Ragtime No. 3: George Takei Rag - Piano Solo by Arthur Breur Sheet Music for Piano Solo at Sheet Music Direct
Log In
1010127
Ragtime No. 3: George Takei Rag - Piano Solo Digital Sheet Music
Cover Art for "Ragtime No. 3: George Takei Rag - Piano Solo" by Arthur Breur PASS

Ragtime No. 3: George Takei Rag - Piano Solo
by Arthur Breur Piano Solo - Digital Sheet Music

¥900
Sales tax calculated at checkout.
Get 20% discount with PASS subscription
Purchase of Ragtime No. 3: George Takei Rag - Piano Solo includes:
Official publisher PDF download (printable)
Access anywhere, including our free app

Audio Preview

Video Preview

Product Details


Product Description

A concert rag based on the life of George Takei. Traditional AABBACCDD form.

Approx 4 minutes

Happy birthday, George Takei!

This piece is composed off the letters of George Takei's name (just continuing the additional letters of the alphabet up the scale after A-G), and from patterns created by other words and names from George's life. (I've marked out where the notes are derived directly from his name in the first melody.)

Section by section:

The first section is composed off of the letters of George Takei's name, and is intentionally upbeat and optimistic. The theme is intended to represent his youth, his early family life, and his overall personality. I had the pleasure of interviewing Mr. Takei by phone once a few years ago, and it was a delight speaking to him.

The second section represents the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. It is a sad part of America's history, and George Takei has made it part of his life to bring awareness to a time when America didn't behave so beautifully. The section is composed in a minor key, reflects the melodies of songs of Americana, and is intentionally composed so the melody and the accompaniment are not lined up, as the situation at the time was not in alignment with our country's principles.

The third section is all about Hollywood. The melody plays on the many celebratory melodies about Hollywood and show business, right up to the "big finish" cadences that lead the section into...

The fourth section comes as a surprise and suddenly turns a corner into very different places than the earlier sections, while intentionally keeping rhythms and references to other moments in the piece. The melody (if I do say so myself) is classy and sophisticated, even "cool"-the proud protagonist has found his stride, and it's more than just OK to be Takei.

Arthur Breur (BMI)
https://www.ArthurBreur.com
https://www.Twitter.com/arthurbreur

This product was created by a member of ArrangeMe, Hal Leonard's global self-publishing community of independent composers, arrangers, and songwriters. ArrangeMe allows for the publication of unique arrangements of both popular titles and original compositions from a wide variety of voices and backgrounds.