Dorian Wood
Dorian Wood (born in 1975) is an American singer, composer, performance artist, visual artist and writer.[1]
Early History
Wood was born in Los Angeles, California to Costa Rican parents. He began his musical education at a very early age, under the tutelage of his grandfather, the pianist Calasanz Alvarez.[2] In his early teens, Wood’s parents divorced, and Wood’s mother moved him and his sisters to Costa Rica. He continued his studies at the Conservatorio de Castella, and after graduating, he made his way back to Los Angeles. He studied film at Los Angeles City College for two years but then dropped out to concentrate on music.[3] Wood first gained exposure performing on the gay bar circuit.[4]
Career
Wood released his debut album, BOLKA, independently in 2006. Produced by Rebecca Stout, BOLKA received wide critical acclaim for its impeccable merging of folk, soul, Bulgarian choral music and experimental music.[2] He quickly followed up BOLKA with the EP, Black Pig Suite.[5] In 2010, he released the album Brutus, which featured only Wood on vocal and piano, and was recorded live at the church St. Giles in the Fields in London, in the midst of his European tour.[6]
Wood was a member of the Los Angeles-based experimental orchestra Killsonic for three years.[7] Wood received critical praise for his performance and "picture perfect" art direction (Los Angeles Times) in the Killsonic opera, Tongues Bloody Tongues, presented at the REDCAT in Los Angeles in 2010.[8] Wood performed at the REDCAT again in 2011 in the opera Zoophilic Follies, along with Timur and The Dime Museum.[9]
In 2011, Wood was commissioned by LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions) to present a new work for the performance series Los Angeles Goes Live, part of Pacific Standard Time. Wood's performance installation, Athco, Or The Renaissance of Faggot Tree, incorporated over 30 performers, and was presented at Barnsdall Art Park.[10] That same year, Wood performed with acclaimed artist Marina Abramovic in her piece An Artist's Life Manifesto, presented at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.[1]
Wood released the album Rattle Rattle in 2013. An epic collection of original doomsday-themed songs that form one strong, continuous piece, Rattle Rattle incorporated over 60 musicians, including a 45-member choir assembled by Wood himself, The Difficult Women, as well as duets with Angela Correa (Correatown, Les Shelleys) and Nina Savary.[11] Wood directed the controversial video for the first single "La Cara Infinita" (a duet with Eddika Organista), which featured a guest appearance by Margaret Cho.[12] Wood's following video for his single "O" featured performance artist Rafa Esparza and model/make-up artist Taryn Piana.[13]
In October 2014, Wood toured Europe in support of the release of his EP, Down, The Dirty Roof, via Atonal Industries.[14] In 2015, Wood released a digital EP, "Hymn to Freedom", also via Atonal Industries.[15]
Wood has announced that he is currently working on the official full-length follow up to Rattle Rattle. Entitled XALÁ, the album will consist of brand new work, all in Spanish. XALÁ was recorded in Spain and is set to be released sometime in 2016.[16]
Discography
- BOLKA (2006)
- Black Pig Suite EP (2009)
- Brutus (2010)
- Glassellalia EP (2012)
- Pearline EP (2012)
- Rattle Rattle (2013)
- La Cara Infinita EP (2013)
- Down, The Dirty Roof EP (2014)
- Hymn to Freedom EP (2015)[17]
References
- 1 2 Dorian Wood and the Art of Performance, KCET Artbound.
- 1 2 Dorian Wood: Beautiful Losing, LA Weekly.
- ↑ SoCal Musician Mends Heartbreak on Debut, Signal Tribune.
- ↑ LA's Dorian Wood is Something Else, Hear in Colors.
- ↑ Interview Dorian Wood: Pianos, Frances Bacon and Peter Seeger, Net Emergence.
- ↑ God Bless This Army So Close to the Ground (how the Brutus), InDigest Mag.
- ↑ Killsonic: A 24-Piece L.A. Big Band's "Cloud of Noise", LA Weekly.
- ↑ Performance review: Killsonic at the NOW Festival at REDCAT, Los Angeles Times.
- ↑ Don't Quarrel About Species, Times Quotidian.
- ↑ Los Angeles Goes Live: Performance Art in Southern California 1970–1983, X-TRA.
- ↑ Album Review: Dorian Wood, "Rattle Rattle", The Deli Magazine.
- ↑ Watch: Dorian Wood's "La Cara Infinita", OUT Magazine.
- ↑ Dorian Wood, Queer Artist, Premieres 'O' (VIDEO), The Huffington Post.
- ↑ Gira Europea y Nuevo EP De Dorian Wood en Otono, Born Music.
- ↑ DORIAN WOOD: HYMN TO FREEDOM EP, LA Record.
- ↑ Dorian Wood Is On A Mission To Put Latinos At The Forefront Of Performance Art, Remezcla.
- ↑ Dorian Wood Bandcamp site, Bandcamp.