Already
an established presence in his native Chicago, trumpeter/composer Marquis Hill
will see his star continue to rise on the national jazz scene with the release
of The Poet, his third CD in as many years. The dynamic session, featuring his
working band, the Blacktet, is due October 22 from Skiptone Music. The title of the new CD was
inspired by remarks made by Hill's friend, poet Kevin Sparks, after hearing his
previous release, 2012's Sounds of the City. "Your music is so
poetic," Hill recalls Sparks saying. "It's modern, but at the same
time, it's in the tradition. It reminds me of great poetry. "
Hill
spent considerable time and care preparing his band for the recording of The
Poet, including performing songs from the upcoming album during a February
engagement at Chicago's Jazz Showcase less than two weeks before he entered the
studio. Among those in attendance was Chicago Tribune arts critic Howard Reich."Considering
the melodic beauty of Hill's themes and the subtle ways the band dispatched
them, the recording could be an important one for this ensemble," Reich
predicted in his review.
The Poet
opens with "Mary's Intro," a poem written by Kevin Sparks and recited
by Mary E. Lawson, and closes with "Legends Outro," a Free Style by
Keith Winford of the Chicago hip-hop band Legend Haz It. Hill's sextet, which
he calls the Blacktet, provides the instrumental backing on both. The remaining
13 tracks place the spotlight on the Blacktet -- Hill, alto saxophonist
Christopher McBride, vibraphonist Justin Thomas, pianist Josh Moshier, bassist
Joshua Ramos, and drummer Makaya McCraven -- with Juan Pastor adding his Latin
percussion prowess to three. All, with the exception of brief improvised
interludes by Thomas, Moshier, and Hill and a rendition of the Bill Lee ballad
"Again Never" from his son Spike's motion picture Mo' Better Blues, were
composed by the trumpeter.
The
remarkable empathy between Hill and saxophonist McBride stems from their having
played together since they were classmates at Northern Illinois University
(NIU) nearly a decade ago. McBride played on Hill's two earlier CDs -- Sounds
of the City and 2011's New Gospel -- as did pianist Moshier.
"The
thing that really, really attracted me to Chris is the way that we blend,"
Hill says. "He has a really dark sound for an alto saxophone, and I try to
go for a dark sound on the trumpet. We're kind of like the same person when it
comes to playing horn parts and cutoffs and how to articulate and how much
vibrato to put on the notes."
Marquis
Hill, 26, was raised in the Chatham neighborhood on Chicago's South Side. He
took up drums in the fourth grade but soon switched to trumpet after hearing
his older female cousin playing one. (He still has a drum set and does
occasional gigs as a drummer.) By the time he was in sixth grade, the young
trumpeter was a member of the South Shore Youth Jazz Ensemble. It was one of
several prestigious student bands in which Hill played while growing up,
including the Ravinia Jazz Scholars, in which he first came in contact with
future mentors Bobby Broom, Tito Carillo, and Willie Pickens.
Hill
graduated from Northern Illinois University in 2009 with a B.A. in music
education and from DePaul University in 2012 with a M.A. in jazz pedagogy. For
the past four summers, he has taught high school students at the Birch Creek
Music Performance Center in Egg Harbor, Wisconsin, and he recently joined the
faculty at the University of Illinois at Chicago. In 2012, he won the
International Jazz Trumpet Competition in Atlanta.
While
still a student at NIU, Hill became one of the most in-demand jazz trumpeters
in the Windy City. When not leading his Blacktet, the trumpeter currently works
with saxophonist Ernest Dawkins (another major mentor), pianist Willerm
Delisfort, bassist Matt Ulery, the Chicago Jazz Orchestra, and groups led by
his own sidemen McBride and Thomas.
Hill and
the Blacktet return to the Jazz Showcase 10/31 through 11/3 to celebrate the
release of The Poet. "I want my music to feel good," Hill states.
"No matter how modern it sounds, I want the swing and the groove and the
feeling to be there."
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