Local history and music meet in Tony Kieraldo’s “Hudson Ragtime Piano Suites”

Tony Kieraldo

Local history and music meet in Tony Kieraldo’s

HUDSON HALL PRESENTS TONY KIERALDO: “HUDSON RAGTIME PIANO SUITE” ALBUM LAUNCH, FRIDAY OCTOBER 8 AT 7 p.m.

“In his Hudson Ragtime Suite, pianist-composer Tony Kieraldo has honored the ragtime tradition while expanding its frontiers. Kieraldo’s vibrant rags are bursting with personality, history, color, surprise, and good old-fashioned fun!”

– Professor Jeremy Siskind, pianist, composer and educator.

HUDSON – Hudson Hall, in partnership with the Hudson Area Library’s History Room, presents the launch of international recording artist, pianist, musical director, and composer Tony Kieraldo’s new album, Hudson Ragtime Piano Suite with a concert in Hudson Hall’s historic 1855 theater. Peppered with fascinating, personal, and oftentimes hilarious stories from residents and historians, Kieraldo takes us on a musical tour of Hudson’s five major streets – Warren, Diamond (now known as Columbia), State, Union and Allen.

Tickets are $15, with a portion of proceeds to benefit Kite’s Nest. Spotty Dog Books & Ale will be on site with copies of the vinyl album and songbook for purchase ($25). Tickets and information at hudsonhall.org or (518) 822-1438.

Composed in 2020 with seed funding from the Hudson Emergency Arts Fund, Kieraldo took inspiration from the past and present of the town in which he lives, naming each of his five Hudson Rags for streets in Hudson. This includes ‘Diamond Street’ (which, a century ago, was renamed Columbia Street), once the epicenter of the town’s red-light district.

A propulsively syncopated musical style and forerunner of jazz, ragtime was the predominant style of American popular music from the 1890s to the early 1900s. Influenced by minstrel-show songs, African American banjo styles, syncopated dance rhythms, and elements of European music, ragtime is quintessential piano music. As Daniel Paget, Professor of Music Emeritus at John Jay College of the City University of New York says in the forward to the Hudson Ragtime Piano Suite songbook, “a more suitable subject for a ragtime work is hard to imagine.” He goes on:

Hudson, located some hundred miles up the river of the same name, was established in the 18th century to serve the whaling industry; given an abundance of sailors, prostitution became one of the town’s major industries. With such tempo and expressive markings as “seductive bordello drag” and “flee from the cops,” Diamond Street Rag (the fourth in the set) references that history. To connect this colorful past with the present day, the evening features live performance by Kieraldo alongside filmed interviews with Hudson personalities such as Reverend Ed Cross, Carole Osterink of Gossips of Rivertown, former Mayor Richard Tracy, local historian Ken Sheffer and others. The Hudson Area Library History Room has also sourced archival images of each named street to project on Hudson Hall’s cinema-sized screen.

Tambra Dillon, Executive Director of Hudson Hall says, “we are thrilled to be working with Tony and the Hudson Area Library to bring this very special, uniquely Hudson event to our community. Much like our own historic theater, it beautifully connects Hudson’s fascinating history with the vibrant, creative, and diverse City it is today.”

Hudson Ragtime Piano Suite marks Kieraldo’s return to Hudson Hall, having conducted the critically acclaimed opera The Mother of Us All in 2017, which was named one of the “Best Classical Music Performances of the Year” by the New York Times.

About Hudson Area Library History Room

The History Room is by appointment only at this time but online research requests for information on local history are available at https://hudsonarealibrary.org/history-room/. This is a free service to the public. To inquire about an appointment email brenda.shufelt@hudsonarealibrary.org or call 518-828-1792 x106.

About Hudson Hall

Hudson Hall (www.hudsonhall.org) is a cultural beacon in the Hudson Valley, offering a dynamic year-round schedule of music, theater, dance, literature, workshops for youth and adults, as well as family programs and large-scale community events such as Winter Walk.

COVID SAFETY: All ticket holders to live, in-person events intended for adults at Hudson Hall are required to wear masks and provide proof of vaccination against COVID-19 upon entry. Read Hudson Hall’s COVID-19 Safety Policy.

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