Home » Jazz Musicians » Max ZT
Max ZT
“I think we’re in the midst of a mass awakening,” says Max ZT, “a kind of collective reprioritization. It feels like we’ve been forging our way through the darkness, and now the light is finally about to break through.”
With Daybreak, Max’s mesmerizing new album of hammered dulcimer music, the light has arrived. Recorded at home in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, the fully-improvised instrumental collection channels all of the hope and fear and pain and discovery of these past few years into a captivating sonic journey that’s equal parts medicine and meditation. The songs here are spare and deliberate, calling on Indian, African, and Celtic traditions as they move with grace and wonder, and the performances are nothing short of entrancing, managing to showcase both Max’s virtuosic command of his instrument and the innovative approach that’s earned him widespread acclaim. A national champion performer, Max has been praised as the Jimi Hendrix of the hammered dulcimer by NPR, but Daybreak isn’t about fireworks or flash. Instead, the album is an offering, an ego-sublimating invitation to step outside of yourself and find peace and comfort in reflection.
“Music has the power to transport us,” Max reflects. “I’m not a healer; I know an F# isn’t going to take anybody’s pain away. But at the same time, I know that I can create an environment where people can engage in the kind of introspection they need in order to heal themselves. And that’s why I made this album.”
A Chicago native who now calls Brooklyn home, Max had his first encounter with the hammered dulcimer—a rather unusual instrument that’s played by striking tuned strings with a pair of soft mallets—at the tender age of two, when, as his parents tell the story, he became so transfixed by a performance at a museum that he planted himself at the player’s feet and refused to budge. At seven, he began taking lessons on a rented dulcimer, and by his teenage years, he’d moved up to one of master luthier David Lindsay’s grand Concert Grand models, which featured an extended range and a floating soundboard designed to increase the instrument’s warmth and resonance. (Under Lindsay’s mentorship, Max would eventually begin building his own instruments, including the one he plays on Daybreak.) Max’s interest in the dulcimer stretched beyond the traditional Western folk music associated with it, though, and after learning about West African music in college, he headed to Senegal to study the 21-stringed kora.
Read moreTags
Manu Delago & Max ZT: Deuce
by Scott Gudell
It seems Manu Delago was always destined to be a musician. Although his first instruments of choice included piano and accordion, he found himself drawn to rock drumming by the time he moved into his teenage years. The goal of mastering various percussion instruments has been his passion, but he has methodically drifted toward jazz and world music. One of the instruments he focused on is the hanga, a sort of metallic steel drum (basically two domed 'handpans' merged together). ...
Continue ReadingHouse of Waters: On Becoming
by Jim Worsley
Flowing in many directions yet forever staying in the moment is largely the challenge and artistic purpose of House of Waters. Here they once again bring forth new and creative concepts that are freely exchanged and intertwined. New beginnings, drawn from multiple sources, as well as further exploration of the past, create the wonder, awe, and awareness of On Becoming. The dulcimer was not part of mainstream culture until Max ZT put it on the map. Joining with six string ...
Continue Reading“The Jimi Hendrix of the hammered dulcimer.” - NPR
"Cloud Bursting, Ear Opening." - WNYC Read more from WNYC's New Sounds with John Schaefer
“ Building upon a fresh, inspiring, imaginative, and unprecedented intersection of jazz and prog rock, House of Waters reinvigorates the movement with [a] new and vibrant assemblage of creativity. Centuries in the making, Rising is a defining moment in twenty-first century fusion.”




