Topic: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Recently I have discovered the piano music of Bob Zurke (born Boguslaw Albert Zukowski, 1912-1944).  Zurke was an American jazz and ragtime pianist who spent his formative years in various groups around Detroit.  In 1937, he replaced an ailing Joe Sullivan in the Bob Cats, a band led by Bob Crosby, Bing's younger brother.  The new position greatly increased his national visibility, gaining an accolade from Jelly Roll Morton and winning a Downbeat Magazine readers' poll in 1938 for  Best Band Pianist.  He started his own Delta Rhythm Band, which made a couple of records, but by 1941 he was back in Los Angeles, the house pianist at the Hangover Club in Hollywood.  Hard living caught up to him, and in February 1944, suffering from pneumonia, he collapsed while performing.  He died the next day, the pneumonia complicated by alcohol poisoning. 

Hangover Square (1939) is from Music for Moderns, a collection of eight Zurke piano solos.  The images in this video were taken in Gleeson and Courtland, two ghost towns in southern Arizona.

https://youtu.be/vozBJs3L8xg

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Thank you, very enjoyable!

Have you used a PIANOTEQ default or customized preset?

Pianoteq 8 Studio Bundle, Pearl malletSTATION EM1, Roland (DRUM SOUND MODULE TD-30, HandSonic 10, AX-1), Akai EWI USB, Yamaha DIGITAL PIANO P-95, M-Audio STUDIOPHILE BX5, Focusrite Saffire PRO 24 DSP.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Amen Ptah Ra wrote:

Thank you, very enjoyable!

Have you used a PIANOTEQ default or customized preset?

You're welcome, glad you enjoyed it.  I used the NY Steinway D Jazz preset.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Here's another piece by Bob Zurke, co-composed with Julian Matlock, who was the clarinet player in Bob Crosby's Bob Cats.

Eye Opener by Bob Zurke and Julian Matlock

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

great performance and thanks for sharing this composer.  i had never heard of him before this and there is a lot of cool stuff going on in his music.  please post more!

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

budo wrote:

great performance and thanks for sharing this composer.  i had never heard of him before this and there is a lot of cool stuff going on in his music.  please post more!

Thanks for the encouragement, I have a couple more of his in the works.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Here is another composition by Bob Zurke, Nightcap from his collection Music for Moderns (1939).  Nightcap is a jazz nocturne, a quiet and relatively subdued piece reflecting a little calm at the end of a long day.

Nightcap by Bob Zurke

Last edited by ctdeupree (09-10-2021 14:03)

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

another great piece by Zurke, and beautifully played.  i'm really enjoying these.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Thanks again!  I've made a playlist of the various Zurke pieces, there are still a few more to come.

budo wrote:

another great piece by Zurke, and beautifully played.  i'm really enjoying these.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Fourth in my series exploring the work of Bob Zurke, here is Lace Embroidery, published in 1939.  This was actually the first piece by Zurke that I discovered, in a ragtime folio edited by Dave Jasen that contained a lot of music outside the classic era of ragtime (Joplin, etc.).  The piece uses the HB Steinway Jazz preset.  Photographs from White Sands National Park, New Mexico.

Lace Embroidery

Last edited by ctdeupree (16-12-2021 18:05)

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

another charming piece excellently performed.  it's really interesting to listen to his take on Ragtime, compared to the classic pieces of Scott Joplin (which were written 30-40 years before this).

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Continuing my exploration of the compositions of Bob Zurke, here is Hobson Street Blues.  This was probably Zurke's showpiece, the way Carolina Shout was for James P. Johnson.  He recorded it with his orchestra in 1939, a recording reissued by Folkways and available on various streaming services.  This recording uses the NY Steinway D Jazz preset.

Hobson Street Blues

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

really excellent!  i see what you mean with the comparison to Carolina Shout (totally impossible to play, at least for me, btw).  it is a show-stopper.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Still more to come of Bob Zurke's piano compositions, here is Sugared Candy, somewhat more on his reflective side.  As with my other Zurke pieces, this one uses the NY Steinway D Jazz preset.

Sugared Candy

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Continuing on, here is Nickel Nabber Blues, illustrated with some of the spring flowers from the desert Southwest.

Nickel Nabber Blues

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

This one's clever harmonic mis-directions and textural surprises were a real *Eye Opener* to listen to!

ctdeupree wrote:

Thanks again!  I've made a playlist of the various Zurke pieces, there are still a few more to come.

budo wrote:

another great piece by Zurke, and beautifully played.  i'm really enjoying these.

Last edited by jeff_harrington (03-05-2022 14:55)

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

these latest pieces also sound great!  keep em coming.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Here is a slow drag blues, Southern Exposure, illustrated with AI-generated images of the desert Southwest inspired by The Secret Knowledge of Water by Craig Childs.

https://youtu.be/QhGb5CGWfqw

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

ctdeupree wrote:

Here is a slow drag blues, Southern Exposure, illustrated with AI-generated images of the desert Southwest inspired by The Secret Knowledge of Water by Craig Childs.

https://youtu.be/QhGb5CGWfqw

another really nice composition/performance.  it was fun to hear his ideas in the context of the blues instead of ragtime.  the images were very cool too!

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

In the tradition of cat ragtime (from Confrey's Kitten on the Keys to Bolcom's Tabby Cat Walk), here is another Bob Zurke signature piece, Old Tom Cat on the Keys.

Old Tom Cat on the Keys

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

In addition to the original compositions presented here (and there aren't too many more), Zurke also published several "modern" piano transcriptions of songs by other jazz composers.  Zurke's modern transcriptions are full-fledged compositions in their own right, and completely different from the simple arrangements of then-current pop songs that jazz pianists cranked out to satisfy their publishers (Duke Ellington and Teddy Wilson are only two among the pianists who published this kind of folio).  Here is One O'Clock Jump by Count Basie, arranged for piano by Bob Zurke. 

The images in this video are covered bridges in central Ohio from a set of pictures that my father took in the spring of 1960.

One O'Clock Jump

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

two more gems.  it was great to see all the bridges too, i had no idea there were so many in OH.

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

Getting near the end of original Zurke compositions, here is Ode To An Alligator by Zurke and Ruth Lowe, a Canadian pianist and songwriter, illustrated again with my father's covered bridge pictures from the early 1960s.  I have no idea what the piece has to do with an alligator.

Ode To An Alligator by Bob Zurke & Ruth Lowe

Last edited by ctdeupree (28-01-2023 22:16)

Re: Overlooked ragtime composer -- Bob Zurke

very fun and jaunty piece.  maybe he just liked alligators they are rather impressive.