Guitar World

Todd Mosby’s Imrat Guitar

WHERE EAST MEETS WEST

- By Alan di Perna

WITH ROOTS IN jazz, folk and Indian classical music, guitarist Todd Mosby is eclectic, to say the least. In the mid Nineties, he found himself in need of an axe that could accommodat­e the techniques and compositio­nal ideas he’d drawn from both his Eastern and Western influences. As a result, he co-designed a unique hybrid instrument he calls the Imrat guitar, which combines elements of the guitar and Indian instrument­s such as the sitar and rudra veena. It can be heard on Mosby’s most recent album, Aerial Views, a set of soft-hued impression­istic jazz compositio­ns featuring A-List players like bassist Tony Levin (King Crimson, Peter Gabriel) and drummer Jerry Marotta (Peter Gabriel, Paul McCartney).

The Imrat guitar is named for Mosby’s longtime Indian music teacher, the celebrated master Ustad Imrat Khan, who taught sitar to George Harrison and Brian Jones during the Sixties and later resided in Mosby’s hometown of St. Louis, Missouri. “I’d been studying with Imrat for about four years, starting out on just regular acoustic guitar,” Mosby says. “But I got to a point where I needed to access deeper levels of Indian music. Luckily I knew a luthier, Kim

Schwartz, who already had a design that was somewhat in the ballpark of what I had in mind. So the three of us started designing plans for a personal instrument that I could use as a jazz musician.”

Mosby’s electric Imrat guitar resembles a harp guitar in many ways. The fingerboar­d has five principal playing strings plus three chikari (rhythmic drone) strings. The harp above the fingerboar­d consists of 12 sympatheti­c strings. All strings are suspended across one of two sitar-style jivari bridges which help create a sitar-like buzzing, resonant tonality.

The fingerboar­d is scalloped and has jumbo frets, enabling dramatic microtonal string bends, which are essential in performing Indian classical music.

But you can also play chords, which are required for most Western music forms, such as jazz.

“Western music took harmony to the highest level with Schoenberg and other classical composers,” Mosby says. “And in India, they wound up taking melody to the absolute highest level. With the Imrat guitar, I can incorporat­e both of these beautiful traditions in my playing.”

“Western music took harmony to the highest level with Schoenberg and other classical composers. In India, they wound up taking melody to the absolute highest level. With the Imrat guitar, I can incorporat­e both of these traditions in my playing” — TODD MOSBY

 ??  ?? Todd Mosby with his Imrat Guitar
Todd Mosby with his Imrat Guitar

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