Apparently thinking of Marie Curie, Schwartz published a Radium Dance in 1904. His hits of 1908 included Dear Sing Sing, Good-Bye Mr. Ragtime Man, and an authentically smart little rag called The Whitewash Man, which still sounds more substantial than most raggytime-flavored pop music from that period. Black Beauty Rag, Dat Possum Rag, and The Popcorn Man appeared in 1910, but were immediately and subsequently overshadowed by Schwartz and Jerome's all-time greatest hit, Chinatown, My Chinatown. Still riding the ragtime trend, Schwartz cooked up April Fool Rag in 1911 and That Chop Stick Rag in 1912. In 1913, exercising his knack for fashioning memorable ditties, Schwartz gave the world Sit Down You're Rocking the Boat and a delightful sort of musical manifesto with the title (Syncopation Rules the Nation) You Can't Get Away from It, which was wonderfully rendered on a phonograph recording by Bert Williams in 1914.
Schwartz and Jerome operated their own songwriting agency for a while, only to dissolve their partnership as the First World War so drastically transformed the entire entertainment industry. Schwartz's most poignant WWI title was Hello Central! Give Me No Man's Land, popularized by Al Jolson. In 1918 Schwartz provided the singer with a lifelong signature tune, Rockabye Your Baby With a Dixie Melody. He ground out a few more pop songs, including On the Level, You're a Little Devil (But I'll Soon Make an Angel of You). The last noteworthy melody written by Jean Schwartz was Au Revoir, Pleasant Dreams, published in 1930 and adopted by sweet stuff bandleader Ben Bernie as his broadcasting theme song. Schwartz went into retirement and passed away in Los Angeles on the 30th of November 1956. ~ arwulf arwulf, Rovi