Barrett Martin (born April 14, 1967) is an American drummer, upright bassist, composer, producer, writer, and Zen artist. He was the drummer for the
Seattle, Washington groups
Skin Yard and
Screaming Trees, as well as the supergroups
Mad Season and
Tuatara. A multi-instrumentalist and producer, he does recording session work in Seattle and Los Angeles and has played on, or produced, over 75 albums to date. He is primarily known for his powerful tribal drumming style, which includes the use of the tom toms as a rhythmic component that replaces the traditional hihat and ride cymbal. He credits the jazz drummers
Art Blakey,
Max Roach, and
Elvin Jones for inspiring this approach to his drumming style, as well as the rock drummers
John Bonham,
Keith Moon, and
Neil Peart. He has also stated that the heavyweight boxer
Muhammad Ali inspired his drumming at a young age, saying, "Ali was so incredibly fast on his feet, and his hands were both light and heavy at the same time. Float like a butterfly, sting like bee, that's the way a great drummer should play – light and heavy, the way Ali boxed." Martin has been featured on dozens of albums and several film soundtracks, and notable collaborations include work with REM guitarist
Peter Buck, Iraqi master musician
Rahim Alhaj, West African Griot and master musician
Foday Musa Suso, delta bluesman
CeDell Davis, Rumi scholar and poet
Coleman Barks, and Native American poet and songwriter
Joy Harjo. The PBS short documentary on Barrett's drumming and Zenga painting, titled "Zenga and the Art of Percussion", won a 2009 Emmy in the New Media Arts category.