In Baobab, Phil Torres constructed elaborate pop songs that suggested both the chaos and rigid order of an active mind. With that project on hiatus, Torres has started a new, performance-oriented solo act. Now, as crowdsource, Torres manipulates audio and video streams, mixing between the two to create an experience specific to each event. July will see a crowdsource EP on Hush Hush Records; in the meantime, he opens for Englandโ€™s NYPCโ€”thatโ€™s the former New Young Pony Clubโ€”at Kings in Raleigh May 6.

โ€œThe video can respond in real-time to the audio, the audio to the video, and both to the audience,โ€ he says. โ€œThere are so many audio-visual options here that it would be impossible to recreate any series of mixing events after they happen.โ€

Last summer, near Baobabโ€™s end, crowdsource emerged as Torresโ€™ focus shifted from traditional live music to โ€œprojection events.โ€ Typically unannounced, these sets featured Torres setting up in a busy urban area and projecting his short films against abandoned buildings while playing his music. Torres would ask to borrow a businessโ€™ power, defusing some of the potential for guerrilla art controversy.

โ€œI never had any issues with police or anyone else,โ€ he says. Some officers asked what he was doing, watched for a while, and moved on, he says. Reactions from incidental spectators came split between apathy, he says, and excitement. Sometimes, his impromptu audiences even encouraged him to restart the show.

โ€œMy aim was explicitly not to cause any kind of disturbance of the peace,โ€ Torres says. โ€œI wanted these events to foster community rather than upset it.โ€


crowdsource plays Kings Tuesday, May 6.

Bio: Corbie Hill lives on three wooded acres in Pittsboro, where he is a writer, musician, dad of two and community college English instructor. He is a regular contributor to INDY Week's music section.Twitter: http://twitter.com/afraidofthebear