Talk:Wynton Marsalis

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Before we degenerate into a revert war, let's discuss whether/why "African American" should be in this article, and if so, where.

My feeling: It does NOT belong in the introduction - particularly as the first identified adjective - because race is not central to Marsalis' accomplishments as a musician - any more than Yo-Yo Ma's biography should start "...Asian-American cellist..." or various string players should start "... Jewish violinst ..." Obviously, being black in America is a central facet to shaping Marsalis' life, but so is being male and we don't mention that in the intro! I think this case is particularly true here, because being black is not unusual for American jazz musicians - so we can't even argue that it should be included to describe novelty (as could be argued for, say, a black ice-hockey player).

Perhaps race does need to be specifically mentioned somewhere in the article, or we can find a good photo to upload, for those who don't realize that he's black. But not in the introduction.

Comments? - DavidWBrooks 14:33, 26 Dec 2004 (UTC)

I don't think it necessarily has to be in the first sentence. It can be moved into the paragraph about his parents and family as part of his background. The first paragraph could just say that he's from the United States, and this paragraph should probably just summarize why he is notable.--Sketchee 20:55, Dec 26, 2004 (UTC)

I disagree. It's fine and perfectly natural as is. deeceevoice 04:07, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)

So you wouldn't be interested in moving it elsewhere in the article? How would you respond to the fact that most other popular figures' race is not the first thing mentioned about them? Most black musicians in wikipedia don't have "African-American" in the introduction (e.g., Duke Ellington, John Coltrane, Billie Holiday) and many don't have it mentioned at all. I don't think there's anything uniquely important about race to Marsalis, as compared to other black performers, that merits handling him differently. Can you explain a bit more why you think the reference should stay where it is? - DavidWBrooks 15:14, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)

See discussion on Eddie Murphy. deeceevoice 16:00, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)

I still feel that this is background information and more fitting in the paragraph about his family lineage. The Eddie Murphy talk page doesn't provide any NPOV reasoning, just your point of view as an individual. Not that we shouldn't have or state opinions on the subject, but for the sake of the article we need something more verifiable and a source.
Since it's an important (considering the time period and location, race is still an important aspect) verifiable fact about Marsalis' background it should be in the article. I'm not sure I can think of a NPOV reason that it belongs as is: "an African American trumpeter", however if it was put in a historical context such that he's notable in some what for being African American that could be included in the opening summary more reasonably. I think if a person was a white Jazz musician that would be more immediately notable for example because Jazz is historically associated with the African American people, for example. Perhaps then it is notable that Marsalis has performed and been accepted in classical circles and made breakthroughs in that sense breaking the divide between perceived "white" and "black" music. (Composers such as Ravel and Gershwin considered Jazz to be classical music considering that the instrumentation and basic music theory of the two styles being so connected. Improvosation in classical music was common until the past 100 years.).
I don't completely object to how it is now, but if the information can be included in a better way it should be. I think it can be in this case. :) --Sketchee 16:12, Dec 30, 2004 (UTC)
I agree, but it's also clear from deeceevoice's comments at Eddie Murphy that he/she see this as an ideological battle, and has decided that not mentioning "African/American" right off the top in wikipedia articles about people (those he/she approves of, at least) is historically ignorant or something. As a result, this has "revert war" written all over it, and since I don't think it's worth fighting over, I am bowing out. (By the way, see Clarence Thomas for an excellent inclusion of race in the introductory paragraph.) - DavidWBrooks 19:11, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)

There is absolutely nothing intrinsically negative about identifying someone by their ethnicity -- no more so than doing so by their nationality. It's simply another identifier. Folks need to get over trying to be so PC. It can be tiresome as all get-out. David, thanks for the referral to Clarence Thomas -- but no, thanks. The less I read about that despicable, lying, quizzling, Unkkka Tom fool, the better. Peace. deeceevoice 21:38, 30 Dec 2004 (UTC)

I suppose it's a waste of time to say that wikipedia isn't supposed to be an advocacy forum for imposing your opinions on others about despicable, lying, quizzling (that's a new one to me) people ... yeah , I thought so. - DavidWBrooks 00:50, 31 Dec 2004 (UTC)

Deecee, the opinions you've made on the Eddie Murphy page are much closer to being politically correct than the statements made by David here. We are simply talking about improving this one article, not the world. ;)

The PC page gives us "The reasoning postulated by proponents for using politically correct terminology is to bring peoples' unconscious biases into awareness, allowing them to make a more informed choice about their language and making them aware of things different people might find offensive." Unless I've misread your statements (apoligies if I have), that seems similar to your reasons for inclusion sighting on the Murphy talk. I don't think these are bad reasons at all, just clarifying on the term PC. Rather than subtle we can be a bit more bold, I think:

In any case, I'm proposing giving the fact that Marsalis is African American context because I think it is an important fact about his life and carreer. This includes the strides he made as a Jazz musician who is also accepted as a classical musician. Rather than glossing over the fact in some kind of summary list as-is, I think it would be better to include the concerns you address in the article. In an article about Marsalis, it is noted "We've got the Philharmonic, the various opera and ballet orchestras, none of whom have even 25 percent African-American participation. And none of them have a music director who's African-American. In a major city, this is the only legitimate gig that's run by a leader who's black, so how bad is that?" [1] I think many people won't know anything about these kind of concerns and that is why Marsalis (and race in general) is notable. I think it's obvious to you and me that these are still important issues today, but unfortunately not to everyone. The article can certainly explain this further in a NPOV manner. If you don't object, I'll add a new header and section regarding some of Marsalis' role in this and from there we can probably reword the opening statement to better summarize the expanded article. --Sketchee 03:55, Dec 31, 2004 (UTC)

Brooks, that's the beauty of the Internet. I can call that lying, tomin', self-loathing, sleazoid son-of-a-bitch/bastard on the bench pretty much anything I damned well please.  :-p

Sketchee, that's the funniest thing I've read in a long time. There's absolutely nothing politically correct about me. Frankly, I don't much care where the information about Marsalis' ethnicity appears -- as long as it's there. But it's gotta be there. deeceevoice 01:42, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Agreed - it must be there, and must be prominent. Just not, perhaps, the very first adjective in the article. (And, yes, on the Net we can call anybody anything we like, but hopefully not in wikipedia articles) - DavidWBrooks 14:17, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Well, Einstein, I haven't called that lying Quizzling bastard names in the article -- have I? :-p deeceevoice 23:27, 1 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Contents

[edit] another try

OK, how about this version - it keeps "African American" in the intro, but moves it to the context of classical music where it is more unusual. - DavidWBrooks 02:23, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Not being purposely argumentative, but this doesn't work for me. It's too potentially POV; one could argue Chevalier de Saint Georges -- or, more convincingly (and contemporaneously) Andre Watts, or dredlocked Awadagin Pratt. Certainly, both are also widely known classical concert pianists in modern times. deeceevoice 11:15, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Boy, I'd love to see an article like African-Americans in classical music from you ... you're way over my head with those references! Still, I think that in most of America, from Des Moines to Phoenix to Detroit to New Orleans, Marsalis would score vastly higher on the name recognition scale for classical music. Perhaps not in impact, but in popularity. - DavidWBrooks 14:18, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
I think you both have good points. There are many other notable African American classical musicians. Andre Watts is still a stub (that didn't even exist until I made it last month), as is Kathleen Battle and Jessye Norman. It's probably true that Marsalis is more well known in America; he appears on the Today Show, late night circuit, newspapers and in the news fairly often promoting both jazz and classical (google news has quite a few hits although Watts gets as many).
It's true that there are more black musicians in jazz than classical in the US. If we're going to have a NPOV article we can't assume that the reader knows that US Today reported that 25% of professional classical musicians are African American. This is part of American jazz and classical culture. This is all necessary context. As NPOV says, we want to prevent the various points of view that exist, but not assert that it is correct. If a source says that Marsalis is has made important strides in African American music that we should present that information. Whether it's true or not is for the reader to decide. We are not to avoid POV topics, but represent and characterize them. :) --Sketchee 15:41, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)
25 percent?!?!? Maybe it's because I live in New England, but if 5 percent of the orchestra/quartet/classical musicians I've seen in my life are black, I'd be surprised. (As a side note, I wrote "instrumentalist", an awkward word, to differentiate Marsalis from vocalists such as Jessye Norman. I agree that she is probably more widely known.) - DavidWBrooks 16:11, 3 Jan 2005 (UTC)
Sorry, I rechecked the article (above , in the early conversation). It says less than 25% percent in an urban area with a high black population, not the overal number.
I made some additions continuing from where I left off before. Another thing the article is still missing is Marsalis' discography. --Sketchee 16:43, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)

I just copied the discography from his site. Probably needs better formatting and italics but at least it's there now. --Sketchee 16:55, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)

I edited the characterization of Marsalis' popularity, adding some qualifiers. I don't think it's necessary to make a POV statement about his supreme popularity. Brooks, also keep in mind the article refers to Marsalis as an instrumentalist," in which case Norman and Battle (or any number of other African American opera divas) wouldn't figure into the equation. The addition of the discography is a real plus. deeceevoice 06:01, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)

It looks great now: We can format the discography as time permits - I've been having real problems getting into wikipedia lately. (And just a note: I'm the one who put the word "instrumentalist" in there!) - DavidWBrooks 13:30, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)

U 2? Wiki has been really slow/difficult navigating lately. Well, don't know that I know enough to do an article on blacks in classical music -- or that I necessarily have the interest. (If someone wants to do one, I can maybe drop in and pick at it -- constructively. :-p) And, yep. I mistakenly inserted your tag when I meant to enter Sketchee's w/regard to the "instrumentalist" thing. Peace. deeceevoice 21:44, 4 Jan 2005 (UTC)

Under Biography, in the 4th paragraph, should it be "weeklong" or "week-long"?

Is he well known as an instrumentalist, or only as an African-American instrumentalist?

If he was born in New Orleans, why does the Lincoln Center website say it was "near New Orleans"?

Re "African-American instrumentalist" -- Why not create a third sentence, adding another dimension, such as: "As an African-American, Wynton Marsalis has benn forthright in addressing matters of race in his writings, interviews, and compositions." ?

Without objection then, the latest suggestion regarding "African-American instrumentalist" ought to be implemented. 162.84.72.171 19:29, 3 August 2005 (UTC)


Hi All,

"J Mood" was missing in the discography. I belive it was released in 1985. Can someone confirm?

B.M.

[edit] Website?

WyntonMarsalis.net seems like a reasonable official webpage, but so does the similarly claiming WyntonMarsalis.com. Any idea what's going on? Evan Seeds (talk) 04:44, 1 March 2006 (UTC)


[edit] POV

Since the 1980s, Marsalis is often credited as a major force in repopularizing jazz. He also ruined it with his childlike conception of music as a whole.

"Ruined it"??? "childlike"??? The whole sentence stinks of POV.

I was just surfing through, am not a jazz expert, and have to say: The whole article seems very POV. I mean, his biography, musical accomplishments, and then a section called "Controversy" in which we only get random attacks on the man by a handful of critics! Unsubstantiated attacks, with no detail, are not "controversy." How about explaining what the controversy is about, and how about a description of Marsalis' own views on the subject, not just as filtered through summary of the attack critics? 68.187.225.13

[edit] Discography

I've checked a number of sites and they don't seem to agree on release dates for the albums. If anyone can confirm some dates and add missing albums, I'd be glad to format it. JoeTrumpet 04:28, 4 July 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Headline text