Los Angeles Times

A big influence on sounds of the city

Terrace Martin has worked with a who’s who of L.A. hip-hop, jazz and R&B stars.

- By Randall Roberts randall.roberts @latimes.com

Kendrick Lamar. Snoop Dogg. Kamasi Washington. Robert Glasper. The hiphop giants and jazz greats all have at least one connecting thread: Terrace Martin.

Come Sunday, Martin will receive his Grammy close-up, as his “Velvet Portraits” is competing for top R&B album. But perhaps R&B is too narrow of a definition for Martin’s music.

Last week at the West Los Angeles Sound Studios, the multi-instrument­alist, producer, composer and local connector was leading a quintet of players through tracks from the work.

Ace musicians who have worked with such artists as Snoop Dogg, Washington, Thundercat, Lamar and more, the pickup band was burning through the song “Curly Martin,” named for Martin’s drum-playing dad.

During a break, Martin, 38, casually asks drummer Garrison Brown whether his friends might like the music they were making, which effortless­ly touches on jazz, soul, hip-hop, rhythm & blues until such distinctio­ns are rendered moot.

“My friends? This is over their heads,” Brown replies, and the room erupts with laughter.

Anyone who’s followed Martin’s wild ride knows he’s not on a commercial tip alongside Rihanna or the Weeknd or interested in simple loops and melodies.

“I never really have a theme on what I want any album to sound like because I’m not just one thing, and I don’t like just one thing,” says Martin later. Heavily tattooed, Martin has a musical notation permanentl­y imprinted on his neck and a rosebud decorates the back of his left hand. “I think, ‘Why limit myself? Why limit others?’ All of the records that I’ve been a part of successful­ly have never been one thing.”

As a producer, he’s a longtime collaborat­or with Grammy-winning rapper Lamar, most recently as a key studio wiz on “To Pimp a Butterfly.”

Martin co-produced the already classic L.A. rap track “King Kunta” and others, and his connection­s through nearly a quartercen­tury on the Los Angeles music scene helped fill the record with his longtime peers and collaborat­ors including Washington, Lalah Hathaway, Glasper and others.

“From playing saxophone with God’s Property to playing keys for R. Kelly to playing jazz with Cedar Walton and then producing stuff with Snoop Dogg and Kendrick Lamar — not many people have that kind of resume,” says Glasper, on the phone after a session with Martin and Herbie Hancock.

Across nearly 25 years on the Los Angeles jazz, R&B and hip-hop scene, Martin has shared the stage or the studio with artists including jazz drummer Billy Higgins, hotshot hip-hop artist-producer Travis Scott and legendary producer Quincy Jones.

In the hip-hop realm, Martin recently produced “Twist My Fingaz,” an undergroun­d hit for Compton rapper YG, as well as tracks for Wiz Khalifa, the Game, DJ Quik, Big K.R.I.T and others.

Martin has been signed to Warner Bros. as a rapperprod­ucer, issued a series of mixtapes that featured early verses from Lamar and his Top Dawg label-mate AbSoul.

The list of his credits could fill the page.

“The amazing thing about him is he’s one of a few people that really understand­s firsthand the music from a hip-hop perspectiv­e and from a jazz perspectiv­e,” says Glasper. “Most musicians, there’s a weak link on one of those. They don’t quite understand the jazz all the way or they don’t quite understand the hip-hop all the way.”

Glasper and Martin met as teenagers at a prestigiou­s jazz camp in Vail, Colo. By then, Martin had already shown so much promise that comedian Jay Leno had bought him his first profession­al saxophone and given him a $30,000 scholarshi­p.

Around the same time, celebrated guitarist Williams (Nas, UGK, Jay Z, Snoop, Schoolboy Q) first saw a teenage Martin play during a jam session at the Townhouse in Venice.

“I see this kid get up and I’m like, ‘Whoa, wow. That’s a lot for a kid to play,’ ” says Williams. Martin and Williams are now partners in Sounds of Crenshaw, which issued “Velvet Portraits.”

Soon, Williams was helping Martin get gigs, most notably with Snoop. Recalls Williams of Snoop’s early reaction to Martin’s way around a studio: “At rehearsal, he saw Terrace on the keyboards, saw Terrace on the drums, saw him on the vocoder, saw him on the horn. He said, ‘Cuz is durable. He can do it all.’ Snoop just fell in love with him.”

Martin hasn’t stopped working since.

“I believe the only way to produce a real record is at some point to be in that room with that human being so you can feel emotion,” says Martin. “That’s why most of the songs that have changed the world, people have been in the same room together. I don’t care who says they do all the music alone and everything. Nothing is ever done alone.”

Motioning toward the rehearsal stage, Martin points at a bass amplifier in trying to explain what distinguis­hes his work.

“I still love air,” he says. “Like a woofer: Those speakers only work because of air in the room. If there’s no oxygen, the speakers wouldn’t boom. The air has to breathe.

“So I’m only familiar with things that breathe,” he continues. “Speakers breathe to me. You breathe, I breathe, Marlon breathes, Snoop breathes, Kendrick breathes, Herbie breathes. The drum machines? These things don’t breathe. These things are just tools.”

 ?? Michael Owen Baker For The Times ?? TERRACE MARTIN’S “Velvet Portraits” is nominated for top R&B album.
Michael Owen Baker For The Times TERRACE MARTIN’S “Velvet Portraits” is nominated for top R&B album.

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