The Jerusalem Post

Ellis Marsalis – a pianist who nobly upheld jazz standards

- • By HOWARD REICH

In 1991, pianist Ellis Marsalis sent me a letter that I’ve held onto ever since. In fact, I framed it, so that I would see it every day, to remind myself of what he wanted me to know.

Marsalis, who died April 1 at age 85 of complicati­ons of the coronaviru­s, told me that I should “keep up the good work” so that others “may recognize you as a significan­t model of jazz criticism.”

But it occurs to me now, as the jazz world mourns one of its most revered elders, that in those words the eminent musician encapsulat­ed what he himself had spent a lifetime doing – at significan­t personal cost. For he had served as a model for what jazz is and ought to be, and how we shouldn’t lower our standards to suit popular tastes and fashions.

He certainly didn’t. In the 1960s, when Ellis L. Marsalis Jr. – his full name – was emerging as a pianist and saxophonis­t, the jazz world he aspired to enter was imploding. Youth-oriented rock music was destroying everything in its path in the marketplac­e, and extraordin­arily accomplish­ed jazz musicians were finding clubs closing, record labels shuttering or shunning them, the broader audience turning away.

None of which escaped Marsalis’ notice, nor deterred him from a life in jazz.

“Let’s put it this way – there wasn’t much work you could get, except maybe on the Fourth of July and Christmas,” he told me in a 1991 interview.

So Marsalis supported his family playing assorted dives, touring with trumpeter Al Hirt, taking low-paying teaching gigs and otherwise subsisting in a jazz world that was crumbling around him.

“It was rough on daddy all the way,” trumpeter Wynton Marsalis, one of Ellis and Dolores Marsalis’ six sons, told me that year. “There was hardly anyplace to play the music. And it wasn’t easy sitting behind screens on buses.”

Meaning that in addition to the economic hardship of the jazz life, there was the brutal weight of pervasive racism.

“We went to a Catholic school with 1,500 kids in which 20 were black, and it was strange,” saxophonis­t Branford Marsalis, another Marsalis son, told me at the time.

“The teachers weren’t openly hostile, but their ignorance was even more detrimenta­l to us than if they had been. To them, (N-word) was an accepted part of the English language.”

Against this backdrop, Ellis Marsalis pushed forward, refusing to compromise his art or aspiration­s. Instead, he and his wife developed a strategy that appears to have influenced their high-achieving sons and the generation­s of jazz musicians who followed his artistic lead.

“They taught us that whatever you do, if you’re not going to be the best, don’t do it,” trombonist Delfeayo Marsalis, another son, told me in 1991. “That was how you survived – by being the best.

“And we did it with music because of my dad.”

LONG BEFORE the Marsalis name became internatio­nally known – thanks to the acclaim won by the Marsalis progeny – Ellis Marsalis toiled for small change while creating great art.

You could hear it on several superb but little-heralded recordings, such as Solo Piano Reflection­s, a 1978 album he reissued as a CD on his own label, ELM Records. The recording shows that at an early stage in his career, Marsalis was embracing the influence of the greatest of all jazz pianists, Art Tatum. The running scales, florid arpeggios and other technicall­y expansive devices affirmed Marsalis’ virtuosity, while his profoundly lyrical playing in John Lewis’ Django and Chick Corea’s Spain illuminate­d the substance beneath the glitter.

His 1997 reissue of his 1983 recording Syndrome: Ellis Marsalis (ELM Records), attested to the man’s harmonic adventurou­sness and orchestral conception in a small-group setting, with bassist Bill Huntington, drummer James Black and flutist Kent Jordan.

But over time, like many great artists, Marsalis distilled his work to its essence, in his case via carefully chosen notes and succinctly stated gestures. That was apparent in 2008’s An Open Letter to Thelonious (ELM Records), with its tough and unvarnishe­d approach to Monk landmarks such as “Straight, No Chaser,” “Crepuscule with Nellie” and “Epistrophy.”

You could savor Marsalis’ work in live performanc­e, as well, especially at Snug Harbor, on Frenchmen Street in New Orleans. For decades, Marsalis played the landmark club once a week, and tickets were hard to come by. He last performed there in December.

Marsalis appeared often in Chicago, offering crisp, concise playing at the Chicago Jazz Festival in 1995; shimmering pianism at the Chicago Cultural Center in May of that year; and unmistakab­le integrity and reverence for jazz fundamenta­ls during a concert at the College of Du Page Arts Center in Glen Ellyn in 1991.

“Consider his characteri­stically suave version of the old standard ‘Someday My Prince Will Come,’” I wrote in my review of that performanc­e. “In just the opening bars, Marsalis spelled out the hallmarks of his pianism: warm tone, articulate touch, gently swinging rhythm, an unusually sophistica­ted sense of harmony and an elegant way of shaping a melody. Through the course of the evening, these elements remained constant, even if the historical reference points were in flux.”

Wynton Marsalis has been criticized for this stance by those more willing to make artistic concession­s, a fact that has had zero influence on his music, just as was the case with his father.

Nor is there any doubt as to where Wynton Marsalis acquired his reverence for what jazz musicians have fought, bled and died to create during the past century-plus.

“I suppose he picked up some of that from my classes,” Ellis Marsalis told me, referring to the many future artists the elder Marsalis taught at the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, including Wynton and Branford Marsalis, singer-pianist Harry Connick Jr., and trumpeters Nicholas Payton and Terence Blanchard.

So Ellis Marsalis’ legacy endures not only through his recordings and through the memories of those lucky enough to have heard him in performanc­e, but also through the work of his sons and other musicians who have tried to live up to his example.

“I only ever wanted to do better things to impress HIM,” wrote Wynton Marsalis on his blog the day after his father’s death (Dolores Marsalis died in 2017).

“He was my North Star, and the only opinion that really deep down mattered to me was his, because I grew up seeing how much he struggled and sacrificed to represent and teach vital human values that floated far above the stifling segregatio­n and prejudice that defined his youth but, strangely enough, also imbued his art with an even more pungent and biting accuracy.”

“For me,” concluded Wynton Marsalis, “there is no sorrow only joy. He went on down the Good Kings Highway as was his way, a jazz man, ‘with grace and gratitude.’

“And I am grateful to have known him.”

So am I. (Chicago Tribune/ TNS)

 ?? (Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for Jazz At Lincoln Center/TNS) ?? PIANIST ELLIS MARSALIS attends the Jazz at Lincoln Center 2017 Gala ‘Ella at 100: Forever the First Lady of Song’ in 2017 in New York City.
(Michael Loccisano/Getty Images for Jazz At Lincoln Center/TNS) PIANIST ELLIS MARSALIS attends the Jazz at Lincoln Center 2017 Gala ‘Ella at 100: Forever the First Lady of Song’ in 2017 in New York City.

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