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Tim Barsky is an American musician from Boston, Massachusetts.[1] Based in the San Francisco Bay Area, he is a beatboxer-instrumentalist, playwright-performer, and urban circus artist.[2] He is a graduate of Brown University with a degree in Islamic and Judaic religious studies. He also studied at the Berklee School of Music and with the Chasidic folklorist and archivist Fishel Bresler.[1]

Trained as a traditional Jewish storyteller,[3] his use of contemporary culture within traditional forms resulted in The Bright River,[4] an underground theatrical piece that achieved cult status within the Bay area.[5] In 2007 he was awarded a $50,000 Gerbode Emerging Playwright's Grant[6] for Track in a Box, a hip hop and circus based play about junkie police, strippers and giant puppets which is set to premiere in Fall 2009.

His work has been produced and performed at The Brava Theatre (2006–08), Climate Theatre (2008; also artist-in-residence), Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco (2005), Julia Morgan Theatre in Berkeley (2004–05),[1] Traveling Jewish Theatre in San Francisco (2004), The Exit Theatre in San Francisco (2003), The Finborough Theatre in London (2002), and AS220 in Providence, Rhode Island (1997–2001).

A former line-producer for the Burning Man Arts Festival, and a member of the Hybrid Project at San Francisco's Intersection for the Arts, he has been a guest artist and lecturer at the Royal College of Art (London), Stanford University, RISD, and Oberlin College; a featured speaker at The American Press Institute; and a beatboxing instructor in San Francisco juvenile detention facilities.

He is the artistic director of City Circus and a co-founder of Vowel Movement Beatboxers.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Hurwitt, Sam. "Word Beat", San Francisco Chronicle, 5 December 2004.
  2. ^ Eaton, Nathaniel. Tim Barsky's new play, 7 Beggars, leaves us begging for more, SF Weekly, 7 October 2008.
  3. ^ Schwartz, Jay. ‘The Bright River’ fuses mouth magic and hip-hop shtick, JWeekly, 10 December 2004.
  4. ^ Hurwitt, Robert. "Hop a subway to a restless hip-hop underworld", San Francisco Chronicle, 9 December 2004.
  5. ^ Barsky's 'Bright River' flows to beat of beatbox, Oakland Tribune
  6. ^ Gerbode Foundation Announcement

External links


Tim Barsky is an American musician from Boston, Massachusetts.[1] Based in the San Francisco Bay Area, he is a beatboxer-instrumentalist, playwright-performer, and urban circus artist.[2] He is a graduate of Brown University with a degree in Islamic and Judaic religious studies. He also studied at the Berklee School of Music and with the Chasidic folklorist and archivist Fishel Bresler.[1]

Trained as a traditional Jewish storyteller,[3] his use of contemporary culture within traditional forms resulted in The Bright River,[4] an underground theatrical piece that achieved cult status within the Bay area.[5] In 2007 he was awarded a $50,000 Gerbode Emerging Playwright's Grant[6] for Track in a Box, a hip hop and circus based play about junkie police, strippers and giant puppets which was set to premiere in Fall 2009.

His work has been produced and performed at The Brava Theatre (2006–08), Climate Theatre (2008; also artist-in-residence), Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco (2005), Julia Morgan Theatre in Berkeley (2004–05),[1] Traveling Jewish Theatre in San Francisco (2004), The Exit Theatre in San Francisco (2003), The Finborough Theatre in London (2002), and AS220 in Providence, Rhode Island (1997–2001).

A former line-producer for the Burning Man Arts Festival, and a member of the Hybrid Project at San Francisco's Intersection for the Arts, he has been a guest artist and lecturer at the Royal College of Art (London), Stanford University, RISD, and Oberlin College; a featured speaker at The American Press Institute; and a beatboxing instructor in San Francisco juvenile detention facilities.

He is the artistic director of City Circus and a co-founder of Vowel Movement Beatboxers.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c Hurwitt, Sam. "Word Beat", San Francisco Chronicle, 5 December 2004.
  2. ^ Eaton, Nathaniel. Tim Barsky's new play, 7 Beggars, leaves us begging for more, SF Weekly, 7 October 2008.
  3. ^ Schwartz, Jay. ‘The Bright River’ fuses mouth magic and hip-hop shtick, JWeekly, 10 December 2004.
  4. ^ Hurwitt, Robert. "Hop a subway to a restless hip-hop underworld", San Francisco Chronicle, 9 December 2004.
  5. ^ Barsky's 'Bright River' flows to beat of beatbox,[dead link] Oakland Tribune
  6. ^ Gerbode Foundation Announcement

External links








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