Masaya Yamaguchi (born July 18, 1970) is a guitarist and educator residing in Manhattan, New York City.
Career
Yamaguchi grew up in Tokyo, Japan and decided to study in the U.S. at the age of 26. He became the first Japanese person to complete the master's program in Jazz Performance at City College of New York (M.A. 1999). He has written for Down Beat magazine and Annual Review of Jazz Studies, which is peer reviewed and published by the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University.[1][2][3]
According to his profile in Marquis Who's Who in America, Yamaguchi has been a musician and educator who established his conceptual system to explore the imaginative formation of musical scales in The Complete Thesaurus of Musical Scales.[4] His representative work, The Complete Thesaurus of Musical Scales was reviewed by John Kuzmich (senior columnist of Jazz Education Journal, International Association for Jazz Education) as "It's worth mentioning that this book comprehensively covers all theoretical possibilities in constructing scales...Take this Thesaurus Scales seriously, you will not be disappointed in the options available for jazz improvisation."[5] "The Subsets of Limited Transposition" (which takes Olivier Messiaen's Modes of limited transposition and updates it) and "Appendix: Scales for Jazz Improvisation" in The Complete Thesaurus of Musical Scales are very helpful to organize musician's mind and ear. "The Subsets of Limited Transposition" was introduced in The Complete Thesaurus of Musical Scales,[6] "Symmetrical Scales for Jazz Improvisation" [7] and his academic article, "A Creative Approach to Multi-Tonic Changes: Beyond Coltrane's Harmonic Formula (Annual Review of Jazz Studies 12, 2002)."[8] The concept of "The Subsets of Limited Transposition" has been updated by the "Lexicon of Geometric Patterns for Jazz Improvisation" as "Systematized The Subsets of Limited Transposition Families." Chapter VI of "Lexicon of Geometric Patterns for Jazz Improvisation" is also given to "Messiaen's Modes for Jazz Improvisation" [9]
Masaya Yamaguchi is also known as a scholar and researcher of the music of Charlie Parker and John Coltrane. David Damsey is a co-author of John Coltrane Plays Coltrane Changes[10] and a professor of music and coordinator of jazz studies at William Paterson University.
Selected works
The Complete Thesaurus of Musical Scales (New York: Charles Colin Publications, 1999, Masaya Music, Revised 2006) ISBN0967635306
Pentatonicism in Jazz: Creative Aspects and Practice (New York: Charles Colin Publications, 2002, Masaya Music, Revised 2006) ISBN0967635314
Symmetrical Scales for Jazz Improvisation (New York: Charles Colin Publications, 2001, Masaya Music, Revised 2006) ISBN0967635322
Lexicon of Geometric Patterns for Jazz Improvisation (Masaya Music, 2012) ISBN0967635330