Jazz legend, Ellis Marsalis, Dies At 85
Legendary Jazz pianist Ellis Marsalis, has died at the age of 85.
His death was announced in tweets from New Orleans Mayor LaToya Campbell and Jazz at Lincoln Center, where his son Wynton is managing and artistic director.
The educator, and patriarch of the Marsalis family reportedly went into the hospital over the weekend with symptoms of pneumonia.
But The New York Times reports that his son Branford says the cause of death was complications from COVID-19.
Ellis Louis Marsalis, Jr., was born on Nov. 14, 1934. He graduated from Dillard University in New Orleans with a BA in music education and that was the field to which he devoted himself.
Despite playing with such notable jazz musicians as Cannonball and Nat Adderly, he was most proud of his work as an educator. His music students included Terence Blanchard, Donald Harrison, Harry Connick, Jr., and four of his sons: Wynton, Branford, Delfayo and Jason Marsalis.
Ellis Marsalis taught at the first full-time public arts high school in New Orleans, the New Orleans Center for Creative Arts, where he instructed students on the harsh realities of pursuing a career in the arts.
The former Marine put it this way to NPR in 1985: “There is no such thing as fair. The world’s not fair, it’s not about being fair.”
Marsalis went on to become Commonwealth Professor at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond before returning to his hometown to teach at the University of New Orleans.
He recorded more than 15 albums of his own in addition to collaborations with his sons.