School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Like
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
Hello Scriabinoff,
I tried posting a long reply three times, but PP spat me out three times.
I gave up.
Thanks for the posting
regards,
tobyjj
I tried posting a long reply three times, but PP spat me out three times.
I gave up.
Thanks for the posting
regards,
tobyjj
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
Strange. That must have been one hell of a reply. PP has a maximum message size of 60,000 characterstobyjj wrote:I tried posting a long reply three times, but PP spat me out three times.
I gave up.

Regards
Fred
PS I can make it bigger if you wish...
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
Hi Fred Bouquet,
The reply wasn't THAT long - I don't think it was the length that caused the expectoration - some other glitch, - but still too long to remember and too tiresome to try and repeat for a fourth time.
as for the PS ... well who wouldn't wish for such endowments !!
regards,
tobyjj
The reply wasn't THAT long - I don't think it was the length that caused the expectoration - some other glitch, - but still too long to remember and too tiresome to try and repeat for a fourth time.
as for the PS ... well who wouldn't wish for such endowments !!
regards,
tobyjj
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
I appreciate it and the extra effort, I am curious now as to what was in that reply but I am glad you enjoyed the upload and effort it took to get those volumes availabletobyjj wrote:Hi Fred Bouquet,
The reply wasn't THAT long - I don't think it was the length that caused the expectoration - some other glitch, - but still too long to remember and too tiresome to try and repeat for a fourth time.
as for the PS ... well who wouldn't wish for such endowments !!
regards,
tobyjj

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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
my alternate scan of the Grand Canyon Suite (maybe perhaps a bit easier to read in spots?).fhimpsl wrote:
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
For Scriabinoff:
The more I translated, the less it felt like this really belonged in the Soviet thread, despite the fact that most composers were from countries that, in 1987, were still stuck in the eastern bloc. Anyhow...
Rhythms of the Twenties in Piano Music (edited and compiled by A. Khitruk) (1987)
Ralph BENATZKY (Czech) - Pieces (3), from the ballet 'Five Desires'; 1. Blue Hour (Boston), 2. Flirt (Slow-Fox), 3. Tango of Death (1929)
Alois HABA (Czech) - Shimmy-Blues, from the cycle 'Four Modern Dances' (1927)
Felix Karl August PETYREK (Austria) - Amusement Park, from the cycle 'Six Grosteque Pieces' (1919)
Erwin SCHULHOFF (Czech) - Pieces (4), from the cycle 'Hot Music (10 syncopated etudes)' (1929)
Darius MILHAUD (France) - Botafogu, from the cycle 'Saudades do Brasil, Op.67' (1920–1921)
Anatoly Nikolayevich ALEXANDROV - Ragtime, from 'Little Suite no. 1, op. 33' (1929)
Leonid Alekseyevich POLOVINKIN - Foxtrot (1925)
Pancho Haralanov VLADIGEROV (Bulgaria) - Foxtrot (1925)
Ernst KRENEK (Czech/Austria) - 'Farewell, my Treasure', blues from the opera 'Jonny spielt auf, op. 45' (1927)
Ernst KRENEK (Czech/Austria) - Foxtrot, from the opera 'Der Sprung über den Schatten, op. 17' (1923, 1927)
Dmitry Dmitryevich SHOSTAKOVICH - Polka, from the ballet 'The Golden Age, op. 22' (1930)
(nms)
The more I translated, the less it felt like this really belonged in the Soviet thread, despite the fact that most composers were from countries that, in 1987, were still stuck in the eastern bloc. Anyhow...
Rhythms of the Twenties in Piano Music (edited and compiled by A. Khitruk) (1987)
Ralph BENATZKY (Czech) - Pieces (3), from the ballet 'Five Desires'; 1. Blue Hour (Boston), 2. Flirt (Slow-Fox), 3. Tango of Death (1929)
Alois HABA (Czech) - Shimmy-Blues, from the cycle 'Four Modern Dances' (1927)
Felix Karl August PETYREK (Austria) - Amusement Park, from the cycle 'Six Grosteque Pieces' (1919)
Erwin SCHULHOFF (Czech) - Pieces (4), from the cycle 'Hot Music (10 syncopated etudes)' (1929)
Darius MILHAUD (France) - Botafogu, from the cycle 'Saudades do Brasil, Op.67' (1920–1921)
Anatoly Nikolayevich ALEXANDROV - Ragtime, from 'Little Suite no. 1, op. 33' (1929)
Leonid Alekseyevich POLOVINKIN - Foxtrot (1925)
Pancho Haralanov VLADIGEROV (Bulgaria) - Foxtrot (1925)
Ernst KRENEK (Czech/Austria) - 'Farewell, my Treasure', blues from the opera 'Jonny spielt auf, op. 45' (1927)
Ernst KRENEK (Czech/Austria) - Foxtrot, from the opera 'Der Sprung über den Schatten, op. 17' (1923, 1927)
Dmitry Dmitryevich SHOSTAKOVICH - Polka, from the ballet 'The Golden Age, op. 22' (1930)
(nms)
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
Wow- I've been looking for the Petyrek Wurstelprater score since I heard it on the 1992 Husum CD. Thank you.
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
Many thanks for this and your efforts!caostotale wrote:For Scriabinoff:
The more I translated, the less it felt like this really belonged in the Soviet thread, despite the fact that most composers were from countries that, in 1987, were still stuck in the eastern bloc. Anyhow...
Rhythms of the Twenties in Piano Music (edited and compiled by A. Khitruk) (1987)
Ralph BENATZKY (Czech) - Pieces (3), from the ballet 'Five Desires'; 1. Blue Hour (Boston), 2. Flirt (Slow-Fox), 3. Tango of Death (1929)
Alois HABA (Czech) - Shimmy-Blues, from the cycle 'Four Modern Dances' (1927)
Felix Karl August PETYREK (Austria) - Amusement Park, from the cycle 'Six Grosteque Pieces' (1919)
Erwin SCHULHOFF (Czech) - Pieces (4), from the cycle 'Hot Music (10 syncopated etudes)' (1929)
Darius MILHAUD (France) - Botafogu, from the cycle 'Saudades do Brasil, Op.67' (1920–1921)
Anatoly Nikolayevich ALEXANDROV - Ragtime, from 'Little Suite no. 1, op. 33' (1929)
Leonid Alekseyevich POLOVINKIN - Foxtrot (1925)
Pancho Haralanov VLADIGEROV (Bulgaria) - Foxtrot (1925)
Ernst KRENEK (Czech/Austria) - 'Farewell, my Treasure', blues from the opera 'Jonny spielt auf, op. 45' (1927)
Ernst KRENEK (Czech/Austria) - Foxtrot, from the opera 'Der Sprung über den Schatten, op. 17' (1923, 1927)
Dmitry Dmitryevich SHOSTAKOVICH - Polka, from the ballet 'The Golden Age, op. 22' (1930)
(nms)
I hope you can help with this last one. If we need to migrate this thing back to the Russian thread (or name the appropriate home) we can do that too.

NMS Googletranslate TC
A. Strock My last tango.
O. Moonlight Rhapsody strings.
O. Strings Oh, those black eyes.
E. Petersburgsky tired sun.
I. Berlin Homesickness. Boston.
E. Rosenfeld My Happiness.
Z. Kompaneyets Foxtrot.
A. Tsfasman I am infinitely sorry.
A. Tsfasman Joyful day. Quick foxtrot.
A. Tsfasman Stay with me. Slow Foxtrot.
A. Happy Tsfasman meeting.
N. Theological Old Coachman's Song.
K. Brune Paris tango.
Cucaracha. Mexican folk song. Arr. E. Vevrika.
I. Dunaevskii so many good girls. The song from the film "Jolly Fellows".
I. Dunaevskii eccentric dance from the operetta "The Way to Happiness."
V. Sidorov mystery.
Rio Rita. Paso Doble.
G. Stoggard Foxtrot from the operetta "Rose Marie."
J. Gershwin Love entered.
A song from the movie "Peter".
G. Warren Chattanooga choo-choo. From the music to the film "Sun Valley Serenade."
M. Zerkovich Tango.
C. Chaplin, Mandolin and love. The song from the movie "King of New York."
R. Brodsky Red rose.
K. B. de Carnaval Holland.
B. Youmans Tea for Two.
A. Polonsky breeze. Foxtrot.
A. Polonsky March. Waltz.
A. Polonsky charm. Tango.
W. Handy St. Louis. Blues.
D. Ellington Believe me only.
D. Ellington Sophisticated Lady.
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
This volume is probably just fine here, especially since it contains about as much American material (Gershwin, Ellington, Berlin, Chaplin, 'Chattanooga Choo-Choo') as it does Soviet material. As far as I can tell, the Soviet composers it does contain (e.g. Tsfasman, Z. Kompaneets) are all 'light music' or popular composers, not quite as serious as the usual fare in the Russian/Soviet Composers thread.
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Re: School of Syncopation - Jazz, Stride, Novelties & the Li
Wonderful postings,
Many thanks.
tobyjj
Many thanks.
tobyjj