Wynton Marsalis
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  • Wynton to perform at New Orleans Jazz Festival on April 24-25

    Wynton is now in New Orleans, to perform at Jazz & Heritage Festival. The first concert will take place tomorrow April 24, at 4:40 PM at Congo Square - “My Louisiana Stage”. He will perform “Congo Square” with Yacub Addy and Odadaa! and the JLCO. On Saturday, April 25, Wynton will perform with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra at 5:30 PM at WWOZ Jazz Tent. The concert will be broadcast by WWOZ 90.7 FM and some highlightss from the concert will be broadcast on May 2-3 by AT&T Music.

    You can follow Wynton in real time through his Facebook and Twitter profile. He will update live with messages, pictures and video clips.

  • Answers to last weeks questions.

    Last week, fans wrote in with their questions for Wynton about He and She and below are the answers to the questions that were picked at random for him to answer.

    Question #1
    From: William G
    Prescott, WI

    Q. Putting a concept album together centered around your poetry is an ambitious effort. Were there any challenges getting the group or record company to buy into your vision, or was it one of those magical moments where everyone got it? I love the album. It's a beautiful wild ride across a range of styles.

    A. Thank you. When you've been recording and working with essentially the same people for 30 years, there's a level of trust which facilitates achieving the goal at hand. I don't know whether everyone "got it" but they acted like they did.

    Question #2
    From Dallas Crane, Alta High School '11
    Salt Lake City, UT

    Q. Dear Mr. Marsalis, I love your style and technique. it never ceases to amaze me when you pull new styles out of that bag of yours :) i was wondering how you manage to always have the right style. Are there different ways of improvising for different styles? how does one such as yourself maintain distinctions and blurs between styles as you play? sincerely yours, Dallas Crane p.s. if its any worth, I've attached of photo of us, taken at red butte gardens in Utah from last summer!

    A. Excellent question. I remember that photo. Languages are spoken with different accents. For example, Southern drawl, a New England accent or a Texas twang. Accents take time but are relatively early to learn. In music, the equivalent would be New Orleans jazz, country western two-beat, Ragtime, 4/4 Kansas City Swing; all different accents of the same basic music. More difficult are different languages in the same system of thought. For example French, Spanish and English. In music, this would be Afro-Latin jazz, Beebop, country fiddle. Then, even more remote and more difficult, languages from different systems - Japanese, Khoisan languages, Hindi. In music this would be Flamenco (Bulerias), different types of African music and Baroque music. The more remote the styles, the more difficult to play. I like playing all the styles and try to find that which is common in all the styles I know. Just like having friends from different cultures, there's much that separates you, but even more that makes you the same.

    Question #3
    From: Lage Nøst
    St. Svithun Videregående Skole '10
    Norway

    Q. Hey, Wynton! Do kids these days move their heads to the music when they're watching you play?

    A. Sometimes. The best ones do.

    Question #4
    From: Norchen L
    Chicago, IL

    Q. Love the poem. Loved the music. Q: What do you like BEST about WB Yeats, or, why is he your favorite poet? Those minor seconds in FIRST KISS knocked me out. And ZERO ended too soon. Yes, I'll just have that chicken wing, thank-you-very-much----

    A. Thank you. I like the timeless lyricism of William Butler Yeats; modern yet ancient at the same time. I like his insightful metaphore and mystical insights into the cyclical nature of life, death, afterlife and life. Some of my favorite poems: "Under Ben Bulben", "The Two Kings", "Sailing from Byzantium", "The Second Coming", "The Wild Old Wicked Man" and "A Stick of Incense".

    Question #5
    From: Onalii W
    Lithonia, GA

    Q. What is the inspiration behind the poem and what artists, specifically poets, inspired your writing? You have a very tactical way of expressing love through your music. How much does love, the act of love and the love of jazz motivate you?

    A. Love is the essence of jazz and all creation and life. Like everybody else, the act of love and the pursuit thereof was instrumental in making me practice in my early years. The inspiration behind the poem was Irish poet William Butler Yeats' "The 2 Kings" and bluesman Robert Johnson's "Come on in My Kitchen".


    Question #6
    From: Dave Vessella
    Los Angeles County High School for the Arts '08
    Los Angeles, CA
    Columbia College

    Q. Hi Mr. Marsalis, I am a trumpet player and I am going through an embouchure change at the moment. The way I was playing before I didn't have enough of my upper lip in the mouthpiece and now I've brought the mouthpiece lower on my chops. Have you ever been through an embouchure change and do you have anything you could tell me that would help? Thank you very much.

    A. Yes. I had an operation on my lip two years ago and had to change my embouchure. It was not fun. Be glad to make those changes now and not have to do it in middle age. I think it's important to have a long term vision of improvement; combat day-to-day discouragement by setting weekly and monthly goals. If you're diligent, though a pain in the booty, it will work out.

    Question #7
    From:Todd K
    Duvall, WA

    Q. Which track on "He and She" did you enjoy playing the most, and why? I think I would enjoy playing "School Boy" the most, probably. I love that New Orleans walk sound. :) I could see you having a lot of fun with "A Train, A Banjo and A Chicken Wing". As if the name isn't enough to justify that one. What's your pick?

    A. The Razor Rim is my favorite to play because I like playing the Frisian sound and 3-bar phrases require a lot of concentration

     

    Thank you to all of the fans that participated by asking questions.  Please stay tuned for upcoming opportunities like this one and THE ANNOUNCEMENT OF WHICH LUCKY FANS WILL BE RECEIVING A SPECIAL GIFT FROM WYNTON!

     

  • Wynton Marsalis' New Album available next 24 hours ONLY on iLIKE

    JAZZ LEGEND WYNTON MARSALIS’ NEW ALBUM AVAILABLE TO LISTEN TO FOR THE NEXT 24 HOURS ONLY ON iLIKE

    Milestone Jazz Event: Marsalis’ First-Ever Online Album Premiere; iLike’s First-Ever Jazz Album Exclusive

    March 23, 2009 — Seattle, WA — Wynton Marsalis, the Pulitzer Prize-winning composer, trumpeter and bandleader, and leading social music discovery service iLike announced that He and She, Wynton’s new album of original music and spoken word, is available to listen to today in its entirety, only on iLike. iLike’s 24-hour world exclusive will culminate with the retail release of He and She on March 24, 2009.

    “What appeals to me about working with iLike is the opportunity to take He and She directly to my fans, giving them a chance to hear it in full before the album is available in stores,” said Wynton Marsalis. “It is with this inspiration that I am inviting my fans to engage with me and one another in an online dialogue about the album on my iLike page.”

    “This is a significant moment for iLike and jazz fans across the Web,” said Ali Partovi, CEO of iLike. “It is almost surreal to have the honor of collaborating with Wynton Marsalis, the defining jazz musician and trumpeter of his generation, to launch our first-ever album exclusive in the jazz genre.”

    He and She, Marsalis’ fifth album for Blue Note, combines spoken word with music from his quintet, tempered with flashes of humor and plenty of swing centered on the relationship between a man and a woman and the elusiveness of romance.

    Marsalis fans will have an opportunity to post questions and comments about the album on his iLike Artist Page (www.iLike.com/WyntonMarsalis and Wynton will personally respond to a select group of fans. A few lucky fans who submit a question will receive a special gift.

    iLike will syndicate Marsalis’ album stream across iLike.com, iLike’s dominant Facebook music app, and other leading social networks and online platforms including the iLike Sidebar for iTunes (www.iLike.com/download. To learn more about iLike’s free content syndication tool for artists, go to: www.iLike.com/forartists

    To listen to Wynton Marsalis’ new album and participate in a virtual dialogue, visit his iLike artist page today (March 23, 2009) at www.iLike.com/WyntonMarsalis And for more information about Wynton Marsalis, sign up for his fan e-newsletter at: www.wyntonmarsalis.org/newsletter

  • Wynton to give a musical Q&A at Yale University

    Wynton will hold a “musical Q&A” on February 5 at 4:30 p.m. at Yale University, in the United Church on the Green.

    The event is free and open to the public.

  • “He and She” to be released on March 24, 2009

    On March 24, 2009, Wynton will release his fifth Blue Note recording, He and She (cover image and tracklist available). It’s an ambitious effort, combining spoken word and music, and Marsalis has given his quintet some formidable charts. The album is tempered with flashes of humor and plenty of swing. There’s ease and elegance and more than a little wisdom in these grooves…

    He and She is about that eternally compelling and most elemental of subjects, the relationship between a man and a woman. Marsalis hasn’t merely crafted a love story, but a life story - a bittersweet rumination about the evanescence of life as well as the elusiveness of romance. Time is very much at the heart of He and She: the swift passage of time over the course of one’s life, the mood-altering shifts of time in the duration of a song.

    He and She began with words, not music, though it was music that brought forth the words. Marsalis had been listening to Max Roach’s Jazz in ¾ Time, along with pieces by Duke Ellington, like “Lady Mac” from Such Sweet Thunder, work that explored waltz tempo in a jazz context. Roach’s classic album features “Valse Hot,” which, explains Marsalis is “a Sonny Rollins piece, a jazz waltz that I started to play when I was in high school.” That tune set off a spark: “I began to contemplate the shuffle rhythm, that the shuffle rhythm is the combination of a waltz feeling and a march feeling, and I thought it would be good for me to do an album of waltzes. I had written a couple before — one was for a ballet by Twyla Tharp, inspired by the Matisse painting, The Dance. I was thinking about waltzes and how in Vienna today younger people still dance the waltz, a waltz season is still a part of their social calendar. From there, I began to consider the ritual of courtship. The waltz is a courtship dance and at one time it was considered to be risqué. Now, of course, it’s genteel. Then I started to think about men and women, our relationships.”

    Marsalis had ended his last Blue Note studio album, From the Plantation to the Penitentiary, with a stunning spoken word piece, a concentrated burst of righteous anger that addressed with preacher-like fervor the divisive, post-Katrina state of the nation. On He and She, Marsalis’s voice is more prominent throughout, prefacing just about every track with his words. Marsalis notes, “On He and She, it’s a man talking, but the person who delivers the universal truth of the matter is a woman.”

    Before heading into the studio, the Wynton Marsalis Quintet traveled to the Iron Horse, in North Hampton, Mass. to perform this new material in front of an audience. Marsalis has been going up to the club for years to test-drive his work. The quintet subsequently cut the tracks live over a two-day period. The minimally edited result became He and She.

    He and She draws its greatest power from telling a familiar story in such a compelling and richly entertaining manner, a unique variation on a theme that everyone, in some way, knows. One detects the sound of all our love stories in here. In other words, He and She is also Us.

  • Reflections

    Wynton Marsalis and Marcus Roberts duets on Thelonious Monk's Reflections