs to be based upon my sessions of June-July, 1981 at York College.
I have always been frightened of the cover of Mandy's Broadway Stroll. It features a girl with a parasol, apparently a prostitute, staring at the viewer from the street: (The red light blocks of Broadway in Nashville were called "the stroll.") It is her pathetically sinister face, which registers a malevolence that flares independently of the rag's title, that so upsets me. The composition's nature is one of the most representative in the ragtime temperament; that Janusian spirit which brightly strides forth and grieves simultaneously, its body stamping proudly before onlookers as its face unabashedly contorts with tears. I view this spirit as the surest guide to ragtime's essence; it has been with us from Sunflower Slow Drag to The Alaskan Rag to John Hancock's Dixon.
Site updated February 07, 2010. Visitors: .