by Karl Nehring
Wynton Marsalis: Blues Symphony. Detroit Symphony Orchestra; Jader Bignamini, conductor. PENTATONE PTC 5187 232
Wynton Marsalis (b. 1961) is a well-known figure in jazz circles. He is a member of a prominent New Orleans musical family. His late father, Ellis Marsalis (1934-2020) was a prominent jazz pianist and educator (for a real treat, try his album Twelve’s It). Ellis and his wife Dolores had six sons, four of whom – Branford (saxophone), Wynton (trumpet), Delfeayo (trombone), and Jason (drums, vibraphone) – became jazz musicians themselves. Of the four musician sons, Wynton and Branford especially have gone on to become major figures in the world of jazz; moreover, both have also released classical recordings as well. To date, Wynton Marsalis has received 32 Grammy nominations and has won nine times (he is the only musician ever to win in both the jazz and classical categories in the same year); in addition, he is the first jazz musician ever to win the Pulitzer Prize for music, which he was awarded in 1997 for his oratorio, Blood on the4 Fields. Branford Marsalis has received 18 Grammy nominations and has won three times, and the Branford Marsalis Quartet has received six nominations and has won once. Bringing further recognition to the family, at the 2023 Grammy Award ceremony, Ellis Marsalis was honored posthumously with a Lifetime Achievement Award.
In the 1980s, Wynton was seen as a controversial figure in jazz circles because of his outspoken comments about the state of jazz at that time – he was often portrayed in the press as something like the anti-Miles Davis. Around the same time, he got into a bit of a feud with Branford, because he felt Branford had “sold out” by playing some gigs with the likes of the Grateful Dead. Ah, brothers, eh? Fast-forward to the present and both brothers are older, wiser, and more settled. Branford recently decided to leave California and return home to the New Orleans area because he felt a responsibility to mentor young musicians. His long-time quartet recently signed with the prestigious Blue Note label and are releasing an intriguing new album titled Belonging, which is their take on the classic ECM album with the same title recorded by Keith Jarrett’s European Quartet, which was originally released in 1974 As for Wynton, he has recorded umpteen dozens of albums over the years, has toured the world, garnered honors thither and yon, and been busy as a composer, arranger, and bandleader – for many years now with the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra.
Marsalis writes of his 2009 Blues Symphony that it “is a seven-movement work that gives a symphonic identity to the form and feeling of the blues. It utilizes regional and stylistic particulars of the idiom’s language and form to convey the basic point of view of the blues as music. ‘Life hands you hard times.’ This piece is intended to further the legacy of Scott Joplin, George Gershwin, James P. Johnson, Leonard Bernstein, John Lewis, Gunther Schuller, and others who were determined to add the innovations of jazz to the vocabulary of the symphonic orchestra. I believe there is an organic and real connection between all Western traditions regardless of instrumentation, and that the symphonic orchestra can and will swing, play the blues, feature melodic improvisation, and execute the more virtuosic aspects of jazz and American vernacular music with absolute authenticity.”
The work is divided into seven movements, which are titled as follows: I: Born in Hope; II: Swimming in Sorrow; III: Reconstruction Rag; IV: Southwestern Shakedown; V: Big City Breaks; VI: Danzón y Mambo, Choro y Samba; VII: Dialog in Democracy. Given the named movements and Marsalis’s stated intention of giving “symphonic identity to the form and feeling of the blues,” it should come as no surprise that the work comes across as more of a tone poem (or suite of tone poems) than symphony – something along the lines of Má vlast by Smetana. It is fascinating to hear the orchestra treated as something of the world’s biggest big band; you can hear the DSO players giving it their all. Trombone slides, clarinet glissandos, and an overall orchestral ability to impart a feeling of swing to the proceedings while never taking things over the top and making the music sound campy make for a rewarding listening experience. There is an earlier recording by the Philadelphia Orchestra; however, this new Pentatone release surpasses that one in terms of both performance and sound. Highly recommended!