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Wynton celebrates 15th Anniversary of In This House, On This Morning

Fifteen years to the day that the Wynton Marsalis Septet debuted In This House, On This Morning at Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center, most of the musicians from the original recording will reunite to perform the gospel and jazz musical work on May 24, 25 & 26, 2007 at 8 pm in Rose Theater at Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Frederick P. Rose Hall.
Wynton Marsalis, Wycliffe Gordon, Wess “Warmdaddy” Anderson, Todd Williams, Reginald Veal, Herlin Riley, who performed on the original CD, and Richard Johnson and guest vocalist will celebrate the anniversary of this milestone work to close out Jazz at Lincoln Center’s 2006-07 season.

This is the very first piece that Jazz at Lincoln Center commissioned from Wynton Marsalis, 15 years ago, a masterful work that takes the form of an African American church service.
“We’ve played that piece all over the world,” Wynton says. “We’ve played in churches around the country. We’ve played it in Europe. And always to great effect.” This spring it comes back home for its first Lincoln Center performance since its May 27, 1992 premiere.

In This House, On This Morning is a spiritual work dealing with the concept of affirmation and utilizing, in the context of jazz, various aspects of a church service: hymn, processional, sermon, prayer, shouts, alter call, devotional, and more.

“Some of it is introspective, some of it is praise, some of it is prayerful,” explains Wynton. “Some of it is exotic. The whole service is a dialogue with God. We have a sermon in the middle of it called ‘In the Sweet Embrace of Life’ because it is performed in the spirit of jazz – we believe in life.” Several preachers, Wynton reveals, taught him the secrets of writing an effective sermon: “Start low, go slow, reach a little higher, catch on fire!”

Wynton reflects back to the 1992 premiere. “At the time, the band was all guys that had grown up in the church: Eric Reed, Reginald Veal, Todd Williams, Wycliffe Gordon, Herlin Riley. The only two people who hadn’t grown up in the church were me and Wess Anderson. We were both children of jazz musicians, so we grew up in another kind of church,” he says with a smile. Joining the original lineup this season is Richard Johnson.

“I want people to walk away feeling good,” says Wynton. “Jazz music can be put in many different contexts. There was a time when it was thought of as the devil’s music, yet many jazz musicians came out of the church. A lot of the church singing is blues. Mahalia Jackson’s favorite singer was Bessie Smith.”

Renowned journalist Stanley Crouch reviewed In This House for its 1992 CD liner notes. “What we hear is a work that steps right up next to Duke Ellington’s Black, Brown, and Beige in its command of material,” Crouch wrote. “Marsalis recognizes the artistic and structural possibilities of the Afro-American church ritual, just as the masters of the European Renaissance saw so well what could happen when they brought the complex human insights of the Biblical texts together with the mastery of perspective. In This House brings the broad spiritual perspective at the root of jazz together with the intellectual achievements that have taken place in an art built upon the melody, the harmony, and the rhythms of the blues. Marsalis is capable of this because he knows a truth quite profound: the blues is the sound of spiritual investigation in a secular frame, and through its very lyricism, the blues achieves its spiritual penetration.”

Tickets for In This House, On This Morning are $30, $50, $75, $100, $120 and are available at the Jazz at Lincoln Center Box Office on Broadway at 60th Street, by calling CenterCharge at (212) 721-6500 or via www.jalc.org.
Tickets for the May 25 & 26 concerts include admission to pre-concert and intermission events in the Atrium in Frederick P. Rose Hall featuring live music and food and drink samplings.

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Comments

  1. Dear Toni,
    Glad that you had a good time with Wynton !
    Send us a photo if you want, we’ll put it on Wynton’s Flickr gallery

    Luigi on May 29th, 2007 at 10:50am

  2. I was lucky enough to attend this performace as a birthday gift provided by my partner. I don’t think I can adequately put into words how much I enjoyed the show. It was incredible. All the musicians were wonderful. To top it off I was able to meet Wynton after the show. We planned our trip to New York specifically to see the show. It was well worth the trip.

    Toni on May 29th, 2007 at 10:39am

  3. How was it? Did anyone attend?

    Karen on May 24th, 2007 at 11:34pm

  4. A fine septet when listening to the original CD and portions of the same CD on the Live at the Village Vanguard set. I can only imagine the sound of this septet today. I would love to be there. Any possibility of releasing this performance on a future CD?

    Sonalii on May 18th, 2007 at 8:56pm

  5. you’re right !!!!
    that is THE SEPTET

    and i love in this house on this morning

    Jason P. on May 18th, 2007 at 2:27am

  6. That group was so good we ought to just call it “The” Septet. I wish I could be there. “Call to Prayer” alone would be worth the trip.

    ZW on May 17th, 2007 at 10:37pm

  7. Wow is right!! I would kill to be at one of these performances. This is probably my favorite extended piece from Wynton (with Citi Movement a close 2nd). To celebrate the anniversary, I guess I will just have to watch the debut of the piece on DVD, since I can’t be there in person.

    CJD on May 14th, 2007 at 2:48pm

  8. wow

    chelsea on May 11th, 2007 at 11:12am

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