There’s the tradition in jazz of having the Battle of the Bands, and you do not want to get your head cut when you’re playing.
Meaning of the quote
In the world of jazz music, there is a tradition of having "Battle of the Bands" where different bands compete against each other. Wynton Marsalis, a famous American musician, says that you don't want to get "your head cut" or get outplayed when you're performing in these competitions. It's important to be prepared and give your best performance to avoid being overshadowed by the other bands.
About Wynton Marsalis
Wynton Marsalis is an acclaimed American trumpeter, composer, and music instructor. He has won numerous Grammy Awards and was the first jazz musician to win the Pulitzer Prize for Music. Marsalis is known for his contributions to both classical and jazz music, often engaging with young audiences.
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We always hear about the rights of democracy, but the major responsibility of it is participation.
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The nerves are a problem on trumpet, because when you mess up everyone can hear it. Just remember most people are too polite to say anything about it. That should calm your nerves.
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The bandstand is a sacred place.
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Whenever you face a man who’s playing your instrument, there’s a competition.
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You need a team. You need people to push you. You need opponents.
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When did we begin to lose faith in our ability to effect change?
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Through first-class education, a generation marches down the long uncertain road of the future with confidence.
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I believe in professionalism, but playing is not like a job. You have to be grateful to have the opportunity to play.
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This rebuilding of New Orleans gives us the perfect opportunity to see if we’re ready to extend the legacy of Dr. King.
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Jazz is not the kind of music you are going to learn to play in three or four years or that you can just get because you have some talent for music.
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Don’t settle for style. Succeed in substance.
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I dress up a certain way because I respect the music.
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My daddy expected that my brothers and I and our generation would make the world a better place. He had lived in an America of continual social progress.
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I feel like a lot of the fundamental material, I’ve assimilated. So now the question is: Am I going to really get into my spiritual inheritance of music and really develop my abilities?
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Trumpet players see each other, and it’s like we’re getting ready to square off or get into a fight or something.
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What I really have in my head, my imagination, my understanding of music, I never really get that out.
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Don’t wish for someone else to do later what you can do now.
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Maybe the preoccupation with technological progress has overshadowed our concern with human progress.
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Thank the good Lord for a job.
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When I auditioned for my high school band the band director was excited because my father was known to be a great musician. When he heard me, he said ‘Are you sure you’re Ellis’s son?’
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My older brother and myself always played together in bands, but we never knew we would be professional musicians.
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There’s the tradition in jazz of having the Battle of the Bands, and you do not want to get your head cut when you’re playing.
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The musicians I respected were much older than me. I expected them to cut my head, and they did.
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Even in these times, there are still neighbors that will turn their backs on neighbors.
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The best way to be, is to do.
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I didn’t want to get that ring around my lips from practicing the trumpet, because I thought the girls wouldn’t like me. So I never practiced.
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Only a few act – the rest of us reap the benefits of their risk.
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The young very seldom lead anything in our country today. It’s been quite some time since a younger generation pushed an older one to a higher standard.
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I sounded like myself. People be saying I sound like Miles or Clifford Brown.
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I got my first trumpet when I was six years old, from Al Hirt. My father was playing in Al Hirt’s band at that time.
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I always read all these books about the slaves. My mother is very educated. My father would talk to us like we were grown men. We never knew what he was talking about half the time.
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When I first came to New York everybody on the scene would treat me like I could play, but I couldn’t.
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I believed in studying just because I knew education was a privilege. It was the discipline of study, to get into the habit of doing something that you don’t want to do.
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People have taken time out of their day and spent their money to come sit down at a concert. And it’s jazz music-it’s not easy for them to get to it. I don’t want them ever to feel that I’m taking their presence lightly.
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