Marc
Rossi’s ambitious genre-transcending career and inclusive
compositions led Down Beat magazine to call him "one
of the dynamic few whose musical and cultural awareness travels
exponentially in many different directions." A versatile contemporary
classical composer, jazz composer and pianist, and educator, Rossi
has been a vital part of the rich Boston music scene since the early
1980’s. He is a 25-year veteran of the jazz and contemporary
classical worlds, a longtime student of both Hindustani and Carnatic
Indian music and full-time Professor of Piano and Jazz
Composition at Boston’s Berklee College of Music.
After receiving
both his Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees in Composition
from New England Conservatory (NEC), Rossi continued his education
through private studies with Frank Bennett (composition and orchestration),
William Thomas McKinley (composition), Charlie Banacos (jazz improvisation),
Peter Row (North Indian Music and sitar), and Ben Schwendener (Lydian
Chromatic Concept).
As an educator,
Rossi has held a full-time position at Berklee since 1989, following
teaching stints at both NEC and Tufts University. He has delivered
guest lectures and jazz master classes at the Venice "Ethnomusicology
and the Emerging World Music Market" conference, UCLA, the
Universita della Musica in Rome, and other institutions and conducted
NEC student ensembles at the request of MacArthur “Genius”
Award-winning jazz legends, Ran Blake and George Russell.
Since 1981, Rossi has
led his own jazz fusion ensemble The Marc Rossi Group, which released
its first recording We Must Continue (MMC Recordings) in 1996. Prominent
LA Jazz Scene reviewer Scott Yanow wrote, “the chance taking
explorations have plenty of exciting moments,” and his eight
originals "complex, [but] always contain some catchy melodies."
Rossi co-led the raga-jazz exploring Row and Rossi Project with
sitarist and NEC Provost Peter Row from 1995-99, and marks the 10th
anniversary of his duo with pianist Ben Schwendener in 2003. AllAboutJazz
Modern Jazz Editor Glenn Astarita chose the Schwendener/Rossi Duo’s
debut, Living Geometry (Gravity Records), as his Pick of the Month
for September 2002.
Rossi has also
served as a sideman, composing, performing and recording extensively
with a variety of other jazz groups including Stan Strickland and
Ascension, the Jimmy Guiffre 4, Natraj, The Robert Moore Quartet,
and George Russell’s Living Time Orchestra, appearing on the
latter’s landmark Blue Note releases, The African Game
and So What.
Rossi’s
concurrent composing career includes premieres in legendary venues
like Boston’s Symphony Hall and Dvorak Hall in Prague. His
pieces have been performed and premiered by renowned musicians like
The Czech Radio Symphony of Prague, the Silesian Philharmonic Orchestra,
pianist Jeffrey Jacob, cellist Raphael Popper-Keizer, the Arden
String Quartet, Indian classical guitarist Prasanna, cellist Xin-Hua
Ma, pianists Cameron and William Merrill, violinist Sharan Leventhal,
jazz historian/pianist Lewis Porter, and the Berklee Faculty Jazz
Orchestra.
Called “intensely
expressive and consistently compelling” by Jacob, and “lushly
orchestrated and lyrically pensive” by Fanfare, Rossi’s
music has been commissioned by the studio of legendary sculptor
Reuben Nakian among others. He is also a member of the Boston-based
group Just in Time Composers & Players, which has premiered
a number of original compositions. Five recordings feature his works
including MMC New Century Volume VI (MMC, 1996), Jeffrey
Jacob’s Contemporary American Eclectic Music for the Piano
Volumes II and VI, (New Ariel, 1996 and 2003), Just In Time
Composers and Players’ In Concert (2002), and A
View From Charles Bridge, (MMC, 2003).
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