How Jensen Meeker Translates Jazz Fusion to the Underground Club Scene

In a city where every corner pulses with sound, Jensen Meeker is carving a singular path, one that bridges the kinetic spontaneity of jazz drumming with the hypnotic propulsion of techno. Born and raised in New York City, Meeker’s journey is both a tribute to his roots and a bold reimagining of where rhythm can take a listener. 

At first glance, he might seem like any other nightlife figure spinning tracks behind glowing decks. But scratch the surface and you discover a musician whose entire life has been shaped by rhythm. 

“I’ve been drumming for most of my life,” Meeker told me over coffee in Bushwick, minutes before heading to his evening set. “I started off really into rock ’n’ roll and jazz. I went to school for music production and spent the better part of the last seven years just playing the local circuit in New York City with jazz fusion and rock ’n’ roll artists.” His LinkedIn confirms he is based in NYC, continuing his musical evolution in the same city that shaped him from the start. 

Two years ago, everything changed. A night at the techno-centric Bushwick club Basement flipped his perspective. “Being a drummer, I was just instantly captivated, drawn to the rhythmic nature of techno music,” he says. That kind of immersion is still relatively rare in New York, where techno culture hasn’t yet reached the underground intensity found in European cities like Berlin or Barcelona. But instead of deterring him, it ignited something. 

What struck him wasn’t just the music, but the seamlessness of the experience. “I kept hearing songs blend into another song like it was all one long track,” he explains. “I really wanted to figure out how they were doing that.” 

That curiosity pulled him deep into the technical mechanics of DJing and production. He soon became a regular at Basement, not only playing sets but also contributing to the club’s lighting design, syncing visuals to beats with the same instinct he once used to map drum patterns. “I literally time the lights to the song,” he says with a laugh, crediting both intuition and early lessons from his father, a lighting director. 

Meeker’s background in jazz, rock, and live performance informs a style that leans into complexity rather than avoiding it. “I’m definitely a more percussive element,” he says. “I love to blend polyrhythms together, take two tracks with the same polyrhythm but different timbres.” A conga hit layered over a synthesized pulse becomes more than a transition; it becomes a transformation. 

“You really get the sense that you’re listening to the same song and then suddenly you’re in a different place, you don’t even know how you got there.” The effect is immersive and almost psychedelic, encouraging dancers to surrender to the flow instead of analyzing each shift. 

His inspiration extends beyond technique into history. Meeker points to techno’s origins abroad, particularly in post–Wall Berlin. “There was this urgency to just be as free as possible,” he says. That freedom birthed underground scenes that later grew into the global culture he now admires and contributes to. 

Digging Deep: The Hunt for Sound 

For Meeker, DJing is inseparable from exploration. “My process comes from relentless digging,” he explains. “Scouring international labels, Shazaming tracks at the club, scrolling Instagram, creating a huge library.” That archive becomes the raw material he feeds into Rekordbox, the software he uses to construct sets that feel cohesive, intentional, and alive. 

He’s not chasing obvious crowd-pleasers. “I don’t have a signature hit like ‘Gypsy Woman,’” he says. “What matters is context, who you’re playing for, what time slot, what city.” 

While he acknowledges that techno remains underrepresented in the U.S., he isn’t discouraged. “Americans just aren’t exposed to that the way people are in Europe,” he says, pointing to festivals like EDC and Ultra that lean toward broader EDM acts. For Meeker, that gap represents opportunity rather than limitation. 

Reading the Room, Feeling the Crowd 

To the uninitiated, DJing can look deceptively simple. Meeker is quick to dispel that myth. “It’s about trial and error,” he says. “You might take a risk on a song and see how people respond.” A track that works in Amsterdam might fall flat in Berlin, even with the same playlist. 

Technical precision matters just as much. “You’re cueing up the next song in your headphones, matching drums so there’s no collision,” he explains. It’s a discipline honed through years of practice, both at home and in the club, informed by a lifetime as a musician. 

Tomorrow: Producing and Performing 

Beyond DJing, Meeker is increasingly drawn to production. “There’s an urge to write my own music,” he admits, describing techno production as a new frontier he’s steadily mastering. He’s watched DJs drop unreleased tracks that send crowds scrambling for Shazam, and he hopes to create that moment himself one day. 

His ambitions, however, extend far beyond the booth. “In five years, I’d love to spend the week touring as a session drummer for artists, jazz, pop, rock, and on weekends doing wild early-morning techno sets around the world.” He doesn’t want to choose between drumming and DJing; he wants both, united by rhythm. 

“I remember what it felt like at my first concert, my first club,” he says. “If there’s one thing I want more than anything, it’s to give that feeling to the next generation of musicians.” 

Ultimately, Meeker’s story is more than a nightlife profile. It’s a musician’s pursuit of resonance, mastery, and connection. And if there’s one thing certain about this New York rhythm maker, it’s that his beat is only just beginning. 

Check him out on Instagram @jensenmeeker and SoundCloud.

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