This is the story of a “local guy” who stuck to his guns and made it on his own terms. He’s a DIY musician. His name is Marcus Shelby.

Twenty years ago, Shelby — bassist, bandleader, composer, big musical thinker — was part of the “Young Lions” movement in jazz, recording for Columbia Records and seemingly destined for fame and fortune in New York City. Shelby, however, moved from Los Angeles to San Francisco and began gigging six and seven nights a week. He was forging a reputation, teaching in schools and collaborating with theater companies, choreographers, filmmakers and poets, while building a discography focused on grand historical themes in African-American history.

He’s never left the Bay Area. Lucky us.

“In New York, I’m not sure I could’ve built the vision,” he says, during a two-hour conversation at the Red Poppy Art House, a cozy community center near his Mission district apartment. “This is my city. This is where I am. My kids go to school here. I work in the schools. I believe in them.”