(Reprinted from the August 2020 issue of Downbeat magazine)

When the progressive jazz trio Medeski Martin & Wood first got together, they all agreed to keep the ensemble going only as long as it felt good. Keyboardist Medeski thought that maybe the group (with drummer/percussionist Billy Martin and bassist Chris Wood) would last five years tops. That was 25 years ago.

The electric chemistry within the group is still undeniable. But their last release was in 2018 and, as has always been the case, each member is working on other projects. Medeski, for his part, has continued to explore the trio sound, though outside the known parameters of the traditional rhythm section configuration. Several new releases—each with a different trio ensemble—demonstrate how effortlessly Medeski adapts in these expansive musical environments.

“The musicians [on the new projects], they all have their own personalities, their own style,” said Medeski by phone from his home two hours north of New York City, where he’s now residing in sequestration with his family. “A combination of musicians comes together and becomes an entity to itself—that’s how a lot of these trios have come about. Organically, from a situation where you get together to make music and then go, ‘We should record this’.”

Medeski describes the musical evolution of MMW in much the same way. Originally an acoustic piano trio, the group developed its deep-grooved, avant garde sound as a matter of expediency: There weren’t any decent pianos on the road.  “So I started using Hammond organ,” Medeski explained. “I pulled it out for Medeski Martin & Wood, then started adding keyboards, mainly to have other sounds and textures.”  

Drummer Jeff Cosgrove “fell head over heels” for Medeski’s modern organ sound when he first heard MMW as a freshman in college. At the same time, he was discovering the William Parker Quartet and fell similarly for the famed bassist’s infectious, tuneful compositions. So, it was somewhat serendipitous that Cosgrove was able to bring these two personal influences together on History Gets Ahead of Itself, to be released July 17 on his own Grizzley label.

“This [recording] project came together in a weird way,” said the Maryland-based Cosgrove in an April phone interview. He’d worked with Parker previously, and the famed bassist had readily lent him some charts from the much-admired quartet. Instead of a quartet, though, Cosgrove heard these tunes as an organ trio—with Medeski on keyboards and Jeff Lederer on reeds. Cosgrove didn’t know Medesdki, but Lederer had worked with him during their time with the Matt Wilson Quartet and could arrange the session.    

The album’s 10 tracks, recorded in about a day and a half, capture all of the intensity of Parker’s originals, though the vibe is sometimes looser and freer, sometimes denser and grittier. “John connected so easily to the music,” Cosgrove recalled. “He had these beautiful ideas.”

Missing most notably from the recording is a bass player. But neither Cosgrove nor Medeski finds the omission disruptive.  “How are you going to replace William Parker?” Medeski asked. “It was a good idea to give his music a completely different treatment. With music that is so personal like this, you have to make it your own.”

In this effort—absent a bass—most of the responsibility for the group’s harmonic content falls to Medeski as the lone chordal instrumentalist. “In these trios there’s no low end, so we have to find another way to achieve that space,” Medeski explained. “In each situation, I just ask what the music needs and see how I can help with that. Sometimes it’s a straight-up bass line, and sometimes you treat the low end more creatively. It depends on the individual group.”

Medeski speaks authoritatively on the issue: No fewer than five of his recent or upcoming releases feature bass-less trios. Each of these albums derives from seasoned musical partnerships, and each speaks in its own distinctive, tripartite voice.

There’s the self-released Upstream (El Destructo Records), for instance, from October 2019, featuring saxophonist Chris Speed and drummer Ben Perowsky, whom Medeski befriended in Boston more than 30 years ago. The album’s eight tracks—four originals commingled with select tunes by Miles Davis, Jaco Pastorius, Paul Motian, and Wayne Shorter—document the seamless rapport among these three powerhouses, built on countless gigs in upstate New York over the years.

Then, Medeski plays on Amygdala, a live album from DRKWAV, his trio with drummer Adam Deitch and saxophonist Skerik. Already recorded, the album builds on the electronics-heavy experimentation of their 2015 release, The Purge, both on Royal Potato Family. “It goes beyond a trio sound,” Medeski said. “The album is a whole work.”

In coming months, too, Medeski will launch Fire Jelly, the long-awaited sequel to Lunar Crush (Gramavision), his 1997 duo album with guitarist David Fiuczynski. For this album—a microtonal, funky jazz redux—he and Fiuczynski ha

And finally, Medeski will appear on two upcoming albums for John Zorn’s Tzadik label: the recorded version of Zorn’s The Bagatelles (he, Fiuczynski, and Weston have been touring Europe with the project) and Beyond Good and Evil: Simulacrum Live, the concert version of Zorn’s 2015 album Simulacrum. For this heavy-metal, through-composed piece, Zorn reunites Medeski, guitarist Matt Hollenberg, and drummer Kenny Grohowski.

With all gigs on hold until clubs and concert spaces reopen, Medeski can’t say definitively when these projects will launch. He does have an idea of how he’ll spend the waiting period, though: practicing. “It’s a good time to work to go in deeper,” he mused. “Out of that comes something to put out there.”