Few
captured the sleek, swinging sophistication of jazz better than
pianist, composer, and bandleader John Lewis, who had a long, deep,
personal relationship with Jazz at Lincoln Center. “He used to always
call our program a miracle,” says Wynton Marsalis. “He used to always
say, ‘Keep that miracle going.’”
In
2013, when the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra with Wynton Marsalis
set out to honor the legacy of the Modern Jazz Quartet’s maestro, they
teamed up with New Orleans’ own Jon Batiste. The bandleader of The Late
Show with Stephen Colbert and a prodigious pianist in his own right,
Batiste joined the JLCO to tackle some of Lewis’s most iconic tunes
during a sold-out concert in Rose Theater, the House of Swing.
From
the blistering bebop of “Two Bass Hit” to the down-home blues of “2
Degrees East, 3 Degrees West”—from small group configurations to the big
band might of the full JLCO—The Music of John Lewis captures the
elegance and soulfulness of Lewis’s daring compositions. The record also
includes a four-movement suite pulled from the Modern Jazz Quartet’s
classic recording, The Comedy.
“The
depth of his belief makes his music timeless,” Batiste says of Lewis.
“For artists, what remains impactful and meaningful in one’s art depends
on the accuracy and intensity of your insights. Mr. Lewis's music is
still with us, and it is an honor to place my artistry in the tradition
of serving it. So put on this record, listen with your eyes closed, and
engage your imagination.”