Breaking Counterpoint:  Immersive Performance-in-Progress
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Breaking Counterpoint: Immersive Performance-in-Progress

Step inside the next evolution of live performance—where minimalist music, interactive visuals, and audience presence collide.

Date and time

Location

Peabody Institute of The Johns Hopkins University: Joe Byrd Hall

1 East Mount Vernon Place Baltimore, MD 21202

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour
  • Paid venue parking

This special event offers a first look at Breaking Counterpoint, a boundary-breaking performance-installation and full-length album for amplified guitar. You'll experience a 25-minute preview featuring two works from the upcoming project:

  • Michael Laurello’s Tell Hope Everything You Hear – an explosive, visceral piece for amplified guitar and electronics
  • Steve Reich’s Electric Counterpoint – radically reimagined with producer Wendel Patrick through multitracking, hip-hop-inspired beats, and digital sampling, reshaping the iconic work for 21st-century ears

In collaboration with Emmy-nominated choreographer Katherine Helen Fisher and her team at Safety Third Productions, and the powerhouse movement artists of Orange Grove Dance, this preview invites you into a multisensory world of sound, movement, and projection. Using real-time technologies like TouchDesigner and OpenFrameworks, the performance transforms the stage into a living system—reactive to performer and audience alike.

This is not a finished concert. It’s a living question:Why gather—physically, together—in an age of infinite digital content?How can music, movement, and design become tools for building connection, not just consumption?

This performance-in-progress is your invitation to help answer those questions.

Created by:Katherine Helen Fisher + Safety Third Productions, choreography + visual design

Orange Grove Dance,choreography + movement performance

Zane Forshee, guitar

Wendel Patrick, sound + samples

This project is made possible through the support of the Dean’s Excellence Accelerator Award. Funded by President Ronald J. Daniels as a three-year pilot initiative, the DXA Grant supports innovative faculty development projects at the Peabody Institute that advance creative research, pedagogy, and public impact.

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FreeJul 19 · 3:00 PM EDT