Wynton Marsalis Quotes About Jazz

We have collected for you the TOP of Wynton Marsalis's best quotes about Jazz! Here are collected all the quotes about Jazz starting from the birthday of the Trumpeter – October 18, 1961! We hope you will be inspired to new achievements with our constantly updated collection of quotes. At the moment, this page contains 59 sayings of Wynton Marsalis about Jazz. We will be happy if you share our collection of quotes with your friends on social networks!
  • Flexibility is an essential part of Jazz. It's what gives Jazz music the ability to combine with all other types of music and not lose its identity.

  • Blues is like the roux in a gumbo. People ask me if jazz always has the blues in it. I say, if it sounds good it does.

    People   Sound   Gumbo  
  • I worry more about the marketing that's taken hold since the 70s. The Jazz era, the Swing era, those were huge. Entire decades were named for music. In the 1940s - after World War II - changes in taxation, ballrooms closing, people moving to the suburbs, and the onset of target marketing and the confusion of commerce with art caused some things to happen as a result that have taken us away from jazz and what jazz offers us.

    Art   War   Moving  
    Interview with Vickie Karp, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 18, 2009.
  • The real power of Jazz is that a group of people can come together and create improvised art and negotiate their agendas... and that negotiation is the art

    Art   Real   People  
  • Sustained intensity equals ecstacy.

    Jazz   Intensity  
  • The first jazz musician was a trumpeter, Buddy Bolden, and the last will be a trumpeter, the archangel Gabriel.

  • The blues. It runs through all American music. Somebody bending the note. The other is the two-beat groove. It's in New Orleans music, it's in jazz, it's in country music, it's in gospel.

    "Marsalis: Racism and greed put blues at the back of the bus". Interview, edition.cnn.com. October 24, 2009.
  • Trumpet players are just belligerant, and cocky, and you know, just hard-headed.

    Cocky   Player   Jazz  
  • Jazz is democracy in music.

  • A beat is a moment in the life a groove.

    Music   Jazz   Moments  
  • Certain music, jazz in particular, has the ability to make you a better citizen of the world. It helps you expand your world view and gives you more confidence in your cultural achievements. Improvisational jazz teaches you about yourself while the swing in jazz teaches you how to work with others

    Swings   Views   Giving  
  • Jazz music creates so many phenomenal figures.

  • The Duke and Swing represent affirmation in the face of adversity.

  • It's really not a stretch. The checks and balances are the same. The drums are the executive branch. The jazz orchestra is the legislative branch. Logic and reason are like jazz solos. The bass player is the judicial branch. One our greatest ever is Milt Hinton, and his nickname is "The Judge."

    Interview with Vickie Karp, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 18, 2009.
  • Jazz music is the power of now. There is no script. It's conversation. The emotion is given to you by musicians as they make split-second decisions to fulfill what they feel the moment requires.

    Music   Decision   Splits  
    Wynton Marsalis, Geoffrey Ward (2008). “Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life”, p.8, Random House
  • Benny Goodman's band was integrated before baseball. Even before it was physically integrated, music was integrated. Everyone listened to Armstrong and Ellington. The 20s was called the Jazz Age. It's part of being American.

    Baseball   Age   Band  
    Interview with Vickie Karp, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 18, 2009.
  • We created the spirituals. We created so much great music, jazz chief amongst our innovations, teaching us how to prize ourselves and how to speak to one another, that our kids don't know that achievement, there's no way in the world that could be good for us.

    Source: www.pbs.org
  • Jazz comes from our way of life, and because it's our national art form, it helps us to understand who we are.

    Art   Who We Are   Way  
    "Third Screen". Interview with Vickie Karp, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 18, 2009.
  • The black hole in democracy is integrity. The great unspoken is integrity. When integrity is not first and foremost, it's quite palpable but not visible. It's always there. Jazz highlights it because musicians and jazz always represented a high level of integrity.

    Interview with Vickie Karp, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 18, 2009.
  • To say that the Afro American created jazz doesn't mean anything bad about Anglo Americans, and I always teach my younger jazz musicians that at this point the entirety of the American tradition is your heritage, and you need to know it.

    Mean   Musician   Needs  
    Source: www.pbs.org
  • Jazz music is America's past and its potential, summed up and sanctified and accessible to anybody who learns to listen to, feel, and understand it. The music can connect us to our earlier selves and to our better selves-to-come. It can remind us of where we fit on the time line of human achievement, an ultimate value of art.

    Art   Past   Self  
    Wynton Marsalis, Geoffrey Ward (2008). “Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life”, p.13, Random House
  • People have taken time out of their day and spent their money to come sit down at a concert. And it's jazz music-it's not easy for them to get to it. I don't want them ever to feel that I'm taking their presence lightly.

    Taken   People   Want  
  • Jazz celebrates older generations and not just the youth movement. When you "sell" only to people of a certain age, you get cut off from the main body of experience. The power of couple dancing and courtship, it's elegant, and you wouldn't realize America was once a nation of dancers and singers today. People of all races could dance and sing.

    Interview with Vickie Karp, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 18, 2009.
  • When those who are educated using their education to exploit those who aren't. That's what the sub-prime scandal represents - people of education using it at the expense of others. At Jazz at Lincoln Center, we have 22 educational programs. Not just the word but the substance of education is guided by the arts.

    Interview with Vickie Karp, www.huffingtonpost.com. January 18, 2009.
  • I had to figure out how to survive in New York, and most of my time was occupied in getting an apartment and getting money. A lot of older jazz guys looked out for me and found me gigs and places to stay.

    New York   Guy   Gigs  
    "A life in music: Wynton Marsalis". Interview with Nicholas Wroe, www.theguardian.com. July 17, 2009.
  • The bandstand is a sacred place.

  • When I did the Abyssinian mass, I went through the whole history of the church music and the gospel music, even with the Anglo American hymns, the Afro American hymns, the spirituals and how it developed, up to Thomas Dorsey and the Dixie Hummingbirds, going through the history of the music, jazz musicians.

    Source: www.pbs.org
  • As long as there is democracy, there will be people wanting to play jazz because nothing else will ever so perfectly capture the democratic process in sound. Jazz means working things out musically with other people. You have to listen to other musicians and play with them even if you don't agree with what they're playing. It teaches you the very opposite of racism and anti-Semitism. It teaches you that the world is big enough to accommodate us all.

    Mean   Opposites   Play  
  • If you didn't have the amalgam of Blacks and African-type sensibility and European sensibility, you wouldn't have jazz. Even in the negative and in the positive ways - if there was no slavery and the abolition of slavery, there would be no jazz.

    Source: www.pbs.org
  • And that's the soulful thing about playing: you offer something to somebody. You don't know if they'll like it, but you offer it.

    Jazz   Offers   Knows  
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