Wynton Marsalis

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Wynton Learson Marsalis est un trompettiste et compositeur américain, né le 18 octobre 1961. Il est actuellement l’un des musiciens de jazz les plus demandés de sa génération, et l’un des rares trompettistes à pouvoir briller aussi bien en jazz qu’en musique classique. En 2004, à l’âge de 43 ans, il pouvait déjà compter à son actif plus de 30 disques de jazz et 16 de musique classique sous son nom. Musicien brillant par sa virtuosité, Marsalis a également su développer un style et une esthétique personnels sophistiqués qui le rendent immédiatement reconnaissable.

Biographie:
Marsalis est né à la Nouvelle-Orléans, il est le second des 6 enfants du pianiste-compositeur-professeur de jazz Ellis Marsalis et de sa femme Dolores. Son frère ainé Branford Marsalis joue des saxophones ténor et soprano, tandis que ses cadets Delfeayo Marsalis et Jason Marsalis jouent respectivement du trombone et de la batterie.

Marsalis commence la trompette à l’âge de 6 ans, puis intègre à 8 ans le Danny Barker’s Fairview Baptist Church Marching Band. Il commence à étudier sérieusement à 12 ans, et à 14 ans joue le Concerto pour trompette de Haydn avec le New Orleans Symphony Orchestra. À 18 ans, il part pour New York afin d’étudier à la Juilliard School of Music. Il joue avec les Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers en 1980, puis avec le pianiste Herbie Hancock l’année suivante.

Il signe un contrat avec Columbia Records en 1982, et réalise ainsi son premier album sous son nom. En 1984, il gagne en même temps les Grammy awards classique et jazz, ce qui l’a fait connaître internationalement.
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Tags populaires : jazz, trumpet, bebop, cool jazz, instrumental  Voir plus

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  • Melpomene_24 a écrit :
    le mois dernier
    C'est Magnifique

    Laissez un shout à Melpomene_24

  • bonzoWhale a écrit :
    décembre 2011
    How is Marsalis not innovative? Granted, he goes back to basics, but he takes the classics beyond that. Just look at the Vitoria Suite, what a way to merge two cultures musically! Not to mention what they did live in those concerts, drawing from several North and South American cultures to do something quite unique... That's definitely some serious innovation.

    Laissez un shout à bonzoWhale

  • SoulJazzsterInc a écrit :
    novembre 2011
    Glad to hear someone who agrees :) I agree that he's being criticized for not being very innovative, that's a respectable point. But who are those people (like Keith Jarrett, for instance) who can honestly tell this man plays with no soul at all? I strongly disagree with that.

    Laissez un shout à SoulJazzsterInc

  • RonZol a écrit :
    novembre 2011
    Excellent!

    Laissez un shout à RonZol

  • spincat a écrit :
    octobre 2011
    It's interesting what SoulJazzsterInc has said that there are the innovators and the classicists who defend the tradition. He strongly defends the innovation and ironically it is what makes him a traditional guy simply because he defends an OLDER/original innovation (of Jazz) while rejecting a lot of newer ones. Also, I agree about his smug character. It's like he's the guy you don't want to argue with because it'll ruin your weekend completely. P.S. Great musician, nevertheless and love listening to him (play).

    Laissez un shout à spincat

  • kaly_ a écrit :
    octobre 2011
    Happy Birthday, dear Wynton !!! <3

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  • rhinowing a écrit :
    octobre 2011
    guy seems like he'd be a republican with this straight eighths thing

    Laissez un shout à rhinowing

  • Marcelo_Santh a écrit :
    septembre 2011
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    Laissez un shout à Marcelo_Santh

  • ChinaBuffet a écrit :
    juillet 2011
    wynton marsalis is a bitch.

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  • NuttersaurusRex a écrit :
    juin 2011
    "Couldn't Metallica be jazz? No. Metallica is rock. it is straight eighths." So is the main riff of The Four Horsemen jazz then? It's got a swing feel. What about latin jazz, and bossa nova? It's impossible to set an exact definition for any genre because there's always exceptions, you just know what it is when you hear it. Besides, genres are really just ways of describing certain sounds and musical movements, not something one should aspire to fit inside the confines of. The guy's a hell of a player and has done a lot for jazz but he is also really strict in what constitutes jazz, and that really limits one's creativity. Establishing borders isn't what causes music to progress.

    Laissez un shout à NuttersaurusRex

  • THXmille138 a écrit :
    juin 2011
    the uncle tom of jazz..

    Laissez un shout à THXmille138

  • De-La-Lune a écrit :
    mai 2011
    Wynton's music is the definition of classy in musical form.

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  • ShiningStar911 a écrit :
    mai 2011
    I know this guy

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  • esotericexcuse a écrit :
    mars 2011
    Street Date interviewed Wynton Marsalis on his new release with Willie Nelson, "Here We Go Again: Celebrating the Genius of Ray Charles" Check it out ! http://streetdate.radio.com/2011/03/29/street-date-interviews-wynton-marsalis-for-his-release-with-willie-nelson-norah-jones-a-tribute-to-ray-charles/

    Laissez un shout à esotericexcuse

  • healmusic a écrit :
    janvier 2011
    i have his Cd's, my father's bought it a long time ago, and i feel so lucky that my father's bought the Cd's,. great work Mr!

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  • MAMMAAIUTO a écrit :
    janvier 2011
    I'm a swedish girl, 22 years old, and I assure you that when Mr. Marsalis comes to sweden he will get pussy , swedish pussy. And that is rare, where not hoes, just almost.

    Laissez un shout à MAMMAAIUTO

  • jazzaficiando a écrit :
    novembre 2010
    Well, as Mr. Marsalis stands, he doesn't believe that straight eighths are jazz. He defines swing as being jazz, and you know, I agree with him there. When it switched to straight eighths, it changed. So listening to all the modern music, what do we define as jazz? Couldn't Metallica be jazz? No. Metallica is rock. it is straight eighths. Just because a sax and a trumpet play in a rap chart doesn't mean it's jazz. Just because someone improvises in a chart, don't mean its swing. I listen to a Latin chart with Latin solos and it is a Latin chart. I listen to Birdland and I hear a funk chart with funk solos. I listen to Ornithology and I hear a jazz chart with jazz solos. Without proper definition, jazz becomes an umbrella for every style of music, and when I go to Myspace to find jazz artists, all I find are funk artists. Wynton is an incredible musician. He wants to preserve jazz. He never says those other styles are wrong, he just separates them and plays great music

    Laissez un shout à jazzaficiando

  • fleadilla a écrit :
    septembre 2010
    i don't care if he played with jesus let alone blakey. miles knew the score from the moment he laid eyes on him. this guy had a hand in trying to remove a portion of jazz history with ken burns, whether deliberate or not. the documentary is a big deal. how many highschool students in band class see any number of these series every year? electric jazz was a major phenomenon in the evolution of jazz, let alone for all music! it changed everything. especially rock music. spend all that time goin nuts about the big 3 for like a billion hours and don't give electric but like a weak 30 minute segment? unacceptable with what a big responsibility and opportunity they had with pbs. so much history and art will remain hidden beyond the light of those who they wanted to shine the brightest, but weren't the end all to jazz. not by a longshot. many who should've got their props didn't and it's a shame that they could've - but won't. they could've easily did 3 hours focused on electric. easily...

    Laissez un shout à fleadilla

  • SoulJazzsterInc a écrit :
    juillet 2010
    Wynton is a classicist, so what?? He is not the first, nor the last. In music, there are always people in the innovation and people who want to keep the tradition alive and it's perfect like that. That said, I agree with zackbrown that the character may be irritating, even though the musician is great

    Laissez un shout à SoulJazzsterInc

  • zackbrown a écrit :
    juin 2010
    To be fair, I haven't heard a lick of his music, but I'm watching Ken Burns Jazz documentary and every time he shows up with a smug, know-it-all comment I wanna bash this guy's face in.

    Laissez un shout à zackbrown

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