Paul Chavez

Paul Chavez (born 1 July 1964) is an American composer of dance music, and a sound designer for installation and theater. He often composes under the project name FeltLike. Chavez has worked in the Los Angeles, California area since 1990 where he did some of his first works at Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions[1] where he started as a sound engineer. Chavez's music is influenced by the minimalism of Steve Reich and Paul Dresher and the experimental music of Robert Ashley and Laurie Anderson. His work has been featured at the REDCAT Theater in Los Angeles (part of the Walt Disney Concert Hall) and his recent score for the Arcane Collective's dance work Cold Dream Colour was created in collaboration with U2's The Edge.

Paul Chavez (aka FeltLike)
Birth namePaul Michael Chavez
Born (1964-07-01) 1 July 1964
Beaumont, California, USA
GenresExperimental, Minimalism, Ambient, Electronic
Occupation(s)Audio Applications, Composer, Sound Designer
InstrumentsGuitar, bass, percussion, keyboards, wind instruments, computer
Years active1987–present
Websitewww.waterrock.org

Chavez has developed a style of composition over the past twenty years that involves creating the initial sound score independently from the choreography. The score is then brought together with the dance just prior to the performance and a sound collage is created. Often the work is mixed and modified live during the dance performance using multiple playback sources such as multitrack computers, CDs, and live instruments.

Biography

Chavez began writing music for dance in college at UC Santa Barbara's College of Creative Studies, where he studied with composers John Carbon, Hagar Kadima and installation artist Ann Hamilton. He received a Bachelor of Arts in Music Composition from there in 1987. A native Californian, Chavez's music is strongly influenced by his engineering, visual arts, design and architecture background.

His past performances with the group The 4GUNAS (which he co-founded with sound designers Raul Vincent Enriquez and Erik Blank) included theatrical, tableaux vivants of his design that underscored the sculptural nature of his work. Chavez has worked extensively in scoring the work of several choreographer/dancers who specialize in the Butoh style of dance, including Oguri, Roxanne Steinberg, Melinda Ring, Morleigh Steinberg, and Sarah Elgart. He has also collaborated with Shel Wagner Rasch and Stephan Koplowitz, Dean of the School of Dance at the California Institute of the Arts.

Selected works

  • 2012 Cold Dream Colour (collaboration with The Edge from U2) - for The Arcane Collective[2]
  • 2011 Fly Away Home - for Sarah Elgart[3]
  • 2011 Rethink LA[4]
  • 2011 Fall Water (Evening in 100 Acres) - for Oguri[5]
  • 2010 LA Beyond Cars[6]
  • 2008 Mapping Idyllwild - for Stephan Koplowitz and Task Force[7]
  • 2007 Caddy! Caddy! Caddy! - for Honeysuckle[8][9]
  • 2006 Drift - for Sarah Elgart[10]
  • 1994 Travelling Light - for Morleigh Steinberg[11]
  • 1994 Clerestory - for Melinda Ring, Roxanne Steinberg and Oguri[12]

References

  1. Apple, Jacki (Summer 1990). "Paul Chavez and the 4Gunas". High Performance. #50 Vol. XIII, No. 2: 59.
  2. Mulrooney, Deirdre (15 November 2010). "Review: Cold Dream Colour". The Independent. Retrieved 15 November 2010.
  3. Johnson, Harold. "SUMMER DANCE PERFORMANCE AT LAX FLYAWAY® BUS TERMINAL IN VAN NUYS". Retrieved 27 June 2011.
  4. Almendrala, Anna (08/15/11). "Rethink LA Exhibit at the Architecture And Design Museum". HuffPost. Retrieved 19 March 2012. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. "FALL WATER (EVENING IN 100 ACRES)". FLOW: Can You See the River?. Indianapolis Art Museum. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  6. Lee, Evelyn. "LA Beyond Cars: A Global Perspective on Rail and Public Space". Inhabitat. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  7. "'Mapping Idyllwild,' a site-specific performance tour". Town Crier. 29 May 2008. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  8. Bleiberg, Laura (2 March 2007). "Butoh dance meets Faulkner". Orange County Register. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  9. Looseleaf, Victoria (27 March 2006). "At its heart, a dark tale old and familiar". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  10. "DRIFT Open Air Performance at M&A". Materials & Applications. Archived from the original on 3 February 2012. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  11. "Travelling Light". IMDB. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
  12. Segal, Lewis (20 June 1994). "DANCE REVIEW : 'Clerestory': Metaphysical Romp in Modular Space". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 19 March 2012.
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