Trey Gunn
For Trey Gunn, the merging of storytelling, visual imagery and music have always been the point of contact for his creative life. Photography, painting, language and film play together to reinforce and inspire the musical experience he has sought throughout his rich career.
A native Texan who now resides in Seattle, Gunn, began his musical life at the age of 7 playing piano. His interest in music grew through various instruments: electric bass, electric and acoustic guitar, keyboards, and the touch guitar. He completed a degree in classical music composition at the University of Oregon before moving to New York City where his professional life blossomed.
In 1992 he was asked to join David Sylvian and Robert Fripp in a collaborative project that toured throughout the United States, Europe and Japan. The band released "The First Day" and "Damage" - a live recording from the Royal Albert Hall in London - both on Virgin Records. During this period Gunn also found time to record his first solo album "One Thousand Years." This recording began his work merging storytelling, dreamtime and music.
In 1994 he joined King Crimson - a group many contend as the most aggressively, adventurous rock band of all time. Over the next decade he participated in seventeen King Crimson CDs, two DVDs and hundreds of performances. For his role in this configuration of the group (Belew, Fripp, Gunn and Mastelotto), Gunn helped evolve a new and unique instrument. This 'tapped' instrument, the Warr Guitar, is a 10-string touch guitar with the range of a piano. It can be heard, in depth, on his 11 solo recordings.
In addition to the powerful performances and recordings of The Trey Gunn Band, Gunn has toured and/or recorded with TOOL, John Paul Jones, Maynard J. Keenan's "Pusicfer", Vernon Reid, Azam Ali, David Hykes of the Harmonic Choir and played on Steven Wilson's Grammy nominated recording "Grace Under Pressure".
2003 saw Gunn fully step into the world of multi-dimensional art forms. He began working on a series of children's stories set in Africa, a setting of Gregory Orr's poem "Orpheus and Eurydice" and he and Joe Mendelson gave birth to Quodia, a new form of multi-media performance art.
In addition to running his own media label (7d Media) and a multi-media production company (7 Directions), he is dividing his time between his solo work, film and television scoring, building multi-dimensional media projects and coaching musicians in the creative process.