Early Jazz Piano

Oops, the playlist you're looking for doesn't exist.

Fats_Waller2
Jazz piano has a long and interesting history, which actually goes back to the mid-19th century American composer Louis Moreau Gottschalk. Gottschalk’s syncopated works, influenced by the Cuban habanera rhythm, were popular in North America and Europe. These syncopated compositions of the mid-19th century led to the development of the popular cakewalk dance of the late 19th century and later to the ragtime compositions of Scott Joplin and other ragtime composers.

Early Jazz Piano - Episode 1

Late 19th and early 20th century of popular ragtime did not swing in the modern sense, nor did it contain any improvisation. Cakewalk and ragtime music were usually performed on solo piano, but any type of ensemble could play ragtime---it was the syncopated rhythmic approach that helped to identify the music as traditional ragtime. It was probably the New Orleans (or Mississippi Delta) musicians who would give strict ragtime its swinging lilt. We don’t know who first swung it, but Jelly Roll Morton’s 1938 Library of Congress Recordings may give us some insight. Morton is an important figure in the development of jazz piano. He started his career in the early 20th century as a journeyman performer and became a pre-eminent composer, arranger, band leader, and performer by the mid 1920’s.
CompositionArtistYear
At a Georgia Camp MeetingScott Joplin (from a piano roll)ca. 1910
American Beauty RagJoseph Lamb1913
Maple Leaf RagScott Joplin (from a piano roll)ca. 1916
Maple Leaf RagJelly Roll Morton (tradition style)1938
Maple Leaf RagJelly Roll Morton (swing style)1938
The PearlsJelly Roll Morton1923

Early Jazz Piano - Episode 2

CompositionArtistYear
Snowy Morning BluesJames P. Johnson1927
The Mule WalkJames P. Johnson1939
Carolina ShoutJames P. Johnson1921
Carolina ShoutFats Waller1941
A Handful of KeysFats Waller1929
Honeysuckle RoseFats Waller1934
Echoes of SpringWillie “the Lion” Smithca. 1957
Tiger RagArt Tatum1932
Willow Weep for MeArt Tatumca. 1949