Home » Jazz Articles » Brett Larner
Jazz Articles about Brett Larner
Brett Larner: Telemetry Transmission
by AAJ Staff
In the recent American discovery of traditional Japanese music, instruments like the koto and the shakuhachi have become more popularly utilized. One of the distinguishing features of the koto, a string instrument, is its staccato sound, due to its extremely limited sustain. American instrumentalist Brett Larner conceived a very unique solution to circumvent this limitation. His approach appears on Telemetry Transmission. By placing gyroscopes on the strings of the instrument, Larner creates a whole new sound, consisting of broad sweeping ...
read moreBrett Larner, Shoko Hikage, and Philip Gelb: Indistancing
by Robert Spencer
Brett Larner is a master of the Japanese guitar-like koto, on which he has recorded a breathtaking series of duets with Anthony Braxton. On this fine disc he is joined by fellow koto player Shoko Hikage, along with Philip Gelb, who wields another traditional Japanese instrument, the flute-like shakuhachi.
This is improvised music that is formed and guided by the traditions and possibilities of these instruments. For although the music is improvised, apparently without much of anything in the way ...
read moreBrett Larner/Shoko Hikage/Philip Gelb: INDISTANCING
by AAJ Staff
A friend of mine vehemently despises purely improvised music. She refers to free improv as “that genre that refuses to die.” Furthermore, she has predicted that “free improvisation will ultimately be proven to be the gimmicky and cliché-ridden beast that it is as it dead ends with Western practitioners resorting to non-Western instruments to realize their feeble aims.” (Whew...this lady doesn’t mince words, does she?)
Thus, as a fan of improvised music, it was an unnerving coincidence to read the ...
read more