Chris Opperman
American composer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American composer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chris Opperman (born November 20, 1978[1]) is a composer. Opperman is known mostly for his work orchestrating the music of guitarists Steve Vai and Mike Keneally for their respective performances with Holland's Metropole Orkest. Opperman also performed on Steve Vai's first round of orchestral concerts and the song "Lotus Feet" was nominated for the 2006 Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance. "The Attitude Song" from Vai's Sound Theories Vol. I & II album was nominated for the 2008 Grammy Award for Best Rock Instrumental Performance.
Opperman has also worked with AWR Music Productions since 2011, a company organized by composer Arnie Roth.
Raised in Clifton, New Jersey, Opperman graduated in 1996 from Clifton High School where he participated in the school's marching band on the coronet.[2]
Opperman has several albums of his own music. His style is described as a cross between 1990s alternative rock and his favorite 20th-century composers (Schoenberg, Stravinsky, Webern, and Zappa). His main instrument is the piano. He has also been known to play the trumpet and the guitar on at times, and will occasionally sing. Opperman lived in Los Angeles, California, from 2000 to 2008, when he moved back to New Jersey, where he earned a master's degree in music theory/composition from Montclair State University in May 2010.[3] He earned his Ph. D. in Music Composition from the Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University.
In 2019, Opperman ran a successful Kickstarter campaign for his sixth album Chamber Music from Hell. The album was produced by longtime bass player for Dweezil Zappa, Kurt Morgan.[4] It is a contemporary classical concept album about a posthuman civilization and the music that follows. One of the pieces, "Are We Living in a Computer Simulation?" was inspired by the paper by philosopher Nick Bostrom and was featured in Prog Magazine UK.[5]
In 2020, Opperman collaborated with composer/conductor Eric Roth and the Fifth House Ensemble on a tour and album of chamber music from the videogame Undertale by Toby Fox called Undertale LIVE.[6]
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