Steve Rodby (born December 9, 1954, in
Joliet, Illinois) is an American
jazz bassist and producer known for his time with the
Pat Metheny Group.[2]
Biography
Rodby was born in Joliet, Illinois, into a musical family. His father was a music teacher who bought him an acoustic bass, electric bass, and amp when he was 12. He heard
classical music from a young age and was educated in classical until high school when he learned jazz.[3] During high school summers, he went to jazz camps, where he met
Pat Metheny,
Lyle Mays, and
Danny Gottlieb, three of the four members of The Pat Metheny Group.[4]
Rodby played acoustic bass until he graduated from Northwestern University in 1977, when he taught himself how to play electric.[4] He performed in the house band at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago, with local and visiting musicians such as
Milt Jackson,
Joe Henderson, and
Art Farmer. He joined the Pat Metheny Group in 1981, starting on electric bass before spending most of his time on acoustic.[3] He spent the next thirty years at Metheny's side, touring, recording, and producing, in Group projects and in Metheny's other projects. With Metheny he earned multiple Grammy awards and nominations, and admiration from critics, magazines, and reader polls.[5]
Rodby collaborated with
Fred Simon and
Paul McCandless on two albums: Since Forever and Remember the River.[6] In 2011 he collaborated with
Paul Wertico, a former drummer for the Metheny Group, and with Israeli musicians Danny Markovitch and Dani Rabin on
Marbin's album Breaking the Cycle.
Since 2018, Rodby has held a position as artist of residence in the faculty of Jazz Studies at the
University of Washington in Seattle.
^
abKennedy, Gary (2002). Kernfeld, Barry (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. Vol. 3 (2nd ed.). New York: Grove's Dictionaries Inc. p. 436.
ISBN1-56159-284-6.
Steve Rodby (born December 9, 1954, in
Joliet, Illinois) is an American
jazz bassist and producer known for his time with the
Pat Metheny Group.[2]
Biography
Rodby was born in Joliet, Illinois, into a musical family. His father was a music teacher who bought him an acoustic bass, electric bass, and amp when he was 12. He heard
classical music from a young age and was educated in classical until high school when he learned jazz.[3] During high school summers, he went to jazz camps, where he met
Pat Metheny,
Lyle Mays, and
Danny Gottlieb, three of the four members of The Pat Metheny Group.[4]
Rodby played acoustic bass until he graduated from Northwestern University in 1977, when he taught himself how to play electric.[4] He performed in the house band at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago, with local and visiting musicians such as
Milt Jackson,
Joe Henderson, and
Art Farmer. He joined the Pat Metheny Group in 1981, starting on electric bass before spending most of his time on acoustic.[3] He spent the next thirty years at Metheny's side, touring, recording, and producing, in Group projects and in Metheny's other projects. With Metheny he earned multiple Grammy awards and nominations, and admiration from critics, magazines, and reader polls.[5]
Rodby collaborated with
Fred Simon and
Paul McCandless on two albums: Since Forever and Remember the River.[6] In 2011 he collaborated with
Paul Wertico, a former drummer for the Metheny Group, and with Israeli musicians Danny Markovitch and Dani Rabin on
Marbin's album Breaking the Cycle.
Since 2018, Rodby has held a position as artist of residence in the faculty of Jazz Studies at the
University of Washington in Seattle.
^
abKennedy, Gary (2002). Kernfeld, Barry (ed.). The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. Vol. 3 (2nd ed.). New York: Grove's Dictionaries Inc. p. 436.
ISBN1-56159-284-6.