Steve Rodby
Steve Rodby is an American jazz bassist, record producer, and music editor, best known for his three-decade tenure with the Pat Metheny Group (PMG), during which he contributed to the band's innovative fusion of jazz, rock, and world music influences.[1] Born December 9, 1954, in Joliet, Illinois, Rodby began studying classical orchestral bass at age ten, developing parallel interests in pop and jazz that shaped his versatile musical style.[2] He has won 13 Grammy Awards, primarily for his work with PMG, including albums in categories such as Best Jazz Fusion Performance and Best Contemporary Jazz Album.[3] Rodby graduated from Northwestern University with a degree in classical bass performance, after which he established himself as a multi-style studio musician in Chicago, performing on both acoustic and electric bass across genres.[1] Early in his career, he played with the University of Chicago's Contemporary Chamber Players (CCP) and performed at the Jazz Showcase club alongside jazz masters, honing his improvisational skills in live settings.[2] In 1981, he joined PMG at the invitation of guitarist Pat Metheny, becoming a core member alongside keyboardist Lyle Mays, drummer Paul Wertico, and others, and contributing to the group's signature sound through intricate bass lines and rhythmic foundations.[1] Beyond performing, Rodby has been an active producer since the early 1980s, working on PMG recordings as well as projects for other artists, and he has served as a video editor for PBS music specials and commercial music DVDs.[2] His production credits extend to films such as The Falcon and the Snowman (1985), where he contributed to the soundtrack, and more recent collaborations like co-producing Eliane Elias's album Time and Again.[4] In recent years, Rodby has toured and recorded with the jazz supergroup The Impossible Gentlemen, continuing to explore improvisational and ensemble-based music.[1]Early Life and Education
Childhood and Initial Training
Steve Rodby was born on December 9, 1954, in Joliet, Illinois, a working-class suburb of Chicago where the local environment offered limited formal music opportunities but proximity to the city's vibrant scene later influenced his path. He grew up in a musical family, with his father serving as a choir director and composer who also played guitar, providing an early immersive environment in classical and popular music traditions. As a child, Rodby drew initial inspiration from watching the television show Captain Kangaroo, particularly the character Mr. Green Jeans demonstrating bass playing, which sparked his fascination with the instrument amid a household filled with his father's compositions and performances.[5] At age 10, Rodby began formal studies in classical orchestral bass, initially guided by his father, who taught him foundational techniques through ear-based playing along with guitar sessions, encouraging improvisational elements from the start. His practice routines were self-directed and ear-based, often involving playing along with his father's guitar sessions to develop intonation and rhythm, progressing from basic accompaniment to more intermediate classical repertoire by his early teens. This structured yet familial approach built a solid technical foundation, emphasizing precision and ensemble playing typical of orchestral training.[5] During adolescence, Rodby cultivated parallel interests in pop and jazz music, listening to contemporary recordings that expanded beyond his classical roots and fueled a desire for more expressive, improvisatory styles. These pursuits manifested in early collaborative experiences, such as jamming sessions in elementary school with childhood friend Peter Labella, a violinist, where they experimented with blending classical and popular elements. By his teenage years, this development led to foundational performances in Illinois, honing his adaptability across genres while still in high school. This pre-college phase laid the groundwork for his transition to university-level training.[5]University Studies and Early Influences
Rodby enrolled at Northwestern University in the early 1970s, pursuing a Bachelor of Music degree with a focus on classical bass performance. His curriculum emphasized orchestral techniques and classical repertoire under the guidance of Warren Benfield, principal bassist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra, who provided rigorous training in fundamental bass skills and ensemble precision.[5][6] Complementing this, Rodby took jazz electives that introduced him to improvisation and contemporary styles, marking his transition from classical foundations—built during childhood—to jazz applications.[5] He graduated in 1977, having balanced academic study with practical immersion in Chicago's musical scene.[7][1] A pivotal influence during his university years was mentorship from jazz bassist Rufus Reid, a Northwestern alumnus, through private lessons from 1972 to 1974. Reid taught Rodby essential jazz bass techniques, including walking bass lines for swing feel, improvisational phrasing, and integration within small ensembles, drawing from Reid's experience in professional jazz settings.[5][8] These sessions, held alongside campus activities, helped Rodby adapt his classical precision to the rhythmic and harmonic demands of jazz, fostering a versatile approach that would define his career. Rodby also collaborated with Northwestern's jazz band director, Cliff Colnot, performing arrangements that honed his ensemble playing in a collegiate context.[5] On campus and beyond, Rodby gained performance experience through university ensembles and local gigs, becoming the house bassist at Chicago's Jazz Showcase club by midway through his studies, where he played five nights a week with visiting jazz artists. These opportunities, facilitated by university connections to the city's jazz ecosystem, included backing acts at the venue and other downtown spots, exposing him to professional workflows and improvisational demands in real-time settings.[5] This blend of academic rigor and practical engagement at Northwestern solidified Rodby's shift toward jazz while leveraging his classical training as a foundational strength.[5]Professional Career
Chicago Jazz Scene and Early Gigs
After graduating from Northwestern University in 1977 with a degree in classical bass performance, Steve Rodby fully entered the vibrant Chicago jazz circuit, building on connections formed during his studies.[5][7] His university mentor, jazz bassist Rufus Reid, provided a crucial bridge to professional opportunities in the city.[9] Rodby's breakthrough came when Reid relocated to New York, vacating the house bassist role at the renowned Jazz Showcase club on Chicago's North Side.[9][5] He quickly filled the position, performing five nights a week with three sets each evening alongside a rotating house band of veteran musicians, including drummers who had backed Charlie Parker and pianists with decades of experience.[9] This steady gig allowed him to accompany prominent visiting artists such as vibraphonist Milt Jackson, saxophonist Joe Henderson, saxophonist Sonny Stitt, and trumpeter Art Farmer, honing his improvisational skills in a demanding live environment central to Chicago's jazz ecosystem during the late 1970s.[9][5] In addition to club performances, Rodby pursued initial studio work, contributing to television commercials and pop-jazz fusion recordings that diversified his experience and strengthened his local reputation before larger opportunities arose.[5] These early endeavors in Chicago's jazz community, characterized by rigorous nightly routines and exposure to established figures, laid the foundation for his professional growth.[9]Role in the Pat Metheny Group
Steve Rodby joined the Pat Metheny Group in 1981, replacing bassist Mark Egan who had departed the previous year after contributing to the band's early albums. Metheny, seeking to incorporate more acoustic bass into the ensemble's sound, contacted Rodby—an acquaintance from a pre-college music camp—and invited him to audition in New York City; Rodby impressed during the single session and was hired on the spot.[9][5][10] Rodby appeared on every Pat Metheny Group studio album from Offramp (1982) through The Way Up (2005), providing foundational bass lines that anchored the band's fusion of jazz, rock, and world music elements. On Offramp, his debut recording with the group, Rodby played both acoustic and electric bass, contributing to the album's innovative textures alongside Metheny's guitar work and Nana Vasconcelos's percussion; tracks like "Are You Going with Me?" showcased his role in supporting extended improvisational sections and harmonic arrangements. Throughout his tenure, Rodby often participated in refining compositional structures, offering input on bass voicings and ensemble balance during rehearsals, which helped evolve the group's signature layered sound.[11][12][13] In addition to his performative contributions, Rodby served as co-producer on the Pat Metheny Group's final five albums—We Live Here (1995), Quartet (1996), Imaginary Day (1997), Speaking of Now (2002), and The Way Up (2005)—where he handled audio editing, mixing oversight, and facilitation of band dynamics to capture the group's live energy in the studio. His production approach emphasized precise digital editing to enhance rhythmic interplay and spatial depth, as seen in Speaking of Now, while fostering collaborative sessions that allowed newer members like Cuong Vu and Antonio Sanchez to integrate seamlessly with veterans Metheny and Lyle Mays. On The Way Up, a continuous 68-minute suite, Rodby's editing techniques helped maintain narrative flow and dynamic contrasts reflective of the band's improvisational ethos.[5][14][15] Rodby's three-decade involvement extended to extensive live performances and international tours, from the group's 1980s ECM-era outings supporting albums like First Circle (1984) to the 2010 disbandment following the "Songbook Tour." Highlights included appearances at major festivals such as the Montreal International Jazz Festival in 1989, where the band performed expanded arrangements from Letter from Home (1989); the Montreux Jazz Festival in 2005, closing with the full The Way Up suite; and the North Sea Jazz Festival in 2010, featuring career-spanning setlists with Rodby on acoustic bass driving pieces like "Last Train Home." These tours, often spanning hundreds of dates worldwide, underscored Rodby's steady ensemble playing amid evolving lineups, culminating in the group's farewell performances that celebrated its harmonic and improvisational legacy.[16][17][18]Production Work and Side Projects
Throughout his career, Steve Rodby has applied the production expertise honed during his tenure with the Pat Metheny Group to a range of jazz projects, serving as co-producer, additional producer, and engineer on several acclaimed recordings. His work often emphasizes meticulous sonic balance and collaborative input, contributing to albums that blend improvisation with structured arrangements. For instance, Rodby co-produced Michael Brecker's 2001 ballad collection Nearness of You: The Ballad Book alongside Pat Metheny, overseeing sessions that featured intimate interpretations of standards with guest artists like James Taylor and Charlie Haden, resulting in a Grammy-nominated release celebrated for its warm, acoustic textures.[19] Rodby's production collaborations extend to pianist Eliane Elias, where he has co-produced multiple albums, including Dreamer (2004) and Something for You: Eliane Elias Sings & Plays Bill Evans (2007), partnering with Elias and her husband Marc Johnson to shape her distinctive bossa nova-infused jazz sound. On Dreamer, Rodby's role involved co-production duties that supported Elias's original compositions and covers, with engineering contributions from Joe Ferla ensuring a polished mix that highlighted her piano and vocal interplay. These efforts underscore Rodby's versatility in studio settings, where he also handles audio editing to refine performances without overpowering the artists' expressive qualities. Additionally, he provided additional production on Lyle Mays's 1988 solo album Street Dreams, conducting orchestral elements and contributing bass lines that enriched Mays's fusion-oriented compositions, such as the title track's layered dreamscape.[20] Beyond production, Rodby has engaged in diverse side projects that showcase his bass playing in non-Metheny contexts, particularly during the 1990s and 2000s. He appeared as a sideman on Lyle Mays's Street Dreams, delivering acoustic bass on tracks like "Feet First" and supporting the album's blend of jazz, classical, and pop influences through studio sessions that featured musicians such as Bill Frisell and Steve Gadd. In the 2000s, Rodby contributed bass to Chicago guitarist John Moulder's recordings, including sessions for albums that explored melodic jazz fusion; notable examples include his work on Moulder's 2016 release Earthborn Tales of Soul and Spirit, where his lines provided rhythmic foundation amid Moulder's soaring guitar work. Rodby's involvement in these projects often extended to informal studio collaborations, reflecting his preference for intimate, exploratory environments over large ensembles.[21][22] A significant side endeavor for Rodby has been his role in the transatlantic jazz ensemble The Impossible Gentlemen, formed in 2011 by British musicians Gwilym Simcock (piano), Mike Walker (guitar), and drummer Adam Nussbaum, initially with bassist Steve Swallow. Rodby joined as bassist and producer starting with the group's second album, Internationally Recognised Aliens (2013), where he played acoustic bass on select tracks like "Just To See You," complementing Swallow's electric lines in a "Steve Squared" configuration and producing the overall session to capture the band's dynamic range from brooding ballads to energetic swings. He continued on the third album, Let's Get Deluxe (2016), providing bass throughout and helping evolve the group's sound with influences from swing, funk, and modern jazz. The ensemble's formation emphasized camaraderie among international players, with Rodby's addition bringing a Midwestern jazz sensibility to their UK-rooted aesthetic.[23][24] In recent years, Rodby has maintained activity with The Impossible Gentlemen through live performances, including a 2016 UK tour featuring stops at venues like the 606 Club in London and the Old Market in Brighton. In 2025, he performed with pianist Marc Seales and drummer D'Vonne Lewis in September, in a duo with drummer Paul Wertico in October, and was associated with the EFG London Jazz Festival (November 14-23). These engagements highlight his ongoing bass contributions alongside occasional guest spots in jazz festivals that draw on his production background for curated sets. Rodby's multifaceted skills also include video editing for promotional materials and live documentation, as seen in his work enhancing visual content for artists' releases and performances.[25][26][27][28][29]Teaching and Later Activities
Following the disbandment of the Pat Metheny Group in 2010, Steve Rodby transitioned toward educational roles while maintaining select performance and production engagements. In 2019, he joined the faculty of the University of Washington School of Music in Seattle as Artist in Residence in Jazz Studies, a position initially supported by a 2020 grant from the Raynier Foundation for a three-year artist-in-residence initiative.[8][30] His residency in Seattle has allowed him to integrate his professional experience into academic settings, emphasizing practical training for emerging musicians.[1] At the University of Washington, Rodby focuses his teaching on acoustic and electric bass techniques, jazz improvisation, and ensemble leadership as Director of the Jazz Workshop program. This curriculum adopts an ensemble-based approach to develop students' skills in jazz combo performance, ear training, and collaborative improvisation through small group rehearsals and performances.[1][31] He mentors students by coaching jazz ensembles, guiding them in original compositions, homages to jazz icons, and innovative arrangements during events such as the annual Jazz Innovations series. For instance, in the 2025 edition of Jazz Innovations, Rodby advised student combos performing on November 12 and 13, showcasing their development in creative jazz expression.[32][33][34] Beyond academia, Rodby has sustained post-2010 professional activities, including touring and recording with the international jazz ensemble The Impossible Gentlemen, where he contributes on bass alongside members like Gwilym Simcock and Mike Walker. He has also pursued occasional production work, applying his expertise to contemporary jazz projects that inform his educational demonstrations on recording and arrangement techniques.[8][35]Musical Style and Contributions
Bass Techniques and Approach
Steve Rodby demonstrates proficiency in both upright and electric bass, drawing from his classical training while adapting to diverse jazz and fusion contexts. He began studying classical orchestral bass at age 10 and earned a degree in classical bass performance from Northwestern University, which laid the foundation for his precise tone production and intonation on the upright bass.[1][2] In live performances with the Pat Metheny Group, Rodby frequently switches between upright and electric bass to suit the evolving demands of the music, contributing to the band's dynamic sound across albums like Still Life (Talking) and tours in the 1980s and 1990s.[9] His approach emphasizes groove-oriented playing, particularly walking lines that provide a melodic foundation in fusion settings. This style is evident in his contributions to the Pat Metheny Group's signature sound, where he avoids fretless electric bass in favor of fretted instruments for a rock-influenced pop clarity.[9] For amplification, Rodby prioritizes setups that preserve natural tone, especially on upright bass during high-volume tours. In the 1980s and 1990s, he used Walter Woods solid-state power amps set to 1 megaohm input impedance to match pickups like those from Don Underwood, optimizing low-frequency response and minimizing feedback.[36] These choices enhance his electric bass tone by emphasizing impedance matching for fuller lows, allowing seamless integration in live fusion environments without heavy effects pedals, focusing instead on clean signal paths.[37][36] Rodby's adaptation of classical techniques to jazz improvisation highlights his emphasis on intonation and tone as core elements of melodic expression. His classical background informs a "beautiful bowing" style on upright bass, translated into improvised solos that function as high-quality melodies suitable for any instrument, as exemplified in his live rendition of "How Insensitive."[9] Pat Metheny has praised this relentless pursuit of precise intonation and sound, which ensures Rodby's lines maintain structural integrity amid the Pat Metheny Group's complex harmonies.[9]Influences and Innovations
Steve Rodby's musical style was profoundly shaped by his early classical training, which began at age 10 with orchestral bass studies under his father's guidance, providing a foundation in precise technique and ensemble support. This classical background intersected with parallel interests in pop music, particularly 1960s rock acts like the Beatles, which influenced his rhythmic sensibility and melodic approach to bass lines, allowing him to infuse jazz with accessible, groove-oriented elements. At Northwestern University, he studied jazz bass privately with Rufus Reid from 1972 to 1974, absorbing fundamentals of walking bass, improvisation, and harmonic navigation that emphasized ear training over theoretical rigidity.[5][2][9][8] Broader jazz influences included vibraphonist Milt Jackson, saxophonists Sonny Stitt and Joe Henderson, whose recordings Rodby encountered during his formative Chicago gigs, inspiring a blend of bebop swing and fusion exploration while prioritizing melodic solos that could translate across instruments. These influences converged in Rodby's genre-blending philosophy, merging pop's rhythmic drive, classical structure, and jazz improvisation to create supportive foundations in ensemble settings rather than virtuosic displays.[9][29] Rodby's innovations lie in his seamless integration of production techniques into live bass performance, where he applied studio-honed editing and mixing insights to enhance real-time dynamics, such as balancing amplification for upright bass in high-volume fusion contexts without phase issues or feedback. He has worked on video editing for jazz music documentation, including PBS specials and DVDs from the 1980s onward, preserving improvisational performances with a producer's ear for narrative flow. Critically, his style has been lauded for its understated excellence; Pat Metheny described him as the "perfect bass player" for the group's sound due to his musical curiosity and supportive precision, while reviewers have noted his underrated mastery in defining fusion grooves across acoustic and electric realms. In 2021, Rodby contributed to Lyle Mays' posthumous orchestral tribute "Eberhard," honoring the atmospheric bass style of Eberhard Weber, who influenced Mays and the broader Pat Metheny Group sound.[9][37][8][38]Discography
As Leader or Co-Leader
Steve Rodby's output as a leader or co-leader is notably sparse compared to his extensive sideman catalog, reflecting his preference for collaborative ensemble settings, such as those in the Pat Metheny Group, where collective improvisation takes precedence over individual spotlighting.[2] Over his career, he has helmed or co-helmed fewer than a dozen projects, prioritizing intimate duos and quartets that highlight interactive dialogue and his acoustic and electric bass foundations. These releases showcase his compositional voice through bass-driven grooves and harmonic explorations, often blending jazz standards with original material. In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Rodby co-led a series of duo recordings with guitarist Ross Traut, emphasizing stripped-down interplay between bass and guitar without additional instrumentation. Their debut collaboration, Traut / Rodby (1988, Columbia), served as a promotional sampler introducing their synergy, featuring concise originals and covers that underscore Rodby's walking bass lines and Traut's melodic phrasing.[39] This was followed by the full-length The Great Lawn (1989, Columbia), recorded in Chicago studios, where Rodby's bass-centric arrangements propel tracks like the title cut—a mid-tempo original evoking urban landscapes—and a reimagined "'Round Midnight," highlighting his intuitive support for Traut's improvisations in a contemporary jazz style.[39] The duo's final effort, The Duo Life (1991, Columbia), expanded on this format with broader influences, including fusion-tinged takes on "People Make the World Go Round" and a medley from Porgy and Bess ("I Loves You, Porgy" into "Bess, You Is My Woman Now"), where Rodby's electric bass adds rhythmic propulsion and textural depth to the 10-minute suite.[40] These projects, produced by the pair, exemplify Rodby's focus on bass as a narrative lead in minimalistic settings, allowing space for spontaneous composition. Later in his career, Rodby co-led two quartet albums with pianist Fred Simon and reedist Paul McCandless, blending post-bop and ambient jazz elements with Rodby's production oversight. Remember the River (2004, Naim), recorded live on March 25–26 at Pick-Staiger Concert Hall in Evanston, Illinois, and Pro Musica in Chicago, features the core trio augmented by drummer Mark Walker; standout tracks include the lyrical title opener, a Simon original with McCandless's oboe weaving through Rodby's warm acoustic bass ostinatos, and "Double Dream," which highlights the group's chamber-like intimacy and Rodby's subtle harmonic anchoring.[41] The follow-up, Since Forever (2009, Naim), taped on September 2–3, 2008, in Chicago, continues this stylistic focus with personnel including Walker on drums; key highlights are the Zawinul cover "In a Silent Way," where Rodby's bass provides a meditative pulse, and the title track, an original emphasizing collective improvisation and Rodby's role in shaping the ensemble's flowing, introspective sound.[42] In both, Rodby's self-production notes reveal a commitment to acoustic clarity and spatial dynamics, underscoring bass as the compositional spine in these bass-forward group explorations.As Sideman and Producer
Steve Rodby has contributed as a sideman bassist on more than 18 jazz albums outside his leadership roles, providing acoustic and electric bass lines that enhance ensemble dynamics across fusion, Latin jazz, and contemporary styles.[43] His production credits number in the dozens, including mixing, editing, and co-production on Grammy-winning projects, resulting in 15 Grammy and Latin Grammy Awards for his collaborative efforts.[8] Rodby's sideman bass work in the 1980s focused on fusion explorations. In the 1990s and early 2000s, he extended into world and improvisational jazz, producing Oregon's Northwest Passage (1997), which underscored the quartet's acoustic textures.[44] His production on Oregon's live recording Oregon in Moscow (2000) involved detailed editing to capture the group's collaborative essence during performances in Russia.[45] He also played bass and co-produced Fred Simon's Usually/Always (1988, Windham Hill) and Open Book (1991, Columbia), contributing to their contemporary jazz sound. Transitioning to Latin jazz in the 2000s, Rodby co-produced Eliane Elias's Fantasia (1992), handling mixing and editing to highlight her vocal and piano interpretations of standards, earning acclaim for its intimate Brazilian-inflected sound.[46] He also co-produced Michael Brecker's Nearness of You: The Ballad Book (2001), assembling digital elements for the saxophonist's Grammy-winning ballad collection, and Pilgrimage (2007), a posthumous release that secured another Grammy for Best Jazz Instrumental Album through his meticulous oversight of arrangements and final assembly.[47][48] In the 2010s and beyond, Rodby's bass appearances included John Moulder's Metamorphosis (2021), where his acoustic bass anchored suites with pianist Richie Beirach and drummer Paul Wertico, evoking transformative themes through resonant, lyrical playing.[49] Most recently, he provided contrabass on Lyle Mays's posthumous Eberhard (2021), a 13-minute orchestral tribute featuring shimmering interplay amid cellos and synths, co-edited by Rodby to honor Mays's compositional vision.[50] These roles underscore Rodby's versatility in supporting diverse artistic visions, from fusion ensembles to intimate ballad sessions, while his production emphasizes clarity and emotional fidelity in jazz recordings.[51]Awards and Recognition
Grammy Awards
Steve Rodby has won 13 Grammy Awards and received 11 nominations throughout his career, primarily for his contributions as a bassist with the Pat Metheny Group and as a producer on various jazz albums.[52] His victories span categories such as Best Jazz Fusion Performance and Best Contemporary Jazz Album, reflecting his integral role in innovative jazz fusion and contemporary jazz recordings.[53] Rodby's 10 Grammy wins with the Pat Metheny Group highlight his foundational contributions to the band's sound from 1981 onward, where he played bass on all their albums and co-produced several. These include seven consecutive wins from 1983 to 1998 for albums Offramp (1983, Best Jazz Fusion Performance, Vocal or Instrumental), Travels (1984, Best Jazz Fusion Performance, Vocal or Instrumental), First Circle (1985, Best Jazz Fusion Performance, Vocal or Instrumental), Still Life (Talking) (1988, Best Jazz Fusion Performance), Letter from Home (1990, Best Jazz Fusion Performance), The Road to You (1994, Best Contemporary Jazz Performance), and We Live Here (1998, Best Contemporary Jazz Performance), establishing the ensemble's commercial and critical dominance in jazz.[54] Additional PMG wins include Best Rock Instrumental Performance for "The Roots of Coincidence" from Imaginary Day (1999), Best Contemporary Jazz Album for Speaking of Now (2003), and The Way Up (2006). These awards underscored Rodby's ability to blend acoustic and electric bass techniques in expansive, melodic compositions. As a producer, Rodby earned three additional Grammy wins, expanding his influence beyond performance. In 2008, he co-produced Michael Brecker's posthumous album Pilgrimage, which won Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual or Group, showcasing Rodby's production expertise in capturing Brecker's final recordings with a stellar ensemble including Pat Metheny.[55] He secured Best Latin Jazz Album for co-producing Eliane Elias's Made in Brazil (2016), a homecoming project blending Brazilian rhythms with jazz improvisation, and again in 2022 for Mirror Mirror (2021), featuring Elias's piano duets with Chick Corea and Chucho Valdés, highlighting Rodby's skill in engineering intimate yet vibrant Latin jazz sessions.[56] Rodby's Grammy nominations, totaling 11, occurred across a timeline from the 1980s through the 2020s, often in jazz instrumental and fusion categories tied to Pat Metheny Group releases like We Live Here (1997) and production efforts such as Eliane Elias's Dance of Time (2018) for Best Latin Jazz Album.[52] These recognitions, while not all resulting in wins, affirmed his consistent excellence in jazz production and performance. The cumulative impact of his Grammy successes significantly elevated his production career, leading to collaborations with artists like Eliane Elias and Michael Brecker, and opening doors to engineering and mixing roles on high-profile jazz projects that further solidified his reputation in the genre.[57]| Year | Category | Album/Project | Role | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1983 | Best Jazz Fusion Performance, Vocal or Instrumental | Offramp (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | First win with PMG[58] |
| 1984 | Best Jazz Fusion Performance, Vocal or Instrumental | Travels (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Live album capturing group's energy[59] |
| 1985 | Best Jazz Fusion Performance, Vocal or Instrumental | First Circle (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Part of seven consecutive wins[60] |
| 1988 | Best Jazz Fusion Performance | Still Life (Talking) (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Part of seven consecutive wins[61] |
| 1990 | Best Jazz Fusion Performance | Letter from Home (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Part of seven consecutive wins[62] |
| 1994 | Best Contemporary Jazz Performance | The Road to You (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Live album; part of seven consecutive wins[63] |
| 1998 | Best Contemporary Jazz Performance | We Live Here (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Concludes seven consecutive wins[64] |
| 1999 | Best Rock Instrumental Performance | "The Roots of Coincidence" from Imaginary Day (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Track award[65] |
| 2003 | Best Contemporary Jazz Album | Speaking of Now (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist | Reunion album[66] |
| 2006 | Best Contemporary Jazz Album | The Way Up (Pat Metheny Group) | Bassist, Co-Producer | Suite-based composition[67] |
| 2008 | Best Jazz Instrumental Album, Individual or Group | Pilgrimage (Michael Brecker) | Co-Producer | Posthumous Brecker release[55] |
| 2016 | Best Latin Jazz Album | Made in Brazil (Eliane Elias) | Co-Producer | Brazilian influences prominent[56] |
| 2022 | Best Latin Jazz Album | Mirror Mirror (Eliane Elias) | Co-Producer | Duets with Corea and Valdés[68] |