According to the Village Voice , Grant's distinct sound has "...a driving and rather harsh energy redolent of rock, as well as a clean sense of melodicism ... the music's momentum and intricate cross-rhythms rarely let up, making the occasional infectious tunes that emerge all the more beautiful for surprise."
He has created musical scores for theatrical visionaries Gerald Thomas (Bate Man, Queen Liar) and Robert Wilson ( three installations and a theatrical presentation with artist Andrey Bartenev at The Watermill Center ), The Louvre Museum (an installation for the Musée du Quai Branly ), the Cornell Gamelan Ensemble (a tone poem after a scenario by Artaud ), The Living Theatre - two theater pieces, a one-act "opera" and music for the ..ary "Resist!" , and the Margaret Jenkins Dance Company in San Francisco (a piece called "the strangest and most ravishing dance of the year" by the SF Chronicle and nominated for Best Dance Score of 2003 by the Isadora Duncan Dance Awards ). His work often involves elements found in the natural and physical sciences ( Genome: The Autobiography of a Species ).
He has been commissioned by the CUNY Graduate Center ( BIG BANG ), jointly by the artist Kehinde Wiley (for soprano Shequida), Deitch Projects (Rumors of War), and The Columbus Museum of Art (Historical Black Music Rollercoaster), and the Modern Museum of Fort Worth.
His works have been performed at the Bang on a Can Annual Marathon , MATA - Music at the Anthology , by Gamelan Son of Lion , The CUNY Graduate Center's Science & the Arts series, The Forum Freies Theater in Germany, and by The Young Eight (hIP-hOP eXPERIENCE for string quartet).
As
a presenter, Mr. Grant has produced scores of new music concerts in the alternative
spaces of New York City, in art galleries, theaters, factory lofts and clubs,
since 1988, most recently with the One-Two-Three-GO!
series.
He is founder and artistic director of Strange
Music Inc. , an organization dedicated to releasing recordings and presenting
compelling new work with performances and installations in New York and around
the world. He formed his own ensemble, Patrick Grant Group, in 1998.
Born
in Detroit, MI, Grant studied at Wayne
State University and at The Juilliard
School , and has been a student of gamelan and the Indonesian performing arts
during three residencies in Bali.