Jason Kao Hwang

Jason Kao Hwang (born 1957) is a Chinese American violinist and composer. He is known for his unconventional and improvisational jazz violin technique as well as his chamber opera The Floating Box: A Story in Chinatown which premiered in 2001 and was released in 2005 on New World Records.

Life and career
Hwang's parents had emigrated to the United States from Hunan after World War II. He was born in Lake Forest, Illinois and grew up in Waukegan. He studied classical violin before attending New York University where he received a degree in film and television. During his time at NYU, he became interested in jazz, and soon devoted himself to a career as a musician. He was active in New York City's free jazz scene in the late 1970s and early 1980s, but over the next decade he increasingly focused on Asian American jazz. His later work, including his opera The Floating Box and his extended composition Burning Bridge for a mixed ensemble of jazz, classical and Chinese instruments, has explored his own identity as an Asian American.

Discography
With Jerome Cooper With Dominic Duval With William Parker With Henry Threadgill With Reggie Workman
 * With Jason Kao Hwang and the Spontaneous River Orchestra
 * Symphony of Souls (Mulatta Records), 2013
 * With Billy Bang
 * Outline No. 12 (Celluloid, 1982 [1983])
 * With Anthony Braxton
 * Sextet (Istanbul) 1996 (Braxton House, 1995 [1996])
 * Octet (New York) 1995 (Braxton House, 1995 [1997])
 * Outer and Interactions (About Time, 1988)
 * Cries and Whispers (Cadence Jazz, 1999 [2001])
 * Through Acceptance of the Mystery Peace (Centering, 1980)
 * Sunrise in the Tone World (AUM Fidelity, 1995 [1997])
 * Too Much Sugar for a Dime (Axiom, 1993)
 * Carry the Day (Columbia, 1995)
 * Altered Spaces (Leo, 1993)