Latest Release
- 25 OCT 2024
- 9 Songs
- Crescent City Christmas Card · 1989
- A Carnegie Hall Christmas Concert, December 8, 1991 · 1992
- Big Band Holidays · 2015
- Big Band Holidays II · 2019
- Big Band Holidays II · 2019
- Big Band Holidays · 2015
- Big Band Holidays II · 2019
- Big Band Holidays II · 2019
- Wynton Marsalis · 1981
- A Carnegie Hall Christmas · 1992
Essential Albums
- Ever since the early 1980s, trumpet virtuoso Wynton Marsalis has sought to change the conversation about jazz and its place in American culture. And to this day, as director of the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra, he‘s never stopped. His first two albums for Columbia (Wynton Marsalis and Think of One) were solidly smoking small-group affairs, followed by the Wynton-with-strings offering Hot House Flowers. But it was 1985’s Black Codes (From the Underground) that would prove to be Marsalis’ fiery magnum opus—as well as arguably the single greatest document of what became known as the Young Lions era. The writing on Black Codes (From the Underground) is rhythmically and harmonically imposing, and the swing from bassist Charnett Moffett and Jeff “Tain” Watts is unstoppable. The blended sound of Marsalis, his older brother Branford Marsalis (tenor sax) and Kenny Kirkland (piano) was something sublime, on another plane. What this was not, however, was the “return” of acoustic jazz, a style that had never gone away, despite how culturally sidelined by fusion it may have become in the 1970s. Marsalis and the Black Codes quintet did, however, set a new benchmark in terms of sonic clarity and colour and band interplay in the acoustic setting. The fire that ignites within Watts every time Kirkland begins a solo never ceases to amaze. The way the group turns on a dime through the disorienting hits and transitions of the title track, finally settling into a breezy but angular 20-bar blues, is surreal. And the burners on Black Codes—“Delfeayo’s Dilemma”, “Phryzzinian Man”, Kirkland’s “Chambers of Tain”—are balanced by the calmer glow of “For Wee Folks” and “Aural Oasis” (the latter with Ron Carter on bass). Meanwhile, the album’s closing track, “Blues”, featuring just trumpet and bass, sounds like a reassertion of traditionalist principles, harkening back to Marsalis’ native New Orleans—as well as the father of all trumpet influences: Louis Armstrong.
- 2023
Artist Playlists
- Many regard him as simply the greatest trumpeter of all time.
- Thrilling post-bop riffs and majestic compositions.
Live Albums
- 2015
Appears On
- Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra
- Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers
- The University of New Orleans Jazz Band
- Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra & Wynton Marsalis
About Wynton Marsalis
At the close of the 20th century, Wynton Marsalis became the primary ambassador for jazz music to a wider audience. Born to a musical family in New Orleans in 1961—one of his brothers is celebrated saxophonist Branford Marsalis—the trumpeter entered Juilliard at the age of 17 with dexterity in both jazz and classical playing. After making a name for himself as a member of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, Marsalis found crossover stardom with his bandleader recordings of the ‘80s and ‘90s, showcasing his pyrotechnic trumpet chops and penchant for traditionalism. Through a snowballing résumé of high-profile performances and television appearances—from Sesame Street to Ken Burns’ Jazz—he became a ubiquitous pop culture figure, using his platform to advocate for jazz as “serious” music. Perhaps his biggest cultural contribution is founding Jazz at Lincoln Center, one of the most successful jazz performance institutions in the world. Marsalis is also an accomplished composer of concert music; his epic, two-and-a-half-hour 1997 oratorio, Blood on the Fields, was the first jazz composition to win the Pulitzer Prize.
- HOMETOWN
- New Orleans, Louisiana, United States of America
- BORN
- 1961
- GENRE
- Jazz