Chris Wood, John Medeski, and Billy Martin at Levon Helm Studio in Woodstock.

Itโ€™s a sunny Sunday afternoon and the members of jam-band festival favorites Medeski Martin & Wood are wholly consumed, blissfully experimenting in the musical laboratory that is the stage. In fact, by the way heโ€™s darting between the Hammond organ and the full- and toy-size pianos taking up his corner, egg-headed John Medeski looks more like a technician youโ€™d see posed next to the UNIVAC than the keyboardist in a jazz-funk trio. At the opposite end of the bandstand, drummer Billy Martin lays down the heavy fatback, stirring up a thick broth of second-line shuffle beatsโ€”spiced with extra cowbellโ€”as he bounces madly on his stool. In the middle, gangly bassist Chris Wood nods his head in time as he tickles and saws at his tall instrument, holding the whole mess together with benign solemnity. The music is full of constant sonic surprises and rump-rolling, irresistibly addictive grooves, and the listeners are clearly getting off on it, stomping, spinning, running around, and throwing their hands in the air like, yep, they just donโ€™t care.

Typically great MMW show, right? In many ways, yes. But while the band and its members formidable chops are the same, the audience is something altogether new for these well-seasoned players. This crowd is made up largely of childrenโ€”mainly toddlers, actually. Theyโ€™re here for one of the occasional Kids Rambles held at Levon Helm Studios in Woodstock, where, of course, parents are allowed, too. And the elders are definitely digging the music as well, dancing while holding their kids, sitting Indian-style on the floor in front of the band, or chatting with other moms and dads as their offspring run wild. Family fun, and with a totally unbeatable soundtrack.

โ€œ[The Kids Ramble] did end up being a lot of fun, but we were pretty nervous beforehand,โ€ says Wood a few weeks later. Waitโ€”nervous? A band that has been touring the globe for almost 20 years, collaborated with everyone from Phish to Living Colorโ€™s Vernon Reid to jazz great John Scofield, one that regularly headlines massive outdoor festivals and prestigious venues like Manhattanโ€™s Beacon Theater? Nervous, in front of a roomful of tots and their sippy-cup-bearing, diaper bag-toting parents? If such a thing is possible, the trio sure didnโ€™t look uneasy at the time.

โ€œI guess we fooled ya,โ€ says Wood with a laugh. โ€œThat was the first time weโ€™d done anything like that, being put in front of a bunch of kids and being expected to entertain them. We werenโ€™t sure if weโ€™d have enough material to hold their attention, since kids have much shorter attention spans than adults. It went pretty well, but we still have a lot to learn.โ€

Itโ€™s safe to say, however, that the band will have a few more chances to develop its rapport with the wee ones as it continues to gig in support of it newest release, Letโ€™s Go Everywhere, an album of childrenโ€™s music on Woodstockโ€™s family-oriented Little Monster label. Those familiar with MMWโ€™s 12 previous albums may wonder just how the heck the band could make its predominantly instrumental, wildly experimental music palatable to little kids. Well, to start with the group brought in a slew of guest vocalistsโ€”Wood himself; Martinโ€™s sons, Dakota and Sawyer; band friend Tim Ingham, who delivers a puckish oratory on the cheeky โ€œPirates Donโ€™t Take Bathsโ€; the mysterious Marvin Pontiac (aka Lounge Lizards leader and movie actor John Lurie); and Woodโ€™s daughter, Nissa, who lights up the intro to โ€œAll Around the Kitchen,โ€ a track that also appears on High Meadow Songs (Independent), a benefit compilation for the local High Meadow Arts educational organization. But despite the all-ages appeal of Letโ€™s Go Everywhere, the record never lapses into the pandering pablum of Barney and Baby Bop. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to play down to kids,โ€ Wood maintains. โ€œThey love the darker, more complex stuff more than you might think.โ€ Indeed: The way the little Ramblers reacted to the disorienting, stop-start arrangement of โ€œWhereโ€™s the Music?โ€ clearly bears this out. But the recordโ€™s updated romp through โ€œHickory Dickory Dockโ€ still seems a far cry from the bandโ€™s avant-garde beginnings.

MMW emerged in the early 1990s from the cutting-edge crucible of New Yorkโ€™s intersecting experimental and jazz scenes, whose dominant hub has long been downtown club the Knitting Factory. A Florida native and current Catskills resident, Medeski had played with vocalist Mark Murphy, late Hudson Valley saxophonist Dewey Redman, and late bass legend Jaco Pastorious, and had studied in Boston under arranger George Russell and Miles Davis bassist Dave Holland. Hailing from Boulder, Colorado, Wood also moved to Boston to study with Holland (the two are now fellow Saugerties residents) and percussionist Bob Moses, and later performed with saxophonist Ned Rothenberg. Moses was also the mentor of Martin, the son of a classical violinist and a Radio City Rockette, who grew up in New Jersey (where he still lives) and had worked with artists ranging from smooth jazz hitmaker Chuck Mangione to avant player Rothenberg. During the 1980s the threesomeโ€™s paths regularly crossed in the shifting lineups of bands like the Lounge Lizards and those of Moses, guitarists Marc Ribot and Elliot Sharp, and composer and saxophonist John Zorn, and it wasnโ€™t long before the three musiciansโ€™ uncanny, shared chemistry dictated that they form their own band.

After woodshedding in Martinโ€™s loft, the trio debuted with 1991โ€™s self-released Notes from the Underground (Accurate Jazz). Itโ€™s a Jungle in Here (Gramavision) followed in 1993, though it would be the more heavily groove-based Friday Afternoon in the Universe and Shack-Man (1995 and 1996; both Gramavision) that would put MMW on the jazz map. But another, even bigger, breakthrough lay just around the corner. It was around this time that the members of jam-band juggernaut Phish, devout MMW fans all, began playing the trioโ€™s albums over the PA at their hugely attended outdoor concerts, and soon the โ€œphansโ€ began to ask who it was that they were hearing during the breaks. Phish eventually invited the New Yorkers to open shows and collaborate, and soon MMW was firmly enmeshed in the burgeoning jam-band nation, taking the avant-garde to a whole newโ€”and much widerโ€”audience. โ€œYeah, itโ€™s weird,โ€ observes Wood. โ€œWeโ€™ll be up there playing on some big stage somewhere, and weโ€™ll be thinking Sun Ra, Mingus, and Albert Ayler, and the kids in the audience will be thinking Jerry Garcia. But, hey, as long as people are showing up and they like our music weโ€™re really happy.โ€

Even though MMW tours hard, performing nearly 80 shows per year, all three members also busy themselves with outside projects. Martin runs his own label, Amulet Records, through which he has released several solo and collaborative efforts, including a new album by the experimental quartet Iooi. As a serious sessioneer, Medeskiโ€™s dance card is always full, and, among other projects, he and Martin put out an eponymously titled duet album on Amulet in 2007; he also contributed to the soundtrack of Todd Haynesโ€™s recent and surreal Bob Dylan biopic, Iโ€™m Not There. As the folk roots-slanted Wood Brothers, Wood and his brother, singer-guitarist Oliver Wood, released the acclaimed Ways Not to Lose (Blue Note) in 2006; the siblings have a new album, Loaded (also Blue Note), due out on April 1.

One of MMWโ€™s longtime colleagues is guitarist Oren Bloedow, another ex-Lounge Lizard, who toured with the outfit in 2000 as its unofficial fourth member; Bloedow has long played in venerated New York band Elysian Fields, a unit that also briefly featured Wood. โ€œBesides being such wonderful people, [MMW] are also all real music scholars,โ€ says Bloedow, who was backed by MMW on his second solo album, 1998โ€™s perhaps not unappropriately titled The Luckiest Boy in the World (Knitting Factory Works). โ€œBut they donโ€™t sit around listening to typical Berklee jazz-fusion records; theyโ€™re avant-gardists at heart. So even though theyโ€™re big enough now to work with someone like Kenny G, they ask [ex-Sun Ra saxophonist] Marshall Allen to play with them instead. Which is very cool.โ€

So what, then, led a trio of devoted avant-garde musicians to make a childrenโ€™s album? โ€œWell, I guess with Billy and me being parents it was always in the backs of our minds,โ€ says Wood. โ€œAnd kids already seem to like a lot of our music when they hear it. โ€˜Anonymous Skulls,โ€™ is, I think, a very dark and spooky track off one of our last albums (2004โ€™s End of the World Party [Just in Case] [Blue Note]), but Nissa just loves that tune. Iโ€™ll play it at home and sheโ€™ll dance all over the place. And since she and Emily Salem [the daughter of Little Monster co-founders Kate Hyman and Kevin Salem] were in the same play group, it was just a natural thing when [the label] approached us to do the record.โ€

โ€œKevin and I always secretly wanted to put out a Medeski, Martin & Wood album, so itโ€™s really exciting for us,โ€ says Hyman, whose label was profiled in the January 2007 issue of Chronogram. โ€œAnd itโ€™s great because a lot of MMW fans are also parents now themselves. It isnโ€™t that easy to make a really good kids record; you have to sort of regain your lost innocence to do it well. But [the band] and the other people who played on the record already understood that, so they ended up doing such an excellent job.โ€

โ€œWhen youโ€™re a really young child, you havenโ€™t had your mind made up yetโ€”about music or anything else,โ€ Wood says. โ€œYou donโ€™t have so many people telling you what youโ€™re โ€˜supposedโ€™ to like yet. And music is one of the greatest things about human existence. For John, Billy, and me, itโ€™s everywhere in our lives. So to see kids react to our music in such an unbiased way and to enjoy it is really great.โ€

Medeski, Martin & Woodโ€™s Letโ€™s Go Everywhere is out now on Little Monster Records. Medeski, Scofield, Martin & Wood, featuring guitarist John Scofield, will perform at WDSTโ€™s fourth annual Mountain Jam festival in Hunter on June 1. www.mmw.net.

Peter Aaron is the arts editor for Chronogram.

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