A new phenomenon emerged through the 1990s when keyboardist John Medeski, drummer Billy Martin and bassist Chris Wood (www.medeskimartinandwood.com) created what proved to be the most formidable jazz/fusion act without a stringed instrument since Weather Report.
Director Jason Miller’s new Medeski, Martin & Wood documentary, Not Not Jazz (Oscilloscope Laboratories/MVD Entertainment Group) chronicles the trio’s improvisational creative process and provides a bookend to its 1992 debut album, Notes From the Underground, on which Medeski played only acoustic piano.
Yet Not Not Jazz is a far cry from that all-acoustic recording and the trio’s early New York City gigs. MMW’s second album, It’s a Jungle in Here (1993), featured Medeski on additional electric Hammond and Wurlitzer organs, and charted a course for the trio’s self-described “avant-groove” blend of classical training with jazz/fusion creativity. Somehow, that mix eventually resulted in jam band allure.
Surrounded by keyboards in the film, Medeski approximates a mad audio scientist as he teams with Martin (on drums and various percussion instruments) and Wood (on acoustic upright and electric basses) in an attempt to record a new album at Allaire Studio in New York’s Hudson Valley in 2017, 25 years after the trio’s formation.
Miller documents the trio arriving to record its first studio album in seven years, having slowed its output as each member veered into outside projects and educational pursuits, not to mention middle age. And all three musicians are enamored with the studio — a vast, sprawling remote estate on top of a mountain with a picturesque view of the valley below — yet no recording equipment. It was chosen for remoteness and inspirational scenery, with the realization that the audio nuts and bolts would also have to be brought in.
“I’ve never been anyplace like this,” Wood says. “The only place I’ve been in that’s anything like this, I’ve dreamt.”
“It feels really good,” Martin adds. “But it’s definitely a challenge, because there’s no real studio equipment here.”
“We didn’t discuss any music before this,” says Medeski. Master improvisers, MMW can simply get together, blend ideas on the fly, and produce material whether as an exercise or recording project. Early footage of Martin playing a kalimba (an African thumb piano), Wood using a bass pick on his upright, and Medeski creatively shifting keyboard pitches by hand while the rhythm section effortlessly plays one of its elastic inside-out grooves illustrates such dexterity.
MMW is akin to a musical Bermuda Triangle. It consists of New York City native Martin, Colorado-born Wood, and Kentucky native Medeski, who expanded the triangle by moving to South Florida with his family in his youth. It’s where the child piano prodigy studied at the Pine Crest School in Fort Lauderdale and jammed with bass virtuoso Jaco Pastorius.
Six degrees of separation kicked in after Medeski left to attend the New England Conservatory in Boston. Wood was also a student there, and one of their teachers was drummer Bob Moses. That New York City native had not only recorded with guitarist Pat Metheny on his 1976 debut Bright Size Life (with Pastorius on bass), but was also Martin’s private instructor.
Together, they crafted a modern update on the trio format of bandleading Hammond organists like Jimmy Smith and Dr. Lonnie Smith. Those greats famously straddled jazz and soul music starting in the 1960s, and MMW expanded that formula by adding pop, rock, funk, hip-hop and world music elements for a sound owing as much to James Brown as to Thelonious Monk.
Medeski plays a bank of keyboards that includes an electric piano, clavinet and a Mellotron; Martin a sparse drum kit with minimal cymbals that’s adorned with global percussive instruments. Add Wood’s experiments, especially on upright (like alternately playing slide, or changing pitch, with a drumstick), and you have a tapestry that surprised even them by turning a nightclub jazz trio into a worldwide festival act.
Other gems from the MMW catalog include the studio efforts Combustication (1998) and Uninvisible (2002) and the live, all-improvised, all-acoustic Free Magic (2012). The trio also recorded a series of albums with guitar icon John Scofield, who recorded and toured with godfatherly jazz/fusion trumpeter Miles Davis during the 1980s. Those include Out Louder (2006) and Juice (2014). MMW’s latest release is Omnisphere (2018), recorded live with the 20-piece chamber orchestra Alarm Will Sound in 2015.
It’s a rich history that’s only touched upon through occasional archival footage in Not Not Jazz. Within 15 minutes, the unfortunate sub-theme of the film becomes digital equipment problems, and what was supposed to be a documentary about recording an album curiously becomes the opposite.
“Ten years ago, I wouldn’t have been able to handle this,” Medeski says. “This is the time when I would be locked in the bathroom, freaking out that we’re not gonna get a record.”
Footage of another prospective 2017 remote recording location, Tepoztlan, Mexico, then shows the catastrophic 7.4-magnitude earthquake that necessitated the switch to the Hudson Valley. There are also scenes from MMW recording its acclaimed 1996 album Shack-man in Hawaii, successfully captured remotely in spite of similar obstacles while using solar power.
Yet MMW’s improvisational tendencies still created tension with the trio’s label, Blue Note Records, which no longer offered large recording budgets to instrumental artists by the mid-2000s. Tension increased within the group, too, as it often does in such creative situations. Interspersed dinner scenes and instrumental experiments lead to the film divulging something about the trio that was probably largely unknown beforehand, and which harkens back to Medeski’s coping capabilities with adversity.
“Some things got out of hand,” says Liz Penta, a fan who turned into MMW’s longtime manager. “There were times when John Medeski actually would sit down on stage, in his little keyboard spaceship, and not play for, like, 20 minutes at a time. He was mad at Chris and Billy for not reading his mind.”
Further footage of Medeski playing a contemplative piece on a grand piano and confessing his obsessive tendencies; Martin discussing failed auditions, fatherhood and parenthood, and Wood admitting to a midlife crisis lead to what is, if anything, the documentary’s bombshell.
“At one point, we had to go to therapy as a group,” Penta says. “It was our time to process our stuff. We didn’t even know how badly we needed it until we were in that room, and then it would all come out.”
The quote comes during the 67th minute of a 77-minute documentary about the making of an album that apparently never came out. Miller never reveals what, if anything, ever came of the attempted recordings from the mountain lodge, and uses more footage of the three musicians playing individually than together throughout.
In doing so, the director salvaged Not Not Jazz as a not not good home movie for the MMW family, friends and fans rather than a true document of one of the most important jazz/fusion bands of the past few decades.
NOT NOT JAZZ. Directed by: Jason Miller; Starring: Billy Martin, John Medeski and Chris Wood; Studio: Low Spark Films