Wynton Marsalis and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Wynton Marsalis is an internationally acclaimed musician, composer, bandleader, educator and a leading advocate of American culture. He is the world's first jazz artist to perform and compose across the full jazz spectrum from its New Orleans roots to bebop to modern jazz.
By creating and performing an expansive range of brilliant new music for quartets to big bands, chamber music ensembles to symphony orchestras, tap dance to ballet, Wynton has expanded the vocabulary for jazz and created a vital body of work that places him among the world's finest musicians and composers.
The Early Years
Wynton was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, on October 18, 1961, to Ellis and Dolores Marsalis, the second of six sons. At an early age he exhibited a superior aptitude for music and a desire to participate in American culture. At age eight Wynton performed traditional New Orleans music in the Fairview Baptist Church band led by legendary banjoist Danny Barker, and at 14 he performed with the New Orleans Philharmonic. During high school Wynton performed with the New Orleans Symphony Brass Quintet, New Orleans Community Concert Band, New Orleans Youth Orchestra, New Orleans Symphony, various jazz bands and the popular local funk band, the Creators.
At age 17 Wynton became the youngest musician ever to be admitted to Tanglewood's Berkshire Music Center. Despite his youth, he was awarded the school's prestigious Harvey Shapiro Award for outstanding brass student. Wynton moved to New York City to attend Juilliard in 1979. When he began to pick up gigs around town, the grapevine began to buzz. In 1980 Wynton seized the opportunity to join the Jazz Messengers to study under master drummer and bandleader Art Blakey. It was from Blakey that Wynton acquired his concept for band leading and for bringing intensity to each and every performance. In the years to follow Wynton performed with Sarah Vaughan, Dizzy Gillespie, Sweets Edison, Clark Terry, Sonny Rollins, Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Tony Williams and countless other jazz legends.
Wynton assembled his own band in 1981 and hit the road, performing over 120 concerts every year for 15 consecutive years. With the power of his superior musicianship, the infectious sound of his swinging bands and an exhaustive series of performances and music workshops, Marsalis rekindled widespread interest in jazz throughout the world. Wynton embraced the jazz lineage to garner recognition for the older generation of overlooked jazz musicians and prompted the re-issue of jazz catalog by record companies worldwide. He also inspired a renaissance that attracted a new generation of fine young talent to jazz. A look at the more distinguished jazz musicians of today reveals numerous students of Marsalis's workshops: James Carter, Christian McBride, Roy Hargrove, Harry Connick Jr., Nicholas Payton, Eric Reed and Eric Lewis, to name a few.
Classical Career
Wynton's love of the music of Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and others drove him to pursue a career in classical music as well. He recorded the Haydn, Hummel and Leopold Mozart trumpet concertos at age 20. His debut recording received glorious reviews and won the Grammy Award® for Best Classical Soloist with an Orchestra. Marsalis went on to record 10 additional classical records, all to critical acclaim. Wynton performed with leading orchestras including the New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Boston Pops, The Cleveland Orchestra, Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra, English Chamber Orchestra, Toronto Symphony Orchestra and London's Royal Philharmonic, working with an eminent group of conductors including: Leppard, Dutoit, Maazel, Slatkin, Salonen and Tilson-Thomas. Famed classical trumpeter Maurice Andre praised Wynton as potentially the greatest trumpeter of all time.
The Composer
Wynton Marsalis is a prolific and inventive composer. The dance community embraced Wynton's inventiveness by awarding him with commissions to create new music for Garth Fagan (Citi Movement-Griot New York), Peter Martins at the New York City Ballet (Jazz: Six Syncopated Movements and Them Twos), Twyla Tharp with the American Ballet Theatre (Jump Start), Judith Jamison at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre (Sweet Release and Here and Now), and Savion Glover (Petite Suite and Spaces). Marsalis collaborated with the Lincoln Center Chamber Music Society in 1995 to compose the string quartet At The Octoroon Balls, and again in 1998 to create a response to Stravinsky's A Soldier's Tale with his composition A Fiddler's Tale. With his collection of standards arrangements, Wynton reconnected audiences with the beauty of the American popular song (Standard Time Volumes I-VI). He re-introduced the joy in New Orleans jazz with his recording The Majesty Of The Blues. He extended the jazz musician's interplay with the blues in Levee Low Moan, Thick In The South and other blues recordings.
With Citi Movement, In This House On This Morning and Blood On The Fields, Wynton invented a fresh conception for extended form compositions. His inventive interplay with melody, harmony and rhythm, along with his lyrical voicing and tonal coloring assert new possibilities for the jazz ensemble. In his dramatic oratorio Blood On The Fields, Wynton draws upon the blues, work songs, chants, call and response, spirituals, New Orleans jazz, Ellingtonesque orchestral arrangements and Afro-Caribbean rhythms; and he uses Greek chorus-style recitations to move the work along. The New York Times Magazine said the work marked the symbolic moment when the full heritage of the line, Ellington through Mingus, was extended into the present. The San Francisco Examiner stated, "Marsalis orchestral arrangements are magnificent. Duke Ellington's shadings and themes come and go but Marsalis's free use of dissonance, counter rhythms and polyphonics is way ahead of Ellington's mid-century era."
Wynton extended his achievements in Blood On The Fields with All Rise, an epic composition for big band, gospel choir, and symphony orchestra - a classic work of high art - which was performed by the New York Philharmonic under the baton of Kurt Masur along with the Morgan State University Choir and the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra (December 1999).
Marsalis collaborated with Ghanaian master drummer Yacub Addy to create Congo Square, a groundbreaking composition combining elegant harmonies from America's jazz tradition with fundamental rituals in African percussion and vocals (2006). For the anniversary of the Abyssinian Baptist Church's 200th year of service, Marsalis blended Baptist church choir cadences with blues accents and big band swing rhythms to compose Abyssinian 200: A Celebration, which was performed by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra and Abyssinian's 100 voice choir before packed houses in New York City (May 2008). In the fall of 2009 the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra premiered Marsalis's composition Blues Symphony. By infusing blues and ragtime rhythms with symphonic orchestrations Wynton creates a fresh type of enjoyment of classical repertoire. Employing complex layers of collective improvisation, Marsalis further expanded his repertoire for symphony orchestra with Swing Symphony, premiered by the renowned Berlin Philharmonic in June 2010, creating new possibilities for audiences to experience a symphony orchestra swing. The New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic and the Barbican have all signed on to perform Swing Symphony.
Jazz at Lincoln Center
In 1987 Wynton Marsalis co-founded a jazz program at Lincoln Center. In July 1996, due to its significant success, Jazz at Lincoln Center was installed as new constituent of Lincoln Center, equal in stature with the New York Philharmonic, Metropolitan Opera, and New York City Ballet, a historic moment for jazz as an art form and for Lincoln Center as a cultural institution. In October 2004, with the assistance of a dedicated Board and staff, Marsalis opened Frederick P. Rose Hall, the world's first institution for jazz. The complex contains three state-of-the-art performance spaces (including the first concert hall designed specifically for jazz) along with recording, broadcast, rehearsal and educational facilities. Jazz at Lincoln Center has become a preferred venue for New York jazz fans and a destination for travelers from throughout the world. Wynton presently serves as Artistic Director for Jazz at Lincoln Center and Music Director for the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. Under Wynton's leadership, Jazz at Lincoln Center has developed an international agenda presenting rich and diverse programming that includes concerts, debates, film forums, dances, television and radio broadcasts, and educational activities.
Jazz at Lincoln Center is a mecca for learning as well as a hub for performance. Their comprehensive educational programming includes a Band Director's Academy, a hugely popular concert series for kids called Jazz for Young People, Jazz in the Schools, a Middle School Jazz Academy, WeBop! (for kids ages 8 months to 5 years), an annual High School Jazz Band Competition & Festival that reaches over 2000 bands in 50 states and Canada, and online learning tools.
Giving Back
Wynton Marsalis has devoted his life to uplifting populations worldwide with the egalitarian spirit of jazz. And while his body of work is enough to fill two lifetimes, Wynton continues to work tirelessly to contribute even more to our world's cultural landscape. It has been said that he is an artist for whom greatness is not just possible, but inevitable. The most extraordinary dimension of Wynton Marsalis, however, is not his accomplishments but his character. It is the lesser-known part of this man who finds endless ways to give of himself. It is the person who waited in an empty parking lot for one full hour after a concert in Baltimore, waiting for a single student to return from home with his horn for a trumpet lesson. It is the citizen who personally funds scholarships for students and covers medical expenses for those in need. Immediately following Hurricane Katrina, Wynton organized the Higher Ground Hurricane Relief Concert and raised over $3 million for musicians and cultural organizations impacted by the hurricane. At the same time, he assumed a leadership role on the Bring Back New Orleans Cultural Commission where he was instrumental in shaping a master plan that would revitalize the city's cultural base. Wynton Marsalis has selflessly donated his time and talent to non-profit organizations throughout the country to raise money to meet the many needs within our society. From My Sister's Place (a shelter for battered women) to Graham Windham (a shelter for homeless children), the Children's Defense Fund, Amnesty International, the Sloan Kettering Cancer Institute, Food For All Seasons (a food bank for the elderly and disadvantaged), Very Special Arts (an organization that provides experiences in dance, drama, literature, and music for individuals with physical and mental disabilities) to the Newark Boys Chorus School (a full-time academic music school for disadvantaged youths) and many, many more; Wynton responded enthusiastically to the call for service. It is Wynton Marsalis's commitment to the improvement of life for all people that portrays the best of his character and humanity.
JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA TEN BIG BAND HOLIDAYS ARRANGEMENTS COMPLETE SET
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Ten Jazz Big Band Arrangements
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-1002
$440.00
JAZZ AT LINCOLN CENTER ORCHESTRA TEN BIG BAND HOLIDAYS ARRANGEMENTS COMPLETE SET [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Ten Jazz Big Band Arrangements
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-1002DL
$440.00
JAZZ FOR KIDS COMPLETE SIX ARRANGEMENT SET
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Six Jazz Big Band Arrangements
JLC-1001
$265.00
JAZZ FOR KIDS COMPLETE SIX ARRANGEMENT SET [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Six Jazz Big Band Arrangements
JLC-1001DL
$265.00
THE DEMOCRACY! SUITE: COMPLETE EIGHT ARRANGEMENT SET
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Septet with Wynton Marsalis
Eight Jazz Septet Arrangements
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-1058
$350.00
THE DEMOCRACY! SUITE: COMPLETE EIGHT ARRANGEMENT SET [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Septet with Wynton Marsalis
Eight Jazz Septet Arrangements
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-1058DL
$350.00
THE MARCIAC SUITE: JAZZ LINES PUBLICATIONS COMPLETE FIVE ARRANGEMENT SET
Five Jazz Septet Arrangement (Four Horns and Rhythm)
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-1049
$150.00
THE MARCIAC SUITE: JAZZ LINES PUBLICATIONS COMPLETE FIVE ARRANGEMENT SET [DOWNLOAD]
Five Jazz Septet Arrangement (Four Horns and Rhythm)
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-1049DL
$150.00
THE MUSIC OF WAYNE SHORTER NINE ARRANGEMENT COMPLETE SET
As Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Nine Jazz Arrangements (Eight Big Band and One Saxophone Quintet with Rhythm)
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-1005
$395.00
THE MUSIC OF WAYNE SHORTER NINE ARRANGEMENT COMPLETE SET [DOWNLOAD]
As Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Nine Jazz Arrangements (Eight Big Band and One Saxophone Quintet with Rhythm)
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-1005DL
$395.00
THE ROCK CHALK SUITE: COMPLETE SET OF 15 ARRANGEMENTS
Recorded by The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
15 Jazz Big Band Arrangements
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-1003
$650.00
THE ROCK CHALK SUITE: COMPLETE SET OF 15 ARRANGEMENTS (FIRST SEVEN) [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
Seven Jazz Big Band Arrangements
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-1003DL
$305.00
THE ROCK CHALK SUITE: COMPLETE SET OF 15 ARRANGEMENTS (LAST EIGHT) [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by The Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
Eight Jazz Big Band Arrangements
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-1004DL
$345.00
WYNTON MARSALIS CRESCENT CITY CHRISTMAS CARD: SET OF SIX ARRANGEMENTS
Six Jazz Small Group Arrangements
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-1014
$210.00
WYNTON MARSALIS CRESCENT CITY CHRISTMAS CARD: SET OF SIX ARRANGEMENTS [DOWNLOAD]
Six Jazz Small Group Arrangements
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-1014DL
$210.00
As Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Jazz Big Band Arrangement
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-5225
$50.00
As Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Jazz Big Band Arrangement
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-5225DL
$50.00
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Jazz Big Band Arrangement
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-5032
$50.00
BAA BAA BLACK SHEEP [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Jazz Big Band Arrangement
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-5032DL
$50.00
BALLOT BOX BOUNCE - FROM THE DEMOCRACY! SUITE
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Septet with Wynton Marsalis
Jazz Septet Arrangement
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-7871
$55.00
BALLOT BOX BOUNCE - FROM THE DEMOCRACY! SUITE [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Septet with Wynton Marsalis
Jazz Septet Arrangement
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-7871DL
$55.00
BE PRESENT - FROM THE DEMOCRACY! SUITE
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Septet with Wynton Marsalis
Jazz Septet Arrangement
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-7869
$55.00
BE PRESENT - FROM THE DEMOCRACY! SUITE [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by the Jazz at Lincoln Center Septet with Wynton Marsalis
Jazz Septet Arrangement
Jazz Lines Publications
JLP-7869DL
$55.00
BEARDEN (THE BLOCK) [DOWNLOAD]
Recorded by Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
Jazz Big Band Arrangement
Jazz at Lincoln Center
JLC-5042DL
$50.00