james robbins

Bassist | Composer | Educator

James Robbins is a Brooklyn based bassist, composer, arranger, and educator whose work bridges rigorous jazz tradition with expansive contemporary expression. A deeply intuitive improviser and thoughtful musical architect, Robbins has built a career defined by versatility, collaborative depth, and a clear artistic voice. While his professional experience spans nearly every genre, jazz and improvisational music remain the foundation of his artistic ethos, serving not only as his primary language as a performer, but as the conceptual engine behind his compositional work.

Robbins began formal study at age thirteen under the mentorship of master bassist Marcus McLaurine at William Paterson University. By fifteen, he was already performing professionally throughout his local scene, developing the fluency and maturity that would characterize his later career. He went on to attend Berklee College of Music as a scholarship recipient in both performance and composition, where he refined his technical command, expanded his compositional palette, and deepened his engagement with modern jazz traditions.

An in-demand bassist, Robbins has collaborated with a distinguished and stylistically diverse roster of artists including Sheila Jordan, Johnny O’Neal, ELEW, Sullivan Fortner, Laurence Hobgood, Jonathan Barber, Kenny Werner, Frank Lacy, Don Braden, Ralph Lalama, Fima Chupakhin, Jay Clayton, Nikolas Anadolis, Stephane Wrembel, Mike Ogletree, Dayramir Gonzalez, Thank You Scientist, and Baklava Express. His playing is noted for its lyrical sensitivity, rhythmic clarity, and ability to move fluidly between straight-ahead jazz, chamber settings, and genre-blending contemporary projects.

As a composer, Robbins draws from the lineage of jazz while incorporating structural nuance and textural exploration often associated with contemporary music traditions. His work reflects a commitment to improvisation as compositional process, balancing formal architecture with space for spontaneous dialogue.

In 2018, he formed The Theory Conspiracy with pianist Carlos Homs and drummer Juan Chiavassa as a vehicle for his work as both bandleader and composer. Rooted in progressive jazz language and blues-based expression, the trio established a distinct ensemble identity and released their debut album in 2020. When Chiavassa joined guitarist Mike Stern’s band, drummer Kayvon Gordon entered the group, continuing and deepening the ensemble’s evolving sound and evolving into James and the Revelry.

With the addition of Andromeda Turre (voice, lyrics, crystal bowls) and Daisy Castro (violin), Robbins expanded the project into a larger ensemble while maintaining its core aesthetic and collaborative foundation. Now operating as a cohesive and long-standing unit, James and the Revelry is uniquely equipped to navigate the complex forms, shifting meters, and dynamic range central to Robbins’s compositional voice.

Equally committed to the jazz lineage of mentorship, Robbins maintains an active teaching practice, mentoring emerging musicians in improvisation, ensemble communication, harmonic fluency, and creative development. His pedagogical approach emphasizes listening as a central discipline, encouraging students to cultivate both technical mastery and personal voice. Through private instruction, workshops, and institutional settings, he contributes meaningfully to the next generation of jazz artists.