When Mos Def and Jill Scott need someone to take their performances to the next level, they call him. When X-Clan wanted to add some heft to their Return From Mecca album, he was the one they reached out to. The man in question is Christian Scott, the acclaimed trumpeter whose textured playing appeals to both respected members of the hip-hop community and to jazz purists.
Scott’s ability to harness the attitude, urgency and power of the rap generation and his classically trained musical ear have equally informed Scott’s most impressive work to date, Anthem. It’s an album that stands as a watershed moment in music, a release that will have young fans eager to pick up a trumpet as much as they want to try their hand at rapping. It’s that powerful.
The reason Scott’s music contains such potency is that he was raised to think about things on a major, wide-reaching scale. He’s a product of the streets and the classroom, after all. Given this background and that his parents required that he be informed in local, national and international events, it should come as no surprise that Scott was moved by the destruction caused by Hurricane Katrina, and by the catastrophic failure of government that has yet to result in the repair of the Gulf Coast region nearly two years after it struck. Scott wanted Anthem to use his native New Orleans to serve as a microcosm for what was going on around the world.
The slow, heavy, sensuous “Cease Fire” reflects the moment when a relationship dissolves, while the caressing, comforting tone of “Katrina’s Eyes” came to Scott in a dream where he imagined himself a father who was mesmerized by the eyes of his young daughter. Indeed, the impact children have on us can be profound. That’s why Scott chose to use a photo of himself in front of a young girl playing in a murder scene chalk outline as his album cover. The photograph, taken by his twin brother Kiel, represents how our children are so desensitized to the ills of society surrounding them that are comfortable playing in the middle of them.
Scott’s superior playing led him to the Berklee School of Music, where he completed a double degree in less than half of the standard time. Soon after self-funding and self-releasing his eponymous debut album, he relocated to New York to be among other great artists and musicians, helping pave the way for his current success. Scott joined the prestigious Concord Records roster with 2006’s Rewind That, a Top 15 album on the Billboard’s Top Jazz Albums chart that established Scott as one of music’s most exciting and innovative new talents, one who was respected in jazz circles and whose sensibility led to collaborations and performance gigs with such rap and R&B heavyweights as Mos Def, Jill Scott and X-Clan.
It’s a career path that makes his new work all the more meaningful. “I want to show with my music that you don’t necessarily have to follow a model to be successful with what you’re doing,” Scott says. “If your intentions are right and you’re coming from a place of sincerity, then typically people will understand, get it and gravitate towards it.” And even make it their Anthem.
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