After learning that
Chick Corea was seeking a bassist for an upcoming tour, Wilkenfeld sent him demos of
Transformation, and was selected for his 2007 Australian tour, Prince had Wilkenfeld attend parties at his Los Angeles home. Sometimes he and his band played and she was the only other person there. In 2009, Wilkenfeld toured Australia and
Japan with Jeff Beck. Weeks later the group toured the United States, beginning with Beck's induction into the
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. They played ''
Beck's Bolero'' there and were joined by
Led Zeppelin's
Jimmy Page on
Immigrant Song. A DVD of this performance,
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame: Legends, TV was released in 2010. Between touring Japan and the US, Wilkenfeld performed with
the Roots on
Late Night with Jimmy Fallon as their first musical guest, after which she joined Jeff Beck's summer tour through
Europe,
Canada, and Britain.
Pink Floyd's David Gilmour sat in with the group during a performance at the
Royal Albert Hall. In October 2009, Wilkenfeld reunited with Jeff Beck at
Madison Square Garden for the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 25th Anniversary two-night concert. The set included
Buddy Guy on "Let Me Love You Baby",
Sting singing "
People Get Ready", and
Billy Gibbons on "
Foxey Lady". The
25th Anniversary Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Concerts DVD, which also included "Big Block", "
A Day in the Life", and "Freeway Jam", was released in 2010. Wilkenfeld was featured on four tracks on Jeff Beck's album
Emotion & Commotion. In 2010, she contributed to
Hancock's
The Imagine Project on "
A Change is Gonna Come" and "
Don't Give Up" She played on
Macy Gray's
The Sellout on "That Man",
Lee Ritenour's
Six String Theory on "68", "In your Dreams", "
Give Me One Reason" and
Guthrie Govan's song "Fives". In 2010, Wilkenfeld appeared in
the Baked Potato's 40th anniversary show at the
Ford Amphitheater with
Steve Lukather's band; she accompanied Hancock across the U.S., Canada, and Europe promoting a new release on which she had played. The tour included a show at
Carnegie Hall to celebrate Hancock's 70th birthday. In September 2011, Wilkenfeld accompanied
Steven Tyler and Jeff Beck at the
iHeartRadio Music Festival at the MGM Grand Garden Arena. On 19 May 2012, Wilkenfeld accompanied Beck and
Mick Jagger on
Saturday Night Live. In 2013, she joined alt-country singer-songwriter
Ryan Adams as a collaborator on his studio album,
Ryan Adams (2014). She contributed to two tracks on the
Toto album
Toto XIV, and co-wrote a song called "Running Whiskey" with
ZZ Top guitarist
Billy Gibbons. "Running Whiskey" was released in 2016 by Supersonic Blues Machine. In 2018, Wilkenfeld performed with
Bob Weir and his band Wolf Bros at the
Arlington Theatre in
Santa Barbara, California, and the
Beacon Theatre in
Manhattan. She was featured on the cover of
Bass Player magazine's March 2019 issue. On 22 July 2019, Wilkenfeld appeared on
Jimmy Kimmel Live!, performing "Killing Me" and "Corner Painter". In 2022, Wilkenfeld recorded and performed "
Oye Como Va" alongside
Santana,
Cory Henry and
Becky G for "Playing for Change". In January and February 2023, she played five shows with
Incubus while their bassist
Ben Kenney recovered from brain surgery. She also made two appearances at Bonnaroo alongside Cory Wong from Vulfpeck and JP Saxe. Scary Pockets released a single featuring Wilkenfeld singing "Big Yellow Taxi" alongside
Larry Goldings. She also performed live at the Newport Jazz festival and Monterey Jazz festival with "Scary Goldings" featuring
John Scofield. In 2024, Wilkenfeld was interviewed by
Lex Fridman on his podcast. Wilkenfeld sang and played the National Anthem on
Kill Tony. At the end of the year, she produced, musical directed and performed on
Jeff Ross’s comedy special on Netflix called
Torching 2024 alongside
John Stamos. In September 2025, she made a guest appearance on
The Jimmy Kimmel Show with
Spinal Tap performing live on "Big Bottom", adding further bass alongside
Derek Smalls (bass),
Nigel Tufnel (bass), David St. Hubbins (bass) and
Thundercat (bass). ==Solo career==