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Arturo O'Farrill: It Don't Mean A Thing If It Ain't Got That Sting!
ByArturo O'Farrill
pianob.1960

Carla Bley
piano1938 - 2023

Chico O'Farrill
composer / conductor1921 - 2001
Arturo had already graduated from the High School of Music & Art and was an accomplished pianist, but he rejected what he saw as the prescriptive roles being offered to him in jazzespecially anything labeled "Latin." He avoided the so-called "Latin thing" like his life depended on it. His mother was a singer from Mexico, and Arturo was born in Mexico before moving to New York as a boy. Cuban, Mexican, with the last name O'Farrill which was both notable and noticeable for how un-latino it sounded, he was confused.
Bley, famously irreverent and idiosyncratic, welcomed his wildness. "She loved my freakishness, she loved my craziness," Arturo remembers. "She let me be completely wild and crazy... She encouraged craziness in her musicians, which I thought was amazing. She recognized that in all of us there was this outlier thingbut the biggest outlier of them all was Carla Bley herself."
He spent three formative years in her band while in college, then went on to play with artists including

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Steve Turre
tromboneb.1948

Lester Bowie
trumpet1941 - 1999

Harry Belafonte
vocals1927 - 2023
That began to change in the early 1990s, thanks to bassist

Andy Gonzalez
bass, acoustic1951 - 2020
Arturo began working with the " data-original-title="" title="">Fort Apache Band and slowly reconnected with the world he had shunned. Eventuallyand perhaps inevitablyhe joined his father's band, assisting in Chico's late-career resurgence. After Chico's death in 2001, Arturo took over leadership of the Chico O'Farrill Afro-Cuban Jazz Orchestra, which held a long-standing residency at Birdland.
He later founded the

Arturo O'Farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra
band / ensemble / orchestra
Wynton Marsalis
trumpetb.1961
For O'Farrill, music is not made for its own sakeit's a tool for truth. He lives by a variation on the old swing mantra: "It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that sting." That sting is the bite of social consciousness that underpins his work.
"You can just pretend that music is pretty noise, or you can think it's only to soothe," he tells me. "But I don't believe that's the purpose of art." Across projects like The Offense of the Drum, Four Questions (featuring
Dr. Cornel West
vocals"We will never be free in this nation until we can tell the story of slavery and genocide and unbelievable greed," he says. "We will never be free." This year, O'Farrill's Belongo organization is building a cultural center and community space in Harlem, with performance venues, classrooms, rehearsal studios, and gathering areas. It's more than a buildingit's the physical manifestation of a belief: that art must serve the people.
Sometimes a conversation doesn't just explore a person's lifeit opens a window into their soul. That's what happened when we sat down to talk. Arturo O'Farrill is a man who contains multitudes: the Mexican-born son of a Cuban composer, a New Yorker who felt othered in his own neighborhood, a musician shaped by the avant-garde freedom of Carla Bley and the institutional authority of Wynton Marsalis. In our conversation, he traced a winding pathfrom rejecting his heritage to founding the Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra, from feeling like an outsider to becoming a builder of bridges.
He speaks about his creative process with unflinching honesty. Composing, for him, is like "punching yourself in the face." Each note is a negotiation between doubt and conviction, between ego and faith. But if deadlines are what keep him moving, it's his sense of purpose that drives the work. For Arturo, music is not just soundit's "a form of transportation," a vehicle for truth, justice, and community.
Whether he's invoking the legacy of Mingus, the humor of Groucho Marx, or the spiritual teachings of Jesus and Messiaen, O'Farrill speaks with radical clarity and humility. He doesn't claim to have the answers. He claims the right to ask the questions. And maybe that's what this moment needs most.
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Arturo O'Farrill Concerts
Jazz Room Presents: Arturo O’farrill Latin Jazz
The Jazz Room At The Stage Door TheaterCharlotte, NC
Jazz Room Presents: Arturo O’farrill Latin Jazz
The Jazz Room At The Stage Door TheaterCharlotte, NC

Arturo O'Farrill and the Afro Latin Ensemble
California Center For The Arts, EscondidoEscondido, CA

Arturo O'farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra.
ShapeShifter PlusBrooklyn, NY

Arturo O'farrill & The Afro Latin Jazz Orchestra.
ShapeShifter PlusBrooklyn, NY
Ephrat Asherie Dance With Arturo O'Farrill
Zellerbach TheatrePhiladelphia, PA
Ephrat Asherie Dance With Arturo O'Farrill
Zellerbach TheatrePhiladelphia, PA

Arturo O’Farrill: Afro Latin Jazz Ensemble
Zellerbach TheatrePhiladelphia, PA
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