Chris Tordini: The Bass Player’s Life — Service, Stability, and the Long Game
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Chris Tordini: The Bass Player’s Life — Service, Stability, and the Long Game

On this episode of The Bandwich Tapes, I sit down with bassist Chris Tordini for a thoughtful conversation about what it really looks like to build a sustainable life in music. Chris has quietly become one of the most respected bassists on the scene, known for his deep musicality, versatility, and the kind of collaborative spirit that keeps musicians coming back to work with him.

We talk about his current role holding down a full-time Broadway chair with Hadestown, and how that kind of musical stability fits into a career that has largely been built around creative projects and collaboration. Chris shares what it’s like stepping into that world—where consistency, preparation, and reliability are everything—and how it contrasts with the improvisational spaces he often inhabits as a jazz and creative musician.

Along the way, we trace Chris’s musical path—from early choir singing and piano lessons to discovering both electric and upright bass. His story is a great reminder that a meaningful career in music isn’t always about chasing the spotlight. Often it’s about serving the music, supporting the composer’s vision, and learning to leave ego at the door.

We also spend time talking about Chris’s long-standing musical partnership with Becca Stevens. Their collaboration spans many years and projects, and hearing Chris reflect on how that band identity developed—through trust, chemistry, discipline, and shared musical values—is one of the most rewarding parts of this conversation.

Key Takeaways
  • A sustainable music career often balances art and stability — work like Broadway can provide a foundation for creative projects.
  • Serving the music matters more than serving the ego — great collaborators listen first.
  • Versatility is essential — Chris’s path from choir and piano to electric and upright bass shaped a wide-ranging career.
  • Preparation and reliability keep musicians working — professionalism is as important as talent.
  • Long-term collaborations deepen the music — partnerships like Chris’s work with Becca Stevens grow stronger over time.
  • Consistency builds reputation — careers are often built quietly through trust and dependability.
  • Listening is the bassist’s superpower — great bass playing starts with supporting the musical moment.
Music from the Episode
  • Imperfect Animals (Becca Stevens)
  • The Surge (Angelika Niescier)
  • Transient Beings (Sebastiane Noelle)
  • Attention Flaws (Chris Speed Trio)
About the Podcast

The Bandwich Tapes is a podcast hosted by Brad Williams featuring conversations with musicians, composers, producers, and creative thinkers about their musical journeys. Each episode explores the influences, decisions, and experiences that shape a life in music—one conversation at a time.

Connect with the Show

Email: contact@thebandwichtapes.com