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- FROM THE PUBLISHER, Page 24
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- Jazz strikes a resonant chord in the life of senior editor
- Thomas Sancton, who reported and wrote this week's cover story
- on trumpet virtuoso Wynton Marsalis. A native of New Orleans,
- Sancton studied the clarinet with some of the city's veteran
- musicians and began sitting in on French Quarter jam sessions
- as a teenager. Since moving to the Big Apple, he has continued
- to play occasional gigs at local night spots and in the studio.
- Last month G.H.B. Records released Tom's seventh album, New
- Orleans Reunion, a collection of traditional blues and
- standards that he recorded with a clarinet-drum-piano trio.
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- Sancton's jazz interest has given him an insider's edge as
- a journalist. Last year he was able to trade notes with the
- subject of a profile he was working on, film director (and
- fellow clarinetist) Woody Allen. Several months ago, Tom began
- doing research for a piece on Marsalis. "But the more I looked
- at today's jazz scene," he says, "the more I realized that
- there was a bigger story there: Wynton's success was the
- springboard for a jazz renaissance in which a whole new
- generation of talented young players was taking the music to
- a mainstream audience."
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- Tom took time off from his normal assignment editing stories
- in the Nation section to interview up-and-coming jazz players
- and industry experts. Then he spent hours with Marsalis in his
- home, jazz clubs, dressing rooms, limousines and even on the
- stage of a Harlem theater, where the trumpeter was recording
- a classical album. Along the way, Sancton benefited from their
- shared love of the music and common Louisiana roots: he and
- Marsalis went to the same New Orleans high school. One night
- while the two men were talking in Marsalis' living room, the
- trumpeter's goddaughter Adorea, 2, called from Washington
- asking for a lullaby. He picked up his trumpet and played her
- the theme from Sesame Street over the phone.
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- Tom came away from the story confident that jazz is in good
- hands. "These kids, who will chart the future of this great
- American art form over the coming decades, have the sense to
- realize that they cannot move forward until they understand
- where the music came from," he says. "That's a lesson a lot of
- them learned from Wynton." And one for which all jazz fans can
- be grateful.
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- -- Louis A. Weil III
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