There are very few musicians working today who seem genuinely incapable of being confined by genre. Jon Batiste is one of them.
Over the last decade he has become one of the most recognisable musicians on the planet, yet he has achieved that status by doing precisely the opposite of what the music industry usually demands. Rather than choosing a lane and staying in it, Batiste has spent his career moving effortlessly between jazz, classical music, soul, gospel, R&B, film scores, popular music and outright performance art.
For many people he first appeared as the charismatic bandleader on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Others discovered him through Pixar's Soul, for which he shared an Academy Award. More recently there was the extraordinary American Symphony, the deeply personal project and documentary that revealed both his immense ambition and the challenges he and his wife, Suleika Jaouad, were facing away from the stage.
Yet for all the awards, acclaim and international recognition, there remains something refreshingly difficult to define about Jon Batiste.
That quality sits at the very heart of Black Mozart.
Instead, it feels like an exploration.
Batiste has spoken about imagining Mozart's music through the traditions that shaped his own musical upbringing: the rhythms of New Orleans, the spirituality of gospel music, the emotional honesty of the blues and the freedom of jazz improvisation. The result is not classical music. It is not jazz either. In truth it occupies a space somewhere between the two while belonging entirely to neither.
What immediately strikes me about Black Mozart is its sense of joy.
So many projects built around classical reinterpretation arrive carrying a certain weight. They feel worthy. Educational. Occasionally even a little self-conscious. Batiste avoids all of those traps.
This album simply sounds like someone having fun.
Familiar Mozart themes emerge and then suddenly head off in unexpected directions. Blues phrases appear where you least expect them. Gospel harmonies drift through the music like sunlight through stained glass. Rhythms that originated in New Orleans seem to dance effortlessly around melodies written centuries earlier.
The remarkable thing is how natural it all feels.
There
is never a moment where Batiste appears to be forcing the concept. Nothing
feels bolted on. Nothing feels designed simply to make a point. Instead, the
music unfolds with the ease of a conversation between old friends.
Listening to the album reminded me just how artificial many of our musical categories really are.
We spend an extraordinary amount of time placing music into boxes. Classical over here. Jazz over there. Gospel somewhere else. Blues in another section entirely.
Yet when you strip everything back to melody, rhythm and emotion, those divisions often seem far less important than we imagine.
That is perhaps the most interesting aspect of Black Mozart. It quietly asks questions without ever demanding answers.
What if Mozart had grown up hearing gospel music?
What if a New Orleans pianist had sat beside him at the keyboard?
What happens when music is allowed to travel freely across centuries rather than remain frozen in time?
Batiste never attempts to answer those questions directly. He simply lets the music explore them.
Throughout the album his piano playing remains extraordinary. That should almost go without saying by this stage of his career, but it is worth noting nonetheless.
There are moments of dazzling technical brilliance scattered throughout the record, yet what continues to separate Batiste from many modern virtuosos is his ability to place emotion ahead of technique. The notes themselves rarely feel like the point. They are simply the vehicle through which the story is being told.
That approach has always been central to his appeal.
Born into one of New Orleans' great musical families, Batiste was immersed in music from the very beginning. The city runs through everything he does. Even when performing orchestral works or interpreting classical repertoire, there remains something unmistakably New Orleans about his sense of rhythm, his phrasing and his instinct for collective musical conversation.
You can hear that spirit everywhere on Black Mozart.
This is not the sound of a pianist standing alone in front of a masterpiece and respectfully admiring it from a distance.
It
is the sound of a musician stepping inside the music and inviting us to join
him.
Perhaps that is why the album feels so welcoming. Despite the sophistication of the concept, there is nothing intimidating about it. You do not need a degree in musicology to enjoy what is happening. You simply need ears and a willingness to follow where the music leads.
The release also arrives at a fascinating point in Batiste's career.
Most artists, having won multiple Grammy Awards, an Academy Award and an Emmy, would probably spend their time consolidating success. Batiste seems far more interested in expanding his horizons.
Later this month he brings that restless creativity to London with a four-night residency at KOKO in Camden 24 – 28 June. True to form, he is not presenting four identical performances. Instead, each evening explores a different aspect of his musical personality, from the orchestral world of American Symphony to the music of Soul, audience-led requests and communal celebrations built around song and connection.
It is an ambitious undertaking, but then ambition has become one of Batiste's defining characteristics.
What
continues to impress me most, however, is that none of this ever feels driven
by ego. For all the extraordinary achievements, there remains a sense of
curiosity about his work. He approaches music not as something finished but as
something continually evolving.
That curiosity is what powers Black Mozart.
Ultimately, this album is not really about Mozart at all.
It is about possibility.
It is about recognising that great music does not belong to a single tradition, a single culture or a single moment in history. It is about allowing ideas to travel, evolve and find new life in unexpected places.
Most importantly, it is about listening without preconceptions.
In a world increasingly obsessed with labels, categories and definitions, Jon Batiste continues to remind us that music is at its most powerful when those boundaries disappear.
And
for forty minutes or so, Black Mozart makes them vanish completely. Glenn Wright
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