In theater, broadcasting, publishing and recording, Max Morath devoted his career to performing and championing ragtime music.
Ragtime virtuoso Morath was born in Colorado Springs on October 1, 1926. His mother had lugged a piano bench full of music west from the family farm in Iowa; as a youngster, he said, he discovered “the beat in my fingers” for ragtime, the tunes that predated jazz as America’s first distinctive music. After receiving a bachelor’s degree in English from Colorado College, Morath embarked on a varied career. Finding inspiration in his ragtime heroes Eubie Blake and Scott Joplin, he became fascinated with the accompanying fads from the turn of the century. Morath logged hundreds of appearances in the Gold Bar Room in Cripple Creek during the summers of the 1950s. He also did radio announcing and moved into TV at Colorado’s new KKTV in Colorado Springs and Pueblo. During 1959 through 1961, he wrote, performed and co-produced 26 half-hour television programs for NET (National Educational Television), the precursor to PBS. Produced by KRMA, Channel Six in Denver, they were fed nationally to the nascent public broadcasting network, combining his seemingly offhand, colloquial approach to music, comedy and social history. The Ragtime Era series, followed by the Turn of the Century series, were in syndication through the 1960s. His off-Broadway one-man show, Max Morath at the Turn of the Century, was a hit, and similar productions followed—The Ragtime Years, Living a Ragtime Life, The Ragtime Man and more. Morath earned a Master’s in American Studies from Columbia University. “Mr. Ragtime” retired from touring in 2007 and continued to be active as a lecturer and consultant.