When he entered the Duke Ellington School, Roney had already made his recording debut at age 15 with Nation and Haki R. Madhubuti, and at that time met, among others,
Bill Hardman,
Valery Ponomarev,
Woody Shaw (who befriended him),
Johnny Coles and
Freddie Hubbard. He played with the
Cedar Walton Quartet featuring
Billy Higgins,
Sam Jones, and
Philly Joe Jones at 16 years of age with the encouragement of his high school teacher. In 1983, while taking part in a tribute to
Miles Davis at "
The Bottom Line" in Manhattan, he met his idol. "He [Davis] asked me what kind of trumpet I had," Roney told
Time magazine, "and I told him none. So he gave me one of his." In 1984 and 1985, he was forced to play in Latin dance and reception bands, as the New York clubs, once a prominent part of the jazz scene, had mostly disappeared. But in 1986, he received a pair of calls, in the same month, to tour with drummers
Tony Williams and
Art Blakey, after which Roney became one of the most in-demand trumpet players on the professional circuit. In 1986, he succeeded
Terence Blanchard in Blakey's
Jazz Messengers. Roney learned his craft directly from Miles Davis. Critics have taken Roney to task for sounding too similar to his idol. Roney recorded his debut album as a leader,
Verses, on
Muse Records in 1987. A number of albums on Muse,
Warner Bros. Records and
Concord Records/
Stretch Records followed, and by the time he turned 40 in 2000 Roney had been documented on over 250 audio recordings. His album titles from the 2000s include
Mystikal (2005) and
Jazz (2007) on
HighNote Records. His two most recent albums are
A Place in Time (HighNote 2016) and
Blue Dawn - Blue Nights (HighNote 2019), which features his nephew, drummer
Kojo Roney. ==Personal life==