Biography
Chuck Marohnic belongs to the segment of jazz musicians who integrate teaching alongside their work in studios and on stage. For him, this educational role extends well beyond individual instruction sessions. Besides maintaining a recording output on the Summit label, he serves as the head of jazz education at Arizona State University, has written four teaching manuals, and has adapted multiple sacred hymns into jazz arrangements. As a notable creator of original works, he received a commission from the Jazzbird Foundation in San Diego, California, for a piece featuring jazz piano alongside a full orchestra; this composition debuted in a performance by the Arizona State University Symphony Orchestra during March 2000. Throughout these endeavors, Marohnic has sustained a busy schedule of live shows that began when he turned sixteen upon encountering Red Garland’s keyboard work. Over four decades in the genre, he has contributed to twenty-four recordings in leading or supporting roles, among them collaborations on projects with Chet Baker and Joe Henderson, plus sideman appearances alongside Ira Sullivan and Buddy Rich and additional artists. His approach resists easy categorization given his command of nearly every jazz idiom, yet he concentrates primarily on post-bop. The album White Men Can’t Monk, bearing its playfully named title, demonstrates his inventive approach both in writing music and in his piano execution, highlighting his range across these domains. He appears regularly on festival and concert stages, sharing bills with a wide array of artists including Eddie Jefferson, The National Youth Symphony of Bulgaria, and Joe Diorio at the Great American Music Hall. In quieter moments, Marohnic enjoys a broad selection of listening that encompasses the contemporary classical works of Arvo Part along with performances by Keith Jarrett and Kenny Wheeler, in addition to classic jazz figures from earlier eras.
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