Sweeter (feat. Terrace Martin & Robert Glasper) [Live]
Leon Bridges
Freeze Tag (feat. Phoelix)
Terrace Martin, Robert Glasper, 9th Wonder & Kamasi Washington
Think of You (feat. Kamasi Washington & Rose Gold)
Terrace Martin & Kamasi Washington & Rose Gold
Insane (feat. Ant Clemons)
Terrace Martin, Robert Glasper, Kamasi Washington & Dinner Party
Intimidated (feat. Lalah Hathaway)
Terrace Martin & Rapsody
Breathe (feat. Arin Ray)
Dinner Party
Playlist degli artisti
Terrace Martin: The Producers
Biografia dell'artista
There’s art that fits into clean labels, and then there are the shapeless soundscapes of Terrace Martin. Over the past several decades, Martin has planted his artistic flag in something much deeper than genre or form: Los Angeles. He wears it on his sleeve loud and proud, like on Sounds of Crenshaw Vol. 1 by his side project The Pollyseeds, but you don’t need explicit mentions to hear it in the music, a rich blend of jazz, R&B, hip-hop, soul, and funk that bubbles like melting concrete. The son of a jazz drummer and a singer, Martin was born in 1978 and hopped all around L.A. as a kid, picking up the piano and saxophone on his own. Along the way, he learned to produce on a sampler, too. A bona fide prodigy, he immersed himself in the city’s jazz scene as a high schooler, studying under renowned music educator Reggie Andrews. Midway through studying at CalArts, he departed to tour as part of the backing band for both Kirk Franklin’s gospel choir God’s Property and Puff Daddy, alongside fellow young jazz luminaries Kamasi Washington and Thundercat. Those artists would remain central to Martin’s solo records, including 2015’s simmering Velvet Portraits, as well as his collaborative work with rappers like Kendrick Lamar and YG. In fact, collective play and improvisation have been maybe the most important aspects of Martin’s music. On albums like Sounds Of Crenshaw and his 2020 album Dinner Party with Robert Glasper and 9th Wonder, he’s less a lead player than a guiding light with a clear sonic inspiration. His vision fuses the many threads of Black music into something new, something mind-bending, something Los Angeles.