Branford Marsalis continues to thrill audiences around the world while racking up achievements across diverse musical platforms, even after 4 decades in the international spotlight. From his initial recognition as a young jazz lion, he has expanded his vision as an instrumentalist, composer, bandleader & educator, crossing stylistic boundaries while maintaining an unwavering creative integrity. In the process, he has become an avatar of contemporary artistic excellence winning 3 Grammy Awards, a Tony nomination for his work as a composer on Broadway, a citation by the National Endowment for the Arts as Jazz Master, and a 2021 Primetime EMMY nomination for the score he composed for the Tulsa Burning documentary. His first instrument, the clarinet, gave way to the alto and then the tenor & soprano saxophones when the teenage Branford began working in local bands. A growing fascination with jazz as he entered college gave him the basic tools to obtain his 1st major jobs, with trumpet legend Clark Terry and alongside Wynton in Art Blakey’s legendary Jazz Messengers. When the brothers left to form the Wynton Marsalis Quintet, the world of uncompromising acoustic jazz was invigorated. Branford formed his own quartet in 1986 and it remains his primary performance vehicle. The Quartet has established a rare breadth of stylistic range, known for the telepathic communication among its uncommonly consistent personnel, its deep book of original music replete with expressive melodies and provocative forms, and an unrivaled spirit in both live & recorded performances, the Branford Marsalis Quartet has long been recognized as the standard to which other ensembles of its kind must be measured. Branford formed the Marsalis Music label in 2002, and under his direction it has documented his own music, talented stars such as Miguel Zenón, and un-heralded older masters including one of Branford’s teachers, the late Alvin Batiste. Branford has also shared his knowledge as an educator. He enjoys working with students and has formed an extended relationship with North Carolina Central University where he has been teaching for the past eighteen years. He has also taught at Michigan State University and San Francisco State University and continues to conduct workshops throughout the world. As for other public stages, Branford spent a period touring with Sting, collaborated with the Grateful Dead & Bruce Hornsby, served as Musical Director of The Tonight Show Starring Jay Leno and hosted NPR’s widely syndicated Jazz Set. The range and quality of these diverse activities established Branford as a familiar presence beyond the worlds of jazz & classical music, while his efforts to help heal and rebuild New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina mark him as an artist with an uncommonly effective social vision. Together with Harry Connick, Jr. and New Orleans Habitat for Humanity, Branford conceived and helped to realize The Musicians’ Village, a community in the Upper Ninth Ward that provides homes to the displaced families of musicians and other local residents. The centerpiece of the Village is the Ellis Marsalis Center for Music, honoring Branford’s father. The Center uses music as the focal point of a holistic strategy to build a healthy community and to deliver a broad range of services to underserved children, youth and musicians from neighborhoods battling poverty and social injustice. In January 2024, following in his father’s footsteps, Branford was appointed Artistic Director at the Center and in this capacity, he will shape the artistic trajectory and steer the organization’s creative vision for the future.
I had the complete honor of spending a little time chatting it up with Mr. Branford Marsalis. We dive head first into the upcoming event in Madison on May 1st at the Wisconsin Union Theater. We talk about what people with hear & see at this shared encounter, including the spontaneous interactions. The Quartet gets introduced to us as well so we now know a little more about those folks spending the time with us. They also have a new alum out on Blue Note Records titled ‘Belonging‘, it is an interpretation of Keith Jarret’s 1974 ECM release. Mr. Marsalis shares how this music hits and how it shapes from the original and how the quartet works as students of music, with a slight reminisce of their John Coltrane ‘Love Supreme’ experience years ago. While talking about the tune, ‘The Windup’, we end up talkin’ baseball, sharing our unlove for one particular NY team and I would have been remiss not to try and learn more about his work with the Grateful Dead’s ‘Eyes Of The World’. Note to self, no noodling! Man, I appreciate how this cat does things the way he does things.