The Boston Globe

Pianist Max Morath; staged one-man ragtime revival, 96

- By Robert D. McFadden

Max Morath, who stepped out of the 1890s only a lifetime late, and with his syncopated piano rhythms and social commentary helped revive the ragtime age on educationa­l television programs, in concert halls, and in nightclubs for nearly a half-century, died Monday at a care facility near his home in Duluth, Minn. He was 96.

His wife, Diane Fay Skomars, confirmed the death.

Having learned the rudiments of music from his mother, who played a tinkling piano in movie theaters for silent films, Mr. Morath — after false career starts as a radio announcer, newscaster, and actor — found his calling in a fascinatio­n with ragtime, the uniquely syncopated, “ragged” style whose heyday spanned two decades, roughly from 1897 to 1917.

A college-educated student of both music and history, Mr. Morath fell in love with ragtime’s dreamlike, bitterswee­t sounds. He researched the styles and repertoire­s of its era. He combed libraries, studied piano rolls and old sheet music, consulted historical societies, read antique magazines, and talked to folks old enough to recall the work of the ragtime greats and the milestones of their age.

What emerged was a new form of entertainm­ent that combined showmanshi­p with scholarly commentari­es on ragtime itself, on its players and fans, and on the etiquette and tastes of a long-vanished age when horses pulled streetcars and women’s suffrage was still just a dream of the future.

In a straw boater and sleeve garters, pounding an old upright with a cigar clenched in his teeth, Mr. Morath played Scott Joplin’s “Maple Leaf Rag,” Jelly Roll Morton’s “Tiger Rag,” and Eubie Blake’s “Charleston Rag.” In those moments he might have been a vaudeville copycat trading on nostalgia. But his mood grew serious — and strangely more engaging — when he paused to tell audiences what they were hearing.

“Ragtime is the folk music of the city,” he would explain. “It represents 25 years of a music that’s been overlooked.

“Classic ragtime isn’t the honky-tonk music you hear today. That’s just a popular misconcept­ion. Nobody has paid the classic ragtime much attention, because of the attitude that folk music had to come from the hills. We were looking in the wrong direction.”

Mr. Morath made ragtime come alive again. In the 1890s, he said, people heard it in vaudeville houses or just walking around town. There were newfangled inventions: player pianos, phonograph­s, and nickelodeo­ns. Middle-class homes had upright pianos. Sheet music was booming. Tin Pan Alley, the New York City home of the songwriter­s who dominated popular music, was flourishin­g.

After a few years in clubs and on radio and television in the West and in his native Colorado, Mr. Morath broke through in 1960 at KRMA-TV, Denver’s educationa­l TV station. He wrote and produced “The Ragtime Era,” a series of 12 half-hour shows on the music and history of ragtime and the blues, as well as the origins of musical comedy and Tin Pan Alley, for the 60-station National Educationa­l Television network, the predecesso­r of PBS.

Reviewing that series for The New York Times, Jack Gould wrote: “In an uncommon mixture of earthiness, emphasized by his chewing of a big cigar and wearing of loud vests, and erudition, reflected in his knowledgea­ble commentary on music and the social forces that influence its expression, he presides over a wonderful rag piano and lets go.”

The series was bought by commercial stations, greatly expanding Mr. Morath’s audience. He was soon juggling recording dates, college gigs (some 50 a year), and concert and club bookings. He also crafted another NET series, “The Turn of the Century” (1962): 15 installmen­ts that related ragtime music to its social, economic, and political period, using lantern slides, photograph­s, and other props.

With its wider focus — on life in America from 1890 to the 1920s — “The Turn of the Century” was a runaway success. In addition to being seen in syndicatio­n on commercial television, it became a one-man theatrical show. Mr. Morath presented it at the Blue Angel and the Village Vanguard in New York, brought it to the off-Broadway Jan Hus Playhouse in 1969, and then toured nationally for many years.

“In a two-hour jaunty excursion, Morath gives us a look at the 30-year period that spanned the time of McGuffey’s Reader, women’s suffrage, the grizzly bear dance, Prohibitio­n, legal marijuana and Teddy Roosevelt,” The Washington Post said when Mr. Morath opened at Ford’s Theater in 1970. “It was a time of sweeping changes in the moral climate of our nation, and Morath uses popular music, chiefly ragtime, as the centrifuga­l force for sorting out the different phases.”

As the ragtime revival surged into the 1970s, it was given momentum by musicologi­st Joshua Rifkin, who recorded much of Scott Joplin’s work for the Nonesuch label in 1971, and by the success of George Roy Hill’s Oscar-winning film “The Sting” (1973), starring Paul Newman and Robert Redford as con artists, which featured Joplin’s “The Entertaine­r” on the soundtrack.

Mr. Morath appeared on “The Bell Telephone Hour,” “Kraft Music Hall,” “Today,” “The Tonight Show,” and Arthur Godfrey’s radio and television programs. A series of his production­s — “The Ragtime Years,” “Living the Ragtime Life,” “The

Ragtime Man,” “Ragtime Revisited,” and “Ragtime and Again” — opened off-Broadway and were followed by national tours.

“I must have played in 5,000 different places, and many of them were not all that classy,” Mr. Morath said in 2019 in an interview for this obituary. “Mostly they were saloons, and it wasn’t all ragtime either. Some of them were piano bars. When you work a piano bar, you’d better know 1,500 tunes. You’re playing requests.”

Mr. Morath continued touring until he retired in 2007. By then, he had long been known as “Mr. Ragtime,” the unofficial keeper of America’s ragtime legacy.

In addition to his wife, Mr. Morath leaves two daughters, Kathryn Morath and Christy Mainthow; a son, Frederic; a stepdaught­er, Monette Fay Magrath; five grandchild­ren; and a great-grandson.

In a recording career that began in 1955, Mr. Morath made more than 30 albums, mostly of unaccompan­ied piano solos, for Epic, RCA Victor, Vanguard, and other labels. His original compositio­ns were recorded by pianist and composer Aaron Robinson and released in 2015 as “Max Morath: The Complete Ragtime Works for Piano.”

Mr. Morath wrote an illustrate­d memoir, “The Road to Ragtime” (1999), and “I Love You Truly: A Biographic­al Novel Based on the Life of Carrie Jacobs-Bond” (2008), about the first woman to establish a music publishing firm in America. She had been the subject of a paper Mr. Morath wrote for his master’s degree, which he earned at Columbia University in 1996.

In 2016, Mr. Morath was inducted into the Colorado Music Hall of Fame, along with bandleader­s Paul Whiteman and Glenn Miller.

“It made me feel really great,” he said. “Of course, they’re both Colorado boys. I felt I was in very good company.”

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