A Special Limited Two
Night Farewell Engagement; Columbia's
favorite musical duet is making the move to
Massachusetts, and leaving West Columbia,
their home since 1999.
Wynton Marsalis and Marcus
Roberts collaborated musically for six years, touring
extensively and crafting over fourteen classic jazz recordings.
Wynton Marsalis asserted that, "Marcus is the genius of the
modern piano. He’s so hip. Everybody always wondered about where
Thelonious Monk was at; Monk was so hip, nobody, not even the
critics, could figure out where he was at. That’s where Marcus is at
right now."
Gallery 701 presented Wynton Marsalis
in concert to an enthusiastic sold-out crowd at the Koger Center in June 2002.
October 23, 2004: Gallery 701's
presentation of the Marcus Robert Trio
MARCUS ROBERTS
Marcus Roberts, blind since the age of five, toured and recorded for
six years with Wynton Marsalis, who describes him as, "the genius of
modern piano."
JASON MARSALIS
The youngest of the tremendously talented Marsalis Family, Jason
Marsalis is featured on drums.
ROLAND GUERIN
Appearing with the Trio is world-class bassist Roland Guerin from
Baton Rouge.
October 23, 2004: Gallery 701's presentation of the Marcus Robert
Trio was a marriage of jazz and literature
featuring Marcus Roberts, "the genius of modern piano", as
dubbed by Wynton Marsalis, with literary giant and Jazz at
Lincoln Center co-founder Stanley Crouch. Novelist
Stanley Crouch writes for the Village Voice, the New Yorker,
New York Daily News and numerous other syndicated
publications. Crouch, a featured commentator on Ken Burn's
Jazz documentary, is longtime friend and mentor to Wynton
Marsalis & Marcus Roberts. Crouch composed the literature
that accompanied many of their recordings, including Wynton
Marsalis' Pulitzer Prize winning Recording Blood on the
Fields.
Copyright 2004, Gallery 701
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