The influence of Western pop music has made the koto less prominent in Japan, although it is still developing as an instrument. The
17-string bass koto () has become more prominent over the years since its development by
Michio Miyagi. There are also 20-, 21-, and 25-string koto. Works are being written for 20- and 25-string koto and 17-string bass koto.
Reiko Obata has also made the koto accessible to Western music readers with the publication of two books for solo koto using Western notation. The current generation of koto players, such as American performers
Reiko Obata and
Miya Masaoka, Japanese master
Kazue Sawai, and
Michiyo Yagi, are finding places for the koto in today's
jazz,
experimental music and even
pop music. The members of the band
Rin' are popular 17-string koto players in the modern music scene.
June Kuramoto of the jazz fusion group
Hiroshima was one of the first koto performers to popularize the koto in a non-traditional fusion style. Reiko Obata, founder of East West Jazz, was the first to perform and record an album of jazz standards featuring the koto. Obata also produced the first-ever English language koto instructional DVD, titled "You Can Play Koto". Obata is one of the few koto performers to perform concertos with United States orchestras, having done so on multiple occasions, including with
Orchestra Nova for San Diego's
KPBS in 2010. Other solo performers outside Japan include award-winning recording artist
Elizabeth Falconer, who also studied for a decade at the
Sawai Koto School in Tokyo, and
Linda Kako Caplan, Canadian (grandmaster) and member of Fukuoka's
Chikushi Koto School for over two decades. Another Sawai disciple,
Masayo Ishigure, holds down a school in
New York City.
Yukiko Matsuyama leads her KotoYuki band in Los Angeles. Her compositions blend the timbres of world music with her native Japanese culture. She performed on the Grammy-winning album
Miho: Journey to the Mountain (2010) by the
Paul Winter Consort, garnering additional exposure to Western audiences for the instrument. In November 2011, worldwide audiences were further exposed to the koto when she performed with
Shakira at the Latin Grammy Awards. In March 2010, the koto received widespread international attention when a video linked by the Grammy Award-winning hard rock band
Tool on its website became a viral hit. The video showed Tokyo-based ensemble
Soemon playing member Brett Larner's arrangement of the Tool song "
Lateralus" for six bass and two bass koto. Larner had previously played koto with
John Fahey,
Jim O'Rourke, and members of indie rock groups including
Camper Van Beethoven,
Deerhoof,
Jackie O Motherfucker, and
Mr. Bungle. In older pop and rock music,
David Bowie used a koto in the instrumental piece "
Moss Garden" on his album
"Heroes" (1977). The multi-instrumentalist, founder, and former guitarist of
The Rolling Stones Brian Jones played the koto in the song "
Take It Or Leave It" on the album
Aftermath (1966).
Paul Gilbert, a popular
guitar virtuoso, recorded his wife Emi playing the koto on his song "Koto Girl" from the album
Alligator Farm (2000). Rock band
Kagrra, are well known for using traditional Japanese musical instruments in many of their songs, an example being , a song in which the koto has a prominent place.
Winston Tong, the singer of
Tuxedomoon, uses it on his 15-minute song "The Hunger" from his debut solo album
Theoretically Chinese (1985). The
rock band
Queen used a (toy) koto in "
The Prophet's Song" on their 1975 album
A Night at the Opera. Ex-
Genesis guitarist
Steve Hackett used a koto on the instrumental song "The Red Flower of Tachai Blooms Everywhere" from the album
Spectral Mornings (1979), and
Genesis keyboardist
Tony Banks sampled a koto using an
Emulator keyboard for the band's song "
Mama". A koto played by Hazel Payne is featured in
A Taste of Honey's 1981 English cover of the Japanese song "
Sukiyaki". A synthesized koto appears in their cover of
The Miracles' "
I'll Try Something New".
Steve Howe used a koto in the instrumental break of
Asia's single "
Heat of the Moment", from their
self-titled 1982 album. Howe also played a koto on the
Yes song "It Will Be a Good Day (The River)", from the 1999 album
The Ladder.
Dr. Dre's 1999 album
2001 prominently features a synthesized koto on two of its tracks, "
Still D.R.E." and "The Message". A 2020 acoustic cover of
Led Zeppelin's "
The Battle of Evermore" by PianoRock feat. Dean McNeill also prominently features a synthesized koto. ==Recordings==