All That Jazz
Bill Murray â08, â11 might have gotten a late start making music, but that doesn't mean heâs stopping anytime soon.
By Mike Unger
Photos by Nick Sibol â23

At first, the tune is so faint you think it may be playing just in your mind. But
as you walk from the dimly lit parking garage into the hallway of Greater Baltimore
Medical Center (GBMC) in Ăć±±œû”Ű, past one sign warning those with COVID-19 symptoms
not to enter and another proclaiming âHeroes Work Here,â the jazzy notes become progressively
louder. A few steps later, you arrive at the lobby outside the emergency room, where
the man whoâs making this music in the most surprising of venues sits at an old brown
Baldwin grand piano, his fingers deftly tapping away.
Bill Murray â08, â11 is perched on a black cushion atop the worn maroon one that covers the bench. As doctors, nurses, support staff, patients and visitors shuffle by, he continues to play. Occasionally EMTs pass pushing a person on a stretcher, and still, Murray plays. Everyone is wearing a mask, so itâs tough to tell when a few moments of a song elicit a warm feeling or smileâhowever fleetingâfrom a listener.
But you can tell.
Most people donât stop, but one man is sitting in a wheelchair, intently watching and listening as Murray plays âPolka Dots and Moonbeams,â a popular jazz standard from the 1940s.
âThatâs beautiful,â he says after Murray finishes.
âAny favorites?â Murray, 78, responds.
âIâll let you select them,â says the man, whoâs hooked up to an oxygen tank. âI really enjoy the way that you play.â
The man stays for only a few more minutes before heâs wheeled to treatment. Heâs here five days a week for radiation. Murrayâs music, he says, is the best part of his day.
âI try to play relaxing music, mostly ballads and medium tempo songs,â Murray says. âI am a great believer in the concept of music therapy. Most of these people donât want to be here. If I give them 15 or 30 seconds of relaxation, Iâm happy. Itâs a great experience for me.â
Murray began volunteering at GBMC nearly a decade ago, when his late wife, Helen, was being treated there for cancer. He noticed an old piano sitting dormant, collecting dust, and asked if he could use it. Heâs been playing it twice a week ever since.
Few people love anything more than Bill Murray loves jazz, and few people are as invested in seeing its next generation of performers thrive. His establishment of and support for the Murray Fund for Visiting Jazz Artists and the Murray Jazz Residency have positioned TU as a leader in the fieldâand heâs not done giving. Last year Murray pledged $545,000 to RISE, the campaign for Ăć±±œû”Ű University. The money will support the TU Foundation Grant Endowment, subsidize College of Fine Arts and Communication performance student tickets and fund the programs that bear his family name. He also plans to donate his immense collection of jazz CDs, books and vinyl to TUâs Special Collections and University Archives.
Murrayâs relationship with TU is part of what he calls his second journey in life. After a successful career in commercial banking, he pivoted at the age of 58 and decided to turn his passion for jazz into an academic pursuit. Two degrees, five albums, 50 original compositions and countless acts of philanthropy later, heâs created a legacy that will ensure his impact on the genre will be felt for years to come.

The Colorado town in which Murray grew up was not exactly the cultural equivalent of Greenwich Village. Located about 150 miles south of Denver, Walsenburg had only about 5,000 residents, few of whom likely saw Duke Ellington or Charles Mingus perform.
But music was always flowing through the Murray household. Billâs mother, Virginia, was a singer and a music teacher. She died when he was 9, but the love for the art form she instilled in him resonated. When he was in middle school, his buddy formed a band and asked Murray to be the piano player.
âThe songs were jazz, from the Great American Songbook,â he says. âIt was a little before rock and roll started to come in. Weâd play homecomings and proms. I played my first New Yearâs Eve gig for adults when I was in the eighth grade. I was making $10 a night. I thought I was in heaven.â
Murray played trombone in the marching band in high school, and when he arrived at the University of Colorado as an undergraduate, he joined the Golden Buffalo Marching Band.
After graduating with a degree in business, he earned an MBA from Northwestern University and went to work for Illinois National Bank. He met Helen in Chicago, and the two were married in 1970. The couple moved to suburban Glen Ellyn, where Murray announced to his wife that he was buying himself a Christmas present: a piano.
In 1982, Murray got a job with a bank in Maryland, and the family moved to the single-family home in Ăć±±œû”Ű in which he still lives. Shortly after relocating, he started exploring Baltimoreâs jazz clubs.
âI was determined to find a person that I could take piano lessons from,â he says. âThis was my main hobby. I wanted to learn how to play jazz piano.â
At a club near the old Mechanic Theatre on Charles Street downtown, Murray met a piano player named Lou Rainone, who would become his teacher for the next 20 years. While playing remained a passion, it took second billing to his banking career and helping to raise his three children. But when the kids left the nest and his bank was sold, Murray leapt at the chance to retune his life.
âI never used the word retirement,â he says. âYouâll never hear me use that word. I just donât like it. I use the term âsecond journey.ââ
His first call was to Terry Ewell, a professor in TUâs music department, who spoke to him about the universityâs program. In 2002, he became a 58-year-old freshman.
âWhat I noticed is heâs a very humble gentleman,â says Ewell, a bassoonist who teaches online technology and music theory. âVery eager to learn and very interested in improving his musical skills. When he came into the music department, he didnât expect any special favors. He just wanted to be like one of the students. The jazz faculty were very pleased to have him there. He was an eager student and applied himself diligently.â
Despite being four decades older than some of his classmates, Murray was determined to assimilate.
âWhen I was working, I said, âI donât ever want to be called Mr. Murray,ââ he says, laughingâas he frequently does. âWhen I was working with younger people, I wanted them to feel like they could call me Bill. So I made it known right away that I was Bill. Iâd sit in the back of the class and keep my mouth shut. I would tell the professors. âDonât expect me to raise my hand. If you call on me, I will respond, but I donât want to take anything away from the other students.ââ
Six years after enrolling, Murray owned a second bachelorâs degree, this one in music. But he wasnât done. Thirsting for more knowledge and playing experience, he went on to earn a masterâs in music three years later. His thesis compared the work of his idols, jazz pianists Bill Evans and Billy Strayhorn, with his own compositions.
During his second scholastic stint, Murray decided to establish the Murray Fund for Visiting Jazz Artists. Three years later, he and his wife founded the Bill and Helen Murray Jazz Residency, which the fund for visiting jazz artists now supports. (Itâs now known as the Murray Jazz Residency, and his sister and children also are donors.)
Each term TU hosts a jazz professional who, over the course of a week, gives private lessons to students, teaches a master class and performs one concert with their peers and one with TU students.
âItâs definitely distinguished us from other jazz programs in the nation,â says music professor Dave Ballou, leader of the Jazz and Commercial Music Division and founding director of the Murray Jazz Residency. âOther programs bring in great people for a few days, and mostly those programs only have the guests play with the faculty, but we insist on the guests playing with the students. Itâs had such a profound effect on the students.â
A decorative address plate in the shape of a piano outside Murrayâs home offers guests a preview of what awaits when they enter. Much of the decor in the house could be described as piano chicâif that actually was a thing. The focal point of the front living room is the 35-year-old Kawai grand piano he plays almost every day. On it sits a tip jar, a tongue-in-cheek gift from his family that came with a few dollar bills in it. (Theyâre still stuffed in there.)
Down a flight of stairs is a den lined with bookshelves. He estimates he has more than 3,000 volumes on jazz and classical music, most of which heâs read. Up another flight of stairs is his recording studio, where he spends many of his waking hours at home. Itâs packed with file cabinets containing most of his roughly 10,000 jazz CDs, which he believes is one of the biggest collections in the world. The rest are in the basementâhe ran out of room upstairs.

There are two electric pianos and a computer for when he wants to compose, but he spends most of his time in the studio listening to music. While the tunes flow through his world-class Totem speakers he often works on Japanese number puzzles or builds Lego sets that his kids give him. This Christmas, he got a 1,600-piece jazz quartet set that, for now, remains unopened.
Sprinkled throughout the room are photos of Murray with jazz luminaries whose camps heâs attended. The drummer T.S. Monk. Saxophonist Ravi Coltrane. The late, legendary tenor sax player Stanley Turrentine.
Also displayed are Murrayâs albums, which he hands out for free to friends and family. He recorded many of them with TU faculty and alums. Billyâs Touch, a soothing, melodic collection of seven Murray originals, features Murray on piano, TU adjunct professor Jeff Reed â02 on bass, Frank Russo on drums, Dan Ryan â13 on guitar, and Ballou on trumpet.
âHe has a very strong idea and opinion about what he wants musically, but itâs great to work with him because he doesnât assume that he knows everything. Heâs very self-effacing,â Ballou says. âJazz and improvised music are very personal expressions. Itâs an art form. What I like about Bill is that heâs somebody who is using that art form to express what he wants to express in it. Thatâs cool.â
In the back of the house is a second living room, which is dominated by Murrayâs collection of tiny, kitschy pianos heâs bought and been gifted from around the world. There are hundreds of them. One is a small rendition of a piano thatâs actually a wine bottle holder. Another is a figurine playing a piano crafted from a tuna can. He got that one in the Bordeaux region of France.
Murray is proud of his philanthropic efforts at TU and keeps several plaques and awards from the university on display in the room. He joined the Ăć±±œû”Ű University Foundation board in 2006 and served as the organizationâs president from 2018 until he stepped away in 2022. Thereâs another, slightly larger model piano that sits on the floor near the door that was a gift from TU to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Murray Jazz Residency.
When he founded the program, it was named for Murray and his wife. The two were inseparable for decades until she died from colon cancer in 2013. In one corner of the room sits a framed copy of his original score for âThinking About You,â his love song to his bride.
âShe went through seven years of cancer and treatment and ups and downs,â he says. âIt blew my life apart, but in the last couple of years of her life, we knew that it was not a question of if, it was a question of when.â
After a grieving period, he met Rodica Johnson. She was a fellow volunteer at GBMC, and the two have become friends and enjoy spending time together. Now that the pandemic has subsided, theyâre looking forward to resuming traveling as well. Murray also is planning to record two more albums in the near future.
âItâs been an interesting life,â he says with the curiosity of a man wondering where his next journeyâand noteâwill take him.
