Your Classical: Marc-André Hamelin explores William Bolcom's piano rags in his new album

Your Classical
By Julie Amacher

“In 1985, I won the Carnegie Hall competition for American Music. One of the prizes was an invitation to the Cabrillo Festival in California, which is still going on, I think. And the two composers in residence that year happened to be Arvo Pärt and William Bolcom. So, I got to meet him.”

Pianist Marc-André Hamelin not only got to meet Bolcom, the American composer whom he’d been admiring since he was 16, but he also got to make music with him. For his latest release, Hamelin has recorded a two-disc set of The Complete Rags of William Bolcom.  

There's a lot of diversity in Bolcom’s rags. Can you talk about the many moods that we experience throughout this two-disc set?

“I think his first rags were a little more Joplin influenced, even though he was adding some touches of his own.

“There is one of them, which is a kind of a joke, actually, it's called Brass Knuckles. And it was written in collaboration with the late William Albright. They decided to write that together one day as sort of an antidote to the overdelicate rags that they'd each been writing. It's just a joke, of course, but it's full of clusters and very violent piano writing. And that's why I put it at the very end of the two-disc set.

Read more here.

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