“Living life as an artist is a practice. You are either engaging in the practice, or you’re not. It makes no sense to say you’re not good at it. It’s like saying “I’m not good at being a monk.” You are either living as a monk, or you’re not. We tend to think of the artist’s work as the output. The real work of the artist is a way of being in the world.”

Rick Rubin – The Creative Act: A Way of Being

Depending on the day you might find me playing upright bass in a jazz bar, mandolin at a bluegrass festival, electric bass on a rock stage or country guitar at a winery. Connecting with the audience and fellow performers is my favorite part of making music, in any genre.

My Story

Jazz, Bluegrass, Country, World Music and Coffee..?

Yep, coffee! My careers in music and coffee have been intertwined since my first barista job during my sophomore year at the University of Washington. I grew up listening to country (we were a KRPM house,) played trombone in grade school, and moved on to electric bass and vocal jazz in high school, but wasn’t a coffee fan until college. At UW I studied jazz and classical bass while continuing to work as a barista, and settled into a major in Ethnomusicology which deepened my interest in world travel. I moved into a coffee roasting position, eventually managing roasting and production for a small Seattle company and traveling internationally for some coffee education and sourcing opportunities. I continued to play occasional jazz gigs during this period, but my interest was shifting towards bluegrass thanks to Edgar Meyer’s Uncommon Ritual and Appalachia Waltz records.

After eight years with the coffee roasting company I transitioned to working with a green (unroasted) coffee importer which took me all over Central and South America, Africa and Indonesia. I’d take a Martin Backpacker guitar with me on many of these early trips, but seeing Sam Bush and Chris Thile at the Telluride Bluegrass Festival in 2012 opened my ears to the mandolin. I bought a Mid-Missouri (Big Muddy) Mini-Mo as soon as I got home and that mandolin went with me on every coffee trip thereafter. I’ve even been fortunate to play songs with coffee farmers on some of those trips, and learn about how deeply music is woven into their culture and lifestyle. See the “Ethnomusicology” section below for more on that.

My interest in jazz was rekindled at the National Oldtime Fiddle Championship in Weiser, Idaho in 2015, (didn’t see that coming!) and I dove into recovering my jazz bass chops and studying jazz mandolin. That same year my wife Shannon and I formed our acoustic duo Saint September and started performing originals and songs from our favorite harmony-rich artists. I continued working with the coffee importing company through the pandemic, and Shannon and I moved from Seattle to Ellensburg, WA in 2022.

We first started spending time in the Kittitas Valley in 2016 and thought we had a good idea of what a wonderful area it is, but even after living here full time since 2022 we’re still continually amazed by the quantity and quality of art, live music, beautiful scenery and incredible people. In 2023 I joined up with Central Washington’s most excellent rock & pop cover band Under the Covers, and still commute over the pass frequently to play Western Swing with the Apple Valley Wranglers and jazz with the Wood & Strings trio.

Bass

Mandolin

Guitar

Ethnomusicology

Coffee

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