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Chris Strouth_peliplat

Chris Strouth

Director
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Chris Strouth's art embraces complexity and explores the frontiers of sound. To bring his conceptually ambitious work to life, he works in many different media, making him difficult to pigeonhole: He's a composer, bandleader, filmmaker, writer, producer, designer, experimentalist, culture re-mixer. Music is at the heart of his work as leader and songwriter of the postmodern ensemble Paris 1919, but it is just one part of the whole-crossing genre borders at will, the group's performances fuse music, theater, film, performance art, and dance, creating huge, immersive spaces that draw in listeners more deeply and pervasively than sound alone can. The intention is not to overwhelm, but to build a shared intimacy with the audience, bringing them closer to his often introspective and intensely personal music by literally placing them inside the work itself. It's a way of making potentially difficult or challenging music accessible to a larger audience, and to create a sense of wonder. Strouth creates huge, expansive sonic spaces so he can better explore quiet, intimate, sometimes dark territory. Paris 1919's latest project, "Safe as Houses"-a multi sensory postmodern opera using song, movement, installation, and video-is partly inspired by the post-bubble housing crisis of the last decade. His third collaboration with renowned choreographer Deborah Jinza Thayer, artistic director of Movement Architecture, "Safe As Houses" creates an immersive experience turning the theater into a giant dollhouse. In 2013's "Antarctica," Strouth converted an art gallery into an ethereal polar ice cave; the cold and solitary setting became a concrete expression of his experience with a life-threatening kidney disease, dialysis and transplant. For the 2011 work Czeslaw's Loop, he conducted an orchestra consisting of 30 musicians on a floating barge in the middle of the Mississippi River. One key part of Strouth's approach to music is a focus on turning disadvantages into strengths. His unorthodox approach to composition and instrumentation has roots in a learning disability, dysgraphia, which prevents him from playing an instrument in a traditional way. Faced with an inability to play the way everyone else does, Strouth found his own path, and learned how to approach music in a way very few have. "I can't play Chopin on the piano," he says, "but I can make the piano do things you'd never think it could. Granted, that often involves power tools." Paris 1919's music begins in the studio, where Strouth deconstructs the sounds of guitars, synthesizers and vocals, bending and reshaping and recombining them to create new structures with painstaking technical precision. Some of the pieces are built out of more than 1,000 edits, in a process that can take months to complete. The compositions also draw from a healthy diversity of genres, merging elements from prog, classical, techno, musique concrete, world, ambient, and death metal.

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