Branford Marsalis
An award-winning saxophonist, band leader, featured classical soloist, and a film and Broadway composer, over the span of his decades long career, Branford Marsalis has become a multi award-winning artist with three Grammys, Emmy and Tony nominations, a citation by the National Endowment for the Arts as a Jazz Master, and an avatar of contemporary artistic excellence.
Branford Marsalis is increasingly sought after as a featured soloist with such acclaimed orchestras as the New York Philharmonic, Los Angeles Philharmonic, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, Detroit Symphony Orchestra, North Carolina Symphony and Düsseldorfer Symphoniker, with a repertoire that includes compositions by Claude Debussy, Alexandr Glazunov, Jacques Ibert, Gustav Mahler, Darius Milhaud, Ned Rorem, Ralph Vaughan Williams and John Williams. He has toured with chamber orchestras such as the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra, Chamber Orchestra of Philadelphia, and City Chamber Orchestra of Hong Kong.
Emerging from the global pandemic, in January 2022 Branford Marsalis first returned to the New York Philharmonic to perform John Adam’s Saxophone Concerto, which highlighted his incredible agility and the instrument’s lyrical voice. The artist then launched a tour with the Orpheus Chamber Orchestra in a programme which explored the intersectionality of jazz and classical music with repertoire selections including Debussy’s jazz-inspired Rhapsody for alto saxophone and chamber orchestra. Later that year, he performed John Williams’ Escapades in Tanglewood’s celebration of the composer’s 90th birthday.
Even as he tours the world as a featured classical soloist, Branford Marsalis continues to perform with The Branford Marsalis Quartet, which he formed in 1986. His work on Broadway has garnered a Drama Desk Award and Tony nominations for the acclaimed revivals of Children of a Lesser God, Fences, and A Raisin in the Sun. As a composer for film and television, his screen credits include original music composed for: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks starring Oprah Winfrey, Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom starring Viola Davis and Chadwick Boseman, and the Emmy-nominated Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre.
[2023]