Barrett Martin
Barrett Martin (born April 14, 1967) is an American Grammy-winning drummer, composer, producer, and author renowned for his contributions to grunge, rock, and world music, particularly as the drummer for the Seattle-based band Screaming Trees and a founding member of Mad Season.[1][2] Over a career spanning more than three decades, he has performed on over 120 albums and film soundtracks, blending influences from jazz, blues, and global percussion traditions, while also earning acclaim as a writer and ethnomusicologist with a master's degree in the field.[3][2] Raised in Olympia, Washington, Martin began his musical journey in the mid-1980s, studying jazz theory and classical music at Western Washington University before earning bachelor's and master's degrees in ethnomusicology from the University of New Mexico.[1][4] His early professional work included drumming for the hardcore punk band Skin Yard in the late 1980s, which helped launch his involvement in Seattle's burgeoning grunge scene.[5] By the early 1990s, he joined Screaming Trees, contributing to their breakthrough albums Sweet Oblivion (1992) and the gold-certified Dust (1996), which featured the hit single "Nearly Lost You," solidifying the band's status in the alternative rock movement.[6] In 1995, Martin co-founded the supergroup Mad Season with members of Pearl Jam, Alice in Chains, and Screaming Trees, releasing the critically acclaimed album Above, known for its raw emotional depth amid personal struggles with addiction.[7] Beyond grunge, Martin's versatility shines in collaborations with artists like Queens of the Stone Age, R.E.M., and the instrumental collective Tuatara, as well as his production work on over 60 albums, including projects in the Peruvian Amazon, Brazil, and Cuba.[2][3] He won a 2017 Latin Grammy for producing Nando Reis' Jardim-Pomar (Best Brazilian Rock Album) and received the 2014 ASCAP Deems Taylor/Virgil Thomson Award for his music writing.[3] As an author, Martin has published books such as The Singing Earth (2017), exploring global musical traditions, Stillpoint (2021), a memoir tied to his album of shamanic-inspired compositions, and The Greatest Band That Ever Wasn't (2023), detailing his experiences with Screaming Trees; he has also contributed essays to outlets like Huffington Post and teaches creative writing at Antioch University.[3][4] His ongoing pursuits reflect a deep commitment to Zen philosophy, world travel, and cross-cultural artistry, influencing projects like the Barrett Martin Group and his 2020 album Scattered Diamonds.[3]Early Life and Education
Early Life
Barrett Martin was born on April 14, 1967, in Olympia, Washington.[8] He grew up in the Pacific Northwest's Cascadia region, surrounded by its wild landscapes and wildlife, which profoundly influenced his early worldview.[3][9] Martin's family played a key role in fostering his musical curiosity. His father, a college drummer who never pursued it professionally, introduced him to Latin jazz, Hawaiian music, and other exotic genres.[10] His grandparents gifted him 78 rpm records of post-World War II big band jazz, featuring drummers like Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich, which ignited his fascination with percussion.[10][11] At home, a player piano stocked with approximately 300 paper rolls of ragtime, big band tunes, and show tunes provided playful early exposure to American musical traditions, which he and his siblings operated as children.[11] Additionally, his parents' residence in Australia during his youth led to visits where he encountered Aboriginal music, expanding his appreciation for world music alongside rock and jazz from local Pacific Northwest scenes.[10] Martin's initial forays into music began in junior high school, where he started playing drums and percussion.[10] By high school, he joined the Tumwater Thunderbird Jazz Ensemble, performing alongside jazz icons such as Freddie Green and Cab Calloway during a Count Basie Big Band event, which deepened his roots in jazz while blues emerged as a foundational influence on his emerging style.[11] These formative experiences in Olympia's cultural environment, combined with familial encouragement, laid the groundwork for his lifelong pursuit of diverse musical expressions.[12]Education
Martin began his formal education in music during the mid-1980s as a college student, where he studied jazz theory, classical percussion, drums, and upright bass.[8] He attended Western Washington University before transferring to the University of Washington in 1987, ultimately dropping out after two years to focus on his burgeoning professional music career.[8] After a hiatus from formal studies spanning approximately 15 years, Martin enrolled at the University of New Mexico around 2000, following the breakup of Screaming Trees, drawn to its renowned anthropology and ethnomusicology department.[13] He resumed his academic pursuits around 2002 at the University of New Mexico's Taos campus, working days as a student and nights as a tile setter and jazz musician.[14] He earned a bachelor's degree around 2007 and a master's degree in ethnomusicology and linguistics by December 2008, both from the University of New Mexico.[14][8] His coursework and research emphasized world music, indigenous traditions, and percussion techniques, including fieldwork with communities in regions like the Peruvian Amazon and West Africa.[3][15] This academic foundation bridged theoretical insights into global musical cultures with Martin's practical applications, enabling him to integrate diverse rhythms and traditions into his productions and compositions.[16][14]Musical Career
Skin Yard
Barrett Martin joined Skin Yard in 1990 as the band's drummer, following a 14-month hiatus during which the group cycled through several previous percussionists, including Matt Cameron and Jason Finn.[17][18] His arrival marked a revitalization for the Seattle-based outfit, enabling them to resume activity amid the burgeoning grunge movement.[19] As a powerhouse behind the kit, Martin infused the band's sound with dynamic energy, contributing to their reputation as pioneers in blending heavy metal riffs, punk aggression, and grunge's raw intensity.[17][20] Skin Yard's style during Martin's tenure emphasized sludge-heavy grooves and experimental edges, drawing parallels to contemporaries like Soundgarden through shared musical explorations in heavy rock and psychedelia.[21] Martin's drumming added rhythmic depth and complexity, elevating tracks with intricate patterns that complemented the band's abrasive guitar work led by Jack Endino and vocalist Ben McMillan.[22] Key recordings under his involvement included the 1990 album Fist Sized Chunks and the 1991 album 1000 Smiling Knuckles, both produced by Endino and released on Cruz Records, which captured the group's evolving heaviness.[22] The band also contributed to the Seattle scene's interconnected web, with Endino's production ties extending to Soundgarden and other acts, while Skin Yard opened shows for Nirvana during the explosive rise of Nevermind.[23] In fall 1991, they embarked on their sole European tour, exposing their sound to international audiences and solidifying local bonds in Seattle's underground circuit.[24] Martin's involvement with Skin Yard lasted from 1990 to 1992, concluding with the band's dissolution amid internal shifts, including bassist Daniel House's departure in early 1991.[17][25] This period honed his skills as a versatile percussionist, exposing him to the collaborative intensity of the grunge ecosystem and laying foundational experiences for his subsequent projects.[23] He departed shortly after the breakup to join Screaming Trees, transitioning from Skin Yard's raw aggression to broader rock explorations.[17]Screaming Trees
Barrett Martin joined Screaming Trees in 1991, replacing drummer Mark Pickerel just prior to the band's signing with Epic Records and the recording of their major-label debut album Sweet Oblivion.[26] His arrival stabilized the rhythm section during a transitional period for the Ellensburg, Washington-based group, which had already established itself in the underground scene through indie releases on SST Records. Martin's technical proficiency and intuitive feel quickly integrated with the band's core lineup—vocalist Mark Lanegan, guitarist Gary Lee Conner, and bassist Van Conner—allowing for a more polished sound on Sweet Oblivion, released in 1992.[27] The band's music drew from psychedelic rock roots and the raw energy of grunge, blending hazy, '60s-inspired grooves with heavy, distorted riffs characteristic of the Seattle sound. Martin's percussion work added a distinctive groove and textural depth, often incorporating dynamic fills and layered rhythms that enhanced the psychedelic haze without overpowering Lanegan's brooding vocals or the Conners' swirling guitars. This approach shone on Sweet Oblivion, where tracks like the single "Nearly Lost You" featured Martin's propulsive, boot-stomping drum pattern—recorded in just one or two takes—which became a signature element. The song, an 11th-hour addition to the Singles soundtrack, propelled the album's success, earning heavy MTV rotation and exposing Screaming Trees to a broader audience amid the grunge explosion.[27][3] Following Sweet Oblivion's momentum, Screaming Trees released Dust in 1996, another Epic album where Martin's contributions included subtle world-music influences on percussion, such as congas and tabla, to enrich the band's evolving psychedelic-grunge palette. Guest appearances, including from Pearl Jam's Mike McCready—a future Mad Season collaborator with Martin and Lanegan—underscored the interconnected Seattle scene. However, internal tensions, exacerbated by substance abuse and creative clashes, led to a hiatus after the Dust tour, culminating in the band's official disbandment in 2000.[3][27] Reunion efforts surfaced sporadically, including a planned 2016 tour that fell apart when Lanegan declined to participate, reflecting ongoing personal and logistical challenges. Despite these setbacks, Screaming Trees' legacy endures as a cornerstone of Northwest rock, with Martin's tenure marking their most commercially viable and artistically refined era, influencing subsequent alternative acts through their fusion of psychedelia and grit.[28]Mad Season
Mad Season formed in 1994 as a Seattle supergroup, bringing together vocalist Layne Staley of Alice in Chains, guitarist Mike McCready of Pearl Jam, drummer Barrett Martin of the Screaming Trees, and bassist John Baker Saunders, a Chicago blues musician. The project originated when McCready, attending rehab for addiction, connected with Saunders and reached out to Martin to form a side band, with Staley joining based on his prior friendship with Martin from touring. This collaboration emerged from the tight-knit Seattle music community, providing a creative outlet amid personal challenges.[29][30] Martin played a key role in co-writing and co-producing the band's sole studio album, Above, released in March 1995 by Columbia Records, alongside McCready and producer Brett Eliason. The recording sessions occurred in Seattle studios, emphasizing live takes to capture a raw, intimate sound infused with blues elements drawn from Saunders' heritage and Martin's versatile percussion work, including marimba and cello, which added subtle jazz-like textures to the grunge framework. The album's brooding melodies and stadium-scale riffs marked a departure from standard post-grunge, highlighting emotional depth over aggression.[29][3][30] The group performed only a handful of live shows, most notably a New Year's Eve concert on December 31, 1995, at Seattle's RKCNDY club, which showcased their chemistry in a high-energy setting. However, Mad Season disbanded soon after due to Staley's worsening addiction struggles, which prevented further recording; the band attempted sessions for a follow-up album in 1996 but shelved them, and tragedy compounded with Saunders' death in 1999 and Staley's in 2002. A 2013 deluxe edition of Above, released by Sony Legacy, included unreleased tracks from those sessions—some featuring guest vocals by Mark Lanegan—and the full RKCNDY performance, reviving interest in the project.[29][30][3] Musically and emotionally, Mad Season served as a therapeutic vehicle for its members, fostering sobriety and spiritual reflection during turbulent times, with Martin noting the heightened awareness it brought amid recovery. Above earned gold certification and reached No. 24 on the Billboard 200, cementing the band's legacy as a poignant, one-off highlight of Seattle's grunge era, underscoring themes of loss and resilience.[29][31]Tuatara
Tuatara is an instrumental ensemble co-founded by Barrett Martin in 1996 alongside Peter Buck of R.E.M. on guitar, Justin Harwood of Luna on bass, and jazz saxophonist Skerik.[32] The group emerged from Martin's desire to create music evoking "a film that had never been made," drawing on collaborative sessions among Seattle's music scene musicians to explore cinematic soundscapes.[32] Martin's leadership as the primary percussionist and composer shaped the band's core sound, integrating his background in rock drumming with global rhythmic traditions.[32] Central to Tuatara's identity was Martin's innovative blending of jazz improvisation, rock structures, and diverse global sounds, including exotic percussion like congas, marimbas, and tablas alongside electronic elements.[32] This fusion created atmospheric, genre-defying compositions that evoked late-1960s experimental jazz-rock while incorporating world music influences from Martin's ethnomusicology studies.[33] The band's debut album, Trading with the Enemy (1998), exemplified this approach through tracks featuring layered improvisations and multicultural instrumentation, with Martin driving the rhythmic foundation.[32] Live performances and tours emphasized spontaneity, allowing members and rotating guests—such as Mike McCready of Pearl Jam—to contribute extended improvisational sections that highlighted the ensemble's fluid, collective creativity.[32] Over nearly two decades, Tuatara evolved from a loose collective into a more structured yet flexible unit, releasing albums intermittently and incorporating side projects that broadened its sonic palette.[34] By the mid-2000s, Martin's production role expanded, as seen in explorations of progressive beats, shamanic rhythms, and filmic moods on releases like East of the Sun and West of the Moon (2006), which featured international guests including Israeli singer Adama.[33] The group's longevity until around 2014 reflected Martin's commitment to cross-cultural experimentation, with side endeavors like his Fast Horse Recordings label amplifying Tuatara's influence on world music fusion.[33] This period significantly expanded Martin's international musical vocabulary, bridging his grunge roots with global percussion traditions.[32]Walking Papers and Later Bands
In 2012, Barrett Martin co-founded the Seattle-based blues-rock supergroup Walking Papers alongside vocalist and guitarist Jeff Angell, bassist Duff McKagan of Guns N' Roses, and keyboardist Benjamin Anderson.[35] The band drew on Martin's longstanding connections within the Seattle music scene to create a sound blending hard rock with subtle jazz influences, emphasizing Martin's driving rhythms and full-bodied percussion that evoked drummers like Max Roach and John Bonham.[35] Their self-titled debut album, released that year on Loud & Proud Records, showcased darkly buoyant themes of hard-earned life experiences through artful songwriting and confident subtlety.[35][3] Walking Papers honed their material through extensive live tours in 2014, refining their quartet dynamic before recording their follow-up, WP2, in 2018 at Pink Duck Studios in Burbank, California.[35] Martin not only drummed but also co-produced the album with Angell, incorporating innovative tom patterns and a mature blues-rock edge that highlighted the band's evolution as veteran collaborators.[35] The record maintained the group's focus on storytelling and emotional depth, solidifying their reputation for live performances that balanced intensity with nuance.[35][3] In 2015, Martin joined forces with McKagan and Pearl Jam guitarist Mike McCready to form the loose supergroup Levee Walkers, a one-off project rooted in their shared Seattle history and centered on blues-infused rock.[36] The core trio—Martin on drums, McKagan on bass, and McCready on guitar—collaborated with rotating vocalists for limited releases, beginning with 2016 singles like "El Viento/Alma" featuring Raquel Sofia and "Freedom Song/Tears For The West" with Jaz Coleman.[3] Their most prominent output arrived in 2017 with the two-song self-titled single "All Things Fade Away/Madness," featuring vocalist Ayron Jones and emphasizing cathartic, poignant themes of fade and emotional release.[37][36][3] This effort underscored Martin's role in fostering spontaneous, high-caliber collaborations among rock elders, without pursuing full tours or albums.[36] Shifting toward more acoustic and soulful territories, Martin helped form Silverlites in 2019 with vocalist and poet Joseph Arthur, R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck, and The Black Crowes guitarist Rich Robinson.[38] The band began recording in a Nashville hotel room that year, persisting through the pandemic to produce an "old school" sound of classic songwriting, acoustic and electric guitars, and soulful backbeats, with Martin handling drums, upright bass, keyboards, and backing vocals while also producing and mixing the effort at Flux Studios in 2021.[38] Their self-titled debut album, released on November 15, 2024, via Sunyata Records, featured 12 tracks including the lead single "Don't Go, Don't Stay," reflecting themes of introspection and maturity among its veteran lineup.[38] By 2022, Martin had co-founded another supergroup, Drink The Sea, with Buck, multi-instrumentalist Alain Johannes (Queens of the Stone Age, Eleven), vocalist Duke Garwood, percussionist Lisette Garcia, and bassist Abbey Blackwell, aiming to capture the essence of bands they aspired to join in later career stages.[39] The project released its debut single "Outside Again" in May 2025, followed by additional tracks like "House of Flowers," and issued two albums—a primary release on September 19, 2025, and a sister album on October 3, 2025—as a double CD edition exploring connections between humanity and the natural world through global recordings and visuals.[40][39] Drink The Sea supported these with a UK and Ireland tour from November 11 to 21, 2025, performing new material alongside select classics, while already working on a third album to emphasize live collaboration and thematic depth.[39]Solo Work
Barrett Martin Group
The Barrett Martin Group emerged in 2004 as Barrett Martin's primary solo outlet, debuting with the album The Painted Desert, which showcased collaborations with global musicians drawing from diverse cultural traditions such as Middle Eastern, African, and Latin American sounds.[3] This launch marked Martin's shift toward independent artistry following his experiences in rock bands, allowing him to explore expansive, instrumental compositions free from conventional structures.[41] Over the subsequent years, Martin helmed the group as composer, producer, and multi-instrumentalist across 11 albums, culminating in Atmospheric Tremblings: Music Inspired by Stars and Galaxies of the Northern Hemisphere (2025), each release pushing boundaries through meticulous layering of percussion, strings, and winds.[3] [42] Notable releases include Indwell (2019), a 25-track collection of ambient and percussion pieces created in collaboration with the Nirguna Yoga Center in Albuquerque, New Mexico, for yoga, dance, or martial arts practices; and Songs of the Firebird (2019), a 20-track instrumental album serving as a soundtrack to his narrative book of the same name, incorporating global influences like jazz-funk and world fusion.[43] [44] Later albums such as Stillpoint (2021), featuring shamanic-inspired compositions tied to his memoir, and Atmospheric Tremblings (2025), an ambient exploration with collaborators including Alain Johannes, further exemplify this evolution.[45] [46] The group's work emphasizes integration of world music elements—blending oud, djembe, and frame drums with Western instrumentation—to create immersive soundscapes that reflect Martin's global travels and ethnomusicological interests.[41] Zen influences permeate the music, evident in meditative rhythms and themes of impermanence, while Martin's percussion innovations, such as custom-tuned cajons and hybrid drum kits, drive the experimental ethos.[3] Key collaborators enriched this vision, including R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck, who contributed on tracks like "Blue Sunrise" from Atlas (2011), adding textured guitar lines to the group's fusion style, and Iraqi oud virtuoso Rahim Alhaj, whose intricate melodies featured prominently on albums like Zenga (2009) and Scattered Diamonds (2020).[47] Operating with full artistic independence, the Barrett Martin Group has released its catalog through Martin's own Sunyata Records, enabling uncompromised creative control and direct connection with listeners.[3]Other Solo Projects
Post-2020, Martin's solo work evolved toward multimedia and experimental formats, emphasizing live performances that integrate music with spoken narratives. In 2021, he launched a one-man storytelling tour, featuring solo drumming on multiple percussion instruments, personal anecdotes from his global travels, and projections of photography and short films, often drawing from his ethnomusicological experiences.[48] These shows continued into subsequent years, such as the 2023 "Singing Earth" tour, where Martin performed unaccompanied sets combining live percussion with spoken word explorations of world music cultures, marking a shift to intimate, narrative-driven expressions.[49] In 2025, Martin ventured into collaborative singles outside full-band contexts, contributing percussion to tracks with notable musicians. He joined Peter Buck, Duke Garwood, and Alain Johannes on "Outside Again," the debut single from the ad-hoc project Drink The Sea, which drew inspiration from Amazon River ecosystems and featured ambient, exploratory soundscapes.[40] Later that year, the group released "Sacred Tree," another single highlighting Martin's rhythmic contributions amid the collaborators' guitar and vocal elements, further showcasing his role in spontaneous, issue-themed recordings.[50]Production and Collaborations
Ethnomusicology Projects
Barrett Martin's ethnomusicology projects stem from his master's degree in ethnomusicology and linguistics from the University of New Mexico, where he focused on global musical traditions and cultural documentation.[3] These initiatives emphasize the production and preservation of indigenous music, particularly through collaborations with communities in remote regions. His work prioritizes respectful engagement with traditional practitioners, integrating their vocal traditions into recordings that highlight cultural significance without commercial exploitation. A cornerstone of Martin's projects is his production of albums featuring the Shipibo shamans of the Peruvian Amazon. He recorded the debut album, Woven Songs of the Amazon, in 2004 near the village of San Francisco de Yarina Cocha, capturing sacred healing songs known as icaros during live ceremonies.[51] This was followed by Woven Songs of the Amazon II: A Ceremony of Healing with the Shipibo Shamans in 2019, which includes over 40 icaros spanning 90 minutes, and Woven Songs of the Amazon III: The Shipibo Shamans & Special Guests released in 2025, incorporating additional performers to enrich the shamanic chants.[52][53] In these productions, Martin blends the shamans' a cappella vocals with subtle modern elements such as ambient and jazz backings, creating a sonic framework that amplifies the traditional songs while maintaining their spiritual integrity.[54] Martin extended his efforts to Alaska with the 2020 production of Songs & Stories of the Arctic Village Gwich'in: A Message to the World in collaboration with the Neets'aii Gwich'in community of Arctic Village. This album compiles traditional songs, stories, and fiddle music from the indigenous group, underscoring their cultural heritage amid environmental threats to the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.[55] His field recordings in both the Peruvian Amazon and Alaskan Arctic prioritize cultural preservation, involving direct immersion with communities to document oral traditions at risk of erasure.[56] Throughout these projects, Martin emphasizes ethical practices, including full community consent and directing 100% of proceeds from the Shipibo albums back to the shamans and their communities to support their healing work and livelihoods.[57] Such collaborations foster mutual respect, ensuring that indigenous voices remain central and that recordings serve as tools for cultural advocacy rather than extraction.[34]Commercial Productions
Barrett Martin has amassed over 60 production credits across rock, blues, jazz, and world music albums since the 1990s.[3] His approach often incorporates layered percussion elements to add depth and rhythmic complexity, enhancing the core sound of blues, jazz, and rock while maintaining genre authenticity.[23] In 2017, Martin co-produced Nando Reis' album Jardim-Pomar with Jack Endino, earning a Latin Grammy Award for Best Portuguese Language Rock or Alternative Album; this marked his first win in the category and highlighted his growing impact in Latin music production.[58] He has received additional Latin Grammy nominations for related works, including another collaboration with Reis, underscoring his recognition in the industry.[59] This accolade also contributed to broader Grammy-level acknowledgment for his production expertise in international rock and alternative genres. Martin's productions for blues artists include CeDell Davis' 2016 album Even the Devil Gets the Blues, where he layered percussion to amplify the raw Delta blues style with subtle rhythmic textures drawn from global traditions.[60] In rock, he produced Ayron Jones' 2017 debut full-length Audio Paint Job (co-produced with Jack Endino), infusing Seattle grunge influences with dynamic percussion arrangements to elevate Jones' guitar-driven sound.[61] For jazz-inflected projects, Martin co-produced Joy Harjo's 2021 spoken-word and music album I Pray for My Enemies, using percussion overlays to create atmospheric support for Harjo's poetic delivery and ensemble performances.[62] More recently, in 2023, Martin produced Hector Tellez Jr.'s album The Great Unknown, collaborating with R.E.M. guitarist Peter Buck on guitar contributions, blending rock elements with Tellez's Cuban-rooted songwriting through intricate percussion integration.[63] His ongoing work from 2023 to 2025 includes further productions for Brazilian artists, such as the album Uma Estrela Misteriosa Revelará o Segredo with Nando Reis recorded in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, and additional Latin projects emphasizing Mexican and broader regional influences in commercial rock and alternative releases.[64]Writing and Media
Books
Barrett Martin's literary output, published under his Sunyata Books imprint, weaves together elements of autobiography, philosophical reflection, and musical anecdotes, often serving as companions to his solo recordings and extending his ethnomusicological pursuits into prose. These works draw from his global travels, Zen influences, and experiences in the Seattle rock scene, offering readers intimate insights into creativity, spirituality, and cultural interconnectedness.[65][66] His debut book, The Singing Earth: Adventures from a World of Music (2017), explores Martin's three-decade journey as a musician across six continents and 14 regions, highlighting themes of ecology, community, and humanity's spiritual bonds through song. The narrative incorporates stories from the Seattle music scene, global "song lines," and field recordings, accompanied by a 44-track digital soundtrack of collaborations and ambient sounds that underscore the book's emphasis on music as a universal connector.[65][67] In The Way of the Zen Cowboy: Fireside Stories from a Globetrotting Rhythmatist (2019), Martin presents 35 short stories drawn from his Pacific Northwest upbringing, worldwide adventures, and encounters with indigenous wisdom, structured around seven themes of human development. This memoir blends personal philosophy with rhythmic storytelling, and it ties directly to his solo album Songs of the Firebird, which serves as an auditory extension of the book's fireside reflections.[65][68] Stillpoint: Reflections from a Year on the Cliff (2021) consists of 18 meditative short stories inspired by Martin's time in the Pacific Northwest wilderness, addressing childhood memories, animal encounters, environmental concerns, and Zen principles—where "stillpoint" refers to the pause between thoughts that reveals clarity. The book is paired with an all-acoustic album of the same name, self-produced by Martin with contributions from musicians like Dave Carter and Lisette Garcia, creating a dual sonic and literary meditation on nature and creativity.[65][69] Martin's fourth book, The Greatest Band That Ever Wasn’t: The Story of the Roughest, Toughest, Most Hell-Raising Band to Ever Come Out of the Pacific Northwest, the Screaming Trees (2023), chronicles his decade as drummer for the Screaming Trees, focusing on their turbulent path to near-stardom amid Seattle's 1992 grunge explosion through a 33-story collection that mixes comedic and tragic elements. As his best-selling work to date, it provides a candid portrait of rock band dynamics, musical influences, and personal growth from 1991 to 2016.[66][70][71]Journalism and Other Media
Barrett Martin began contributing to The Huffington Post in 2013 with a series of essays on music, culture, and environmental issues, including pieces such as "Music and the Politics of Resistance," which explored the role of music in social and political activism, and "An Indigenous View of Health," discussing traditional perspectives on well-being among Native American communities.[72][73] His Huffington Post writings also covered global cultural exchanges, as in "40,000 Years of Singing," which examined Aboriginal Australian art and its musical traditions, and travel-related topics like "Cuba, An Ally We Need," reflecting on cultural diplomacy through music tours.[74][75] In parallel, Martin has frequently published with Riot Material since the late 2010s, focusing on environmental degradation and societal shifts; notable examples include the two-part series "Amazon to Arctic," addressing climate impacts on ecosystems from the Amazon rainforest to the Arctic tundra, with references to indigenous resistance against projects like the Dakota Access Pipeline.[76][77] Additional Riot Material contributions, such as "Technology Killed The City," critiqued the erosion of urban community due to digital isolation.[78] In recognition of his music journalism, Martin received the ASCAP Deems Taylor/Virgil Thomson Award in 2014 for excellence in writing about music, honoring his contributions to cultural discourse through platforms like The Huffington Post.[79] His essays extend to philosophical and activist themes, including Zen Buddhism in works like "Zen, Drumming, And The Way Of The Sword," where he draws parallels between martial arts discipline, percussion, and mindfulness practices, and "The Indigenous Way Of Wisdom," advocating for greater governmental attention to Native knowledge on environmental stewardship.[80][81] On Seattle's music history, Martin has written reflectively in essays such as "Sewing Your Way To Enlightenment," recounting his departure from the 1990s grunge scene toward broader global influences, emphasizing the city's pre-grunge blues and punk roots.[82] Beyond print, Martin has engaged in numerous interviews and podcasts, sharing insights on his career and ethnomusicological pursuits; examples include appearances on the "Come to Where I'm From" podcast in 2021, discussing his global travels, and the KNKX Studio Session in 2025, where he traced his musical evolution from Seattle rock to jazz fusion.[83][11] He also hosted the VEVO series Singing Earth, announced in 2023 with episodes released starting in 2025 that explore global music traditions. By November 2025, four episodes had been released: one on the Shipibo shamans of the Peruvian Amazon, another on Brazilian music with Nando Reis and Peter Buck, a third featuring blues legend Cedell Davis, and a fourth on Icelandic landscapes with Duke Garwood and Jason Everman.[84][56][64][85][86] By 2025, Martin's media presence had evolved to incorporate social media storytelling, using platforms like Facebook and Instagram to share episodic narratives from his travels and projects, such as updates on Singing Earth episodes and climate activism, thereby extending his essayistic style into interactive, audience-engaged formats.[87][88] These efforts often echo themes from his longer works, blending personal reflection with calls for cultural preservation.[65]Teaching and Other Pursuits
Academic Teaching
Barrett Martin served as an adjunct professor of ethnomusicology and percussion at Antioch University-Seattle from 2010 to 2017.[89] In this role, he taught one class per year, typically during the winter quarter, while balancing his professional music career.[89] His Master's degree in ethnology and linguistics from the University of New Mexico provided a strong foundation for his academic contributions in these areas.[16] Martin's courses at Antioch focused on world music, cultural expression, and the intersection of music with social and environmental issues.[90] He offered classes such as "Music as Social Commentary," exploring how music serves as a tool for activism and cultural critique, and "The Singing Earth," which examined music, ecology, and indigenous traditions to inspire student engagement with global challenges.[16][89] These courses emphasized ethnomusicology and percussion techniques, drawing on diverse global traditions to foster a deeper understanding of music production and performance.[41][9] Throughout his tenure, Martin mentored students by encouraging the integration of academic study with professional music practice, leveraging his own experiences as a touring musician and producer to guide aspiring artists.[91] He incorporated personal fieldwork from projects in the Amazon rainforest and Alaska into his curriculum, using these narratives to illustrate the role of music in indigenous communities and environmental advocacy.[89][92] This approach helped students blend theoretical knowledge with real-world applications, promoting a holistic view of music as a cultural and activist force.[9] After 2017, Martin continued his educational outreach through guest lectures and workshops at various universities across the United States, including New York University, Occidental College, and Emory University.[93] These sessions often highlighted ethnomusicology, world music traditions, and the cultural impacts of globalization, extending his influence beyond formal professorships.[91][3]Zen Practice and Activism
Barrett Martin has practiced Soto Zen Buddhism for nearly 25 years, beginning his formal training in the late 1990s. He underwent Lay Ordination in 2000 at the Detroit Street Zen Center in Los Angeles under Reverend Dr. Yuko Conniff, where he studied for five years.[94] Martin continued his practice at the Albuquerque Zen Center for another five years while pursuing graduate studies at the University of New Mexico, incorporating daily zazen (seated meditation), kinhin (walking meditation), and mindfulness into his routine.[94] As a self-identified Zen artist, Martin creates visual works deeply inspired by his meditation practice and global travels, blending traditional Zen aesthetics with personal expression. His portfolio includes zenga paintings—calligraphic ink works on paper, card stock, and canvas—and innovative enso sculptures made from hammered clay coated in gold or silver leaf, black acrylic, or white clay, symbolizing elements like Earth, Water, Fire, Moon, Sunyata (emptiness), and the Sun.[94] These pieces, developed over the past decade, reflect contemplative states achieved through meditation and draw from encounters in diverse landscapes, from the Pacific Northwest to remote indigenous communities.[94] Martin's Zen practices profoundly shape his creative output, infusing his music and writing with themes of mindfulness and interconnectedness; for instance, he describes drumming as an extension of sword practice in kendo, where focused awareness channels energy without distraction.[80] This philosophy also informs his book The Way of the Zen Cowboy (2019), a collection of stories that merge Zen principles with reflections on discipline and presence drawn from his lifelong meditation retreats and daily rituals. Martin's activism centers on advocating for indigenous rights, environmental protection, and cultural preservation, with a particular focus on the Amazon rainforest and Arctic regions. Since his first visit to the Upper Peruvian Amazon in 2004, where he collaborated with the Shipibo-Conibo people to record their icaros (healing songs), he has championed efforts to safeguard indigenous territories against deforestation and resource extraction.[95] In 2016, he traveled to Arctic Village, Alaska, 200 miles north of the Arctic Circle, to join Gwich'in Nation gatherings opposing oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, engaging with elders like Sarah James to amplify their voices on climate impacts.[77] His work extends to supporting communities such as the Sarayaku in Ecuador and the Cordillera in the Philippines through documentation and awareness-raising, as detailed in his book The Singing Earth (2017), which chronicles musical exchanges with indigenous musicians worldwide to preserve oral traditions amid environmental threats. Through multimedia projects like the Singing Earth series, launched in 2025, Martin continues to foster global dialogue on these issues via storytelling and recordings that highlight cultural resilience.[95] Rooted in the Pacific Northwest, where he grew up on a small farm near Tumwater, Washington, Martin's Zen philosophy harmonizes with the region's natural ethos, viewing its landscapes as a foundation for his contemplative and activist pursuits—evident in how he weaves local cowboy heritage with Eastern mindfulness to address broader ecological interconnectedness.[96]Discography
Solo and Group Albums
Barrett Martin's solo and group albums primarily explore instrumental jazz, world music, and atmospheric compositions, often featuring collaborations with musicians from rock and jazz backgrounds. The Barrett Martin Group, his primary ensemble for these projects, released eleven albums from 2004 to 2025 on labels such as Fast Horse Recordings and Sunyata Records, typically in CD and digital formats. These works highlight Martin's percussion work alongside guest artists like Peter Buck of R.E.M. and Wayne Horvitz. Standalone solo releases under Martin's name include instrumental albums and recent singles, emphasizing thematic elements tied to his writing on global cultures and nature.[44][97][98] The Barrett Martin Group's discography is as follows:| Title | Year | Label | Formats | Runtime | Key Collaborators/Guests |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Painted Desert | 2004 | Fast Horse Recordings | CD, digital | 62:00 | Mike McCready (Pearl Jam), Chino Moreno (Deftones), Skerik, Eyvind Kang[99][100] |
| Earthspeaker | 2006 | Fast Horse Recordings | CD, digital | 52:14 | Wayne Horvitz, Bill Frisell, Craig Flory[101][99] |
| Zenga | 2009 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital | 50:32 | Rahim AlHaj, Jon Gomm, Seattle Symphony strings[102] |
| Atlas | 2011 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital | 61:00 | Peter Buck (R.E.M.), Kim Thayil (Soundgarden), Tuatara members[103][104] |
| Artifact | 2012 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital | 55:46 | Wayne Horvitz, Eyvind Kang, Craig Flory[105][102] |
| Transcendence | 2018 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital | 52:00 | Solo percussion focus with guest strings; produced by Martin[44][106] |
| Songs of the Firebird | 2019 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital (double album) | 79:00 (approx.) | Peter Buck, Wayne Horvitz, Kim Thayil, Seattle jazz ensemble (20 tracks)[44][107] |
| Indwell: Music for Movement | 2019 | Sunyata Records | Digital, streaming | 80:00 (approx.) | Compilation sequence for dance; solo curation by Martin[44][108] |
| Scattered Diamonds | 2020 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital | 79:00 | Peter Buck, Duke Garwood, jazz ensemble; ninth studio album[48][109] |
| Stillpoint | 2021 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital | 50:00 (approx.) | Wayne Horvitz, guest percussionists; ties to Martin's Zen themes[110][44] |
| Atmospheric Tremblings: Music Inspired by Stars and Galaxies of the Northern Hemisphere | 2025 | Sunyata Records | CD, digital | 49:49 | Peter Buck (guitar), jazz ensemble[111][42] |